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submitted 1 year ago by BrotherKaryl@lemmy.tf to c/selfhost@lemmy.ml

The death of Reddit shall bring the life of Lemmy.tf

Love, Bro. Karyl

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[-] J_C___@sh.itjust.works 0 points 1 year ago

Welcome to the hive!

Could you post some information on how you set up your server so others can do the same? I know there is a lot of interest in the unRAID community if you used docker.

[-] jon@lemmy.tf 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I'm one of the other Lemmy.tf admins and I'll share a bit. We're currently on the docker-compose deployment from the repo, running on a VM with 4c/8gb ram/256gb disk. It's on a baremetal VMware box at OVH with loads of resources to expand as needed.

I'm hoping we get enough users on here to force me into converting to a Helm chart and moving this to my Kubernetes cluster. Pod scaling would help address some of the issues larger instances are starting to run into, and it seems like a fun project.

As for Unraid, your best bet is to see if you can install docker-compose on it. This thread from 2020 suggests it should be possible, but the binary may not persist restarts. If you can't use compose you would probably have to strip it apart and deploy one container at a time, and potentially work around the need for the Docker networks.

I may be interested in helping with an Unraid deployment guide if there's heavy interest- I'm running it on my NAS at home and can tinker a bit. Feel free to DM me if you've got questions or need any assistance.

Edit: That Unraid forum post has a reply about using a bash alias to run docker-compose in Docker, this is the route I'd go rather than having to do jank stuff to make the binary persistent. Should be able to follow the normal docker-compose install from your root user once you have compose ready. Make sure to do your port forwarding or use Nginx Proxy Manager since SSL is mandatory to federate.

this post was submitted on 12 Jun 2023
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