I believe that the original id is stored somewhere as well since there is i fediverse icon that takes one to the original. You can probably use that id when searching your db.
Lemmy
Everything about Lemmy; bugs, gripes, praises, and advocacy.
For discussion about the lemmy.ml instance, go to !meta@lemmy.ml.
I expected some special syntax like post:id!community@domain
Or ap_id?post/15@xn--e1aghfa.xn--e1aqbccjfc.xn--p1acf
Here ap_id is the name of part of URI, which maps to
https://lemmy.ml/post/ap_id
and performs all the magic, which lemmyverse.link does
Or https://lemmy.ml/post/49064481?15@xn--e1aghfa.xn--e1aqbccjfc.xn--p1acf
if developers will integrate it into lemmy itself
?=post/15@xn--e1aghfa.xn--e1aqbccjfc.xn--p1acf - any ap_id
?[!community@xn--e1aghfa.xn--e1aqbccjfc.xn--p1acf](/c/community@xn--e1aghfa.xn--e1aqbccjfc.xn--p1acf) - any community
?usernick@xn--e1aghfa.xn--e1aqbccjfc.xn--p1acf - any user
but the last two options are not necessary
I don't believe those exist, it would be cool though
in another software it's possible to use:
p?ap_id@server
c?conf@server
u?user@server
where this local links will be added to URI ending with trailing /
i.e.
https://engine.tld/application/objtype/NNNNNID/
will be completed with
https://localserver.tld/applicationname/objtype/NNNNNID/p?ap_id@remoteserver.tld
https://localserver.tld/applicationname/objtype/NNNNNID/c?conf@remoteserver.tld
https://localserver.tld/applicationname/objtype/NNNNNID/u?user@remoteserver.tld
This way the local links will allow to setup redirects to any type of objects. (and without special syntax and special parsing)
https://localserver.tld/applicationname/objtype/NNNNNID/=ap_id@remoteserver.tld
https://localserver.tld/applicationname/objtype/NNNNNID/[!conf@remoteserver.tld](/c/conf@remoteserver.tld)
https://localserver.tld/applicationname/objtype/NNNNNID/user@remoteserver.tld
and distinguish them with regular expressions at reverse proxy...
I created this topic on my own instance. It knows original ID, but doesn't know ID-s in all other servers in federation.
I want to write a link in such a way, that lemmy substitute it with the reference to the local copy of message on lemmy.ml server.
But now lemmy just shows an original link to my server.
It’s 4:02 utc, do you know what your smart fridge is up to?
Business cards with your website on em the looooong way
My man is just checking to see if you’re rfc952 complaint.
Only hostname I ever seen with a glottal stop
You know ai out here registering domains bc it tried to put an em dash
I enter xn--e1aghfa.xn--e1aqbccjfc.xn--p1acf into the field of https://lemmyverse.link/ when it asks my home. But the site doesn't accept that perfectly RFC952 compliant name
An additional problem - the site https://lemmyverse.link/ is available only partially (requires VPN to work).
So my new idea is to deploy
https://github.com/RikudouSage/lemmyverse.link
into my website locally, and give 2 links - the relative (via local redirector) and the direct one (as a fallback).
the relative link on forein server will became broken, until they also install such redirector into the same path.
After that the link will always lead to local server and redirect to preferred server of user.
it give the resulting link as https://lemmyverse.link/xn--e1aghfa.xn--e1aqbccjfc.xn--p1acf/post/15 so the lemmyverse.link website is the single point of failure. It goes against the idea of federation.
It's just a convenience service. Your original url is right there in the path if it were to go down, and it's open source if you want to run your own.
There's no other way currently to do it
«Your original url is right there in the path if it were to go down» But how it's supposed to help one, to see the original URL? It will help only if the content is archived in some way. If remote lemmy server will go down. Then content will became unavailable, even If I install a local copy of that redirecting engine.
The point is that it redirects you to the post on your personal interest.
You can also paste that into the search of any lemmy instance to find it, if they mirrored it
You can also paste that into the search of any lemmy instance to find it, if they mirrored it
Yes, this works. But I don't understand how. The question is - will it work, if remote instance went down?
Once a user on the remote instance subscribes, all posts are replicated over as they're made. Not at the the time of request.
The existence of local replica doesn't prove, that searching by remote URL will work (with remote server down).