this post was submitted on 09 Aug 2023
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Putting all of the large communities on a single instance is just reddit with more steps. It's good that one of the larger Lemmy communities is not also on the largest Lemmy instance. Lemmy.world suffers a lot of outages (in part because it's so centralized), meanwhile this community remains available.
That is the reason why I self host my own private instance.
Just out of curiosity
I have my own instance (gadgetro.id), but it isn't set to private. Are you still able to browse other accounts on the fediverse from your instance when set to private?
I don't even know if it's set to private. If you mean browsing accounts from subscribed communities then yes.
What's the hardware and network demand like ? I've been vaguely thinking of doing so myself.
My friends instance, crystals.rest, is hosted on a $5/mo Linode with 1GB of RAM
The lxc container in Proxmox is at around 500 MB of ram usage, 1.35 GB of network traffic, and less than 1% CPU usage. Although I'm the only one using the instance.
Thanks, appreciated.
Edit
I assume you mean 1.35gb of network data per day ? As opposed to per minute / per second etc
Yeah that is the total amount of network data used since I set it up yesterday.
I'm pretty new here, what is an "instance"? And why is it better to have the big communities on different ones rather than one main?
An instance is just a way to access Lemmy. Lemmy.world, lemm.ee, sh.itjust.works, feddit.uk, etc - you can use any of these to access Lemmy and interact with, and see, all the same content.
It's a problem because most communities are hosted on lemmy.world at the moment, but if lemmy.world ever dies they'll die with it.
They need to add account and community migration as soon as possible
To elaborate further from the other comment, it's a person running a copy of the Lemmy software on their server. I for example am running mine (and seeing this thread) from https://zemmy.cc. Thanks to Federation all of our different servers are able to talk to each other so we can have a shared experience rather than everyone being on one centralized instance managed by one set of administrators (like reddit is).
This provides resilience to the network. If reddit goes down, reddit is down. If lemmy.world goes down, you can still access the content of every community that isn't on lemmy.world, and if other servers were subscribed to the content on a community from lemmy.world you could still see the content from before the server went offline (and it will resync once it's back up).
If we put all of our eggs into a single basket, we have a single point of failure. If all of the major communities go to lemmy.world then lemmy.world is that single point of failure. Doing that is effectively just recreating the same issues we had with reddit but with extra steps. By spreading larger communities across servers we ensure that the outage (or permanent closure) of a single instance doesn't take down half the active communities with it.
You can think of it like emails. It'd be better to have more choice than just gmail.