Hi!
I spawned my own instance of lemmy on my server and I discovered new things about how lemmy and federation works, and I have a lot of doubt. I don't know exactly if those doubts are problems of my implementation of if they are normal, so!
My main account is on lemmy.world and I see that new posts from communities I follow show up before on lemmy.world and then on my instance. Is it normal?
With comments happens the same thing and they are slower to "sync". Why?
If a community has been never discovered from the search form with the full format !community@instance, it will never appear on my instance. This means that is not possible to search for an argument (i.e. steam deck) and finding all the posts and communities about it. Is this normal or a feature that we/you would like to see in future/is adaptable to the concept of the fediverse? Because if I am on a big instance with a lot of users maybe I found that specific community or post, but on smaller instances like mine it will never appear If I don't know the exact name.
From my instance I am unable to follow lemmy.ml communities (they are pending, usually on lemmy.world the pending status is faster)
I am unable to search for communities on Kbin.social, and when I try I see this log message of type "couldnt_find_object: error decoding response body: missing field properties at line 1 column 206" from my docker instance:
I have a lot of warnings in the lemmy log of type "Error encountered while processing the incoming HTTP request: lemmy_server::root_span_builder: Header is expired" such as:
2023-06-20T21:58:12.484449111Z 2023-06-20T21:58:12.484275Z WARN Error encountered while processing the incoming HTTP request: lemmy_server::root_span_builder: Header is expired 2023-06-20T21:58:12.484510012Z 0: lemmy_server::root_span_builder::HTTP request 2023-06-20T21:58:12.484517559Z with http.method=POST http.scheme="https" http.host=lemmy.g97.top http.target=/inbox otel.kind="server" request_id=caf194c5-cac3-4c37-a29c-577d65deb050 http.status_code=400 otel.status_code="OK" 2023-06-20T21:58:12.484525578Z at src/root_span_builder.rs:16 2023-06-20T21:58:12.484530286Z LemmyError { message: None, inner: Header is expired, context: "SpanTrace" }
I have more questions/doubt but for now this is enough I think! Thank you!
I can't even see this post on my selfhosted instance, so that's fun.
With regard to #6, you apparently have to search for the URL of the Kbin magazine (e.g. https://kbin.social/m/RedditMigration) and then you can subscribe as normal from that point on.
And yeah, the discovery and comments thing is super annoying. There will be completely different conversations based on where you're viewing the post, which kind of kills the idea of all these instances federating in the first place.
That being said, it appears to be feeds coming from lemmy.world and lemmy.ml that have the majority of the problems with comment/post sync. Unfortunately that's the selfhosted community.
Until 5 minutes ago I was seeing 6 comments. Now Lemmy says there are 11 comments (as I was saying on lemmy.world until minutes ago) but I only count 6 comments by hand 😂
Yep the problem is that we all see different things so we are not having a consistent conversation between us.
I still don't know and I would like to, how the activityPub and federation protocol works and where the fault is (in the activityPub or in the Lemmy's implementation). As I understood everything that happens on Lemmy.ml or lemmy.world is sent to all the connected instances with HTTP. This means that if there are 10k connected instances, a like produces 10k HTTP request and this is multiplied for each actions done on these servers. Is this right?
It sounds like you know more about ActivityPub than I do, but that seems right. My guess is that .ml and .world are so overloaded that there's just a massive delay coming from them. It is kind of funny that, like you mentioned above, with my Lemmy instance I have almost perfect sync with Kbin servers but problems with Lemmy.
I'm hopeful that this is like Mastodon, where things calm down in a few weeks and there's a smaller but more sustainable userbase.