This is my understanding as well, though I believe the manual route is “not recommended” as far as the Lemmy documentation goes and Ansible/Docker are the preferred ways.
At the moment I’m trying to work out how to scale it horizontally (add more nodes) instead of vertically (make the one node bigger) as there’s diminishing returns on the latter method but the documentation doesn’t mention whether the “scale” option in Docker Compose is usable. That said it’s early days and I’ve only just started looking into it 😊
MS have always been a little shitty and I don’t want to sound “high horse”-y since everything is flawed in one way or another, but basically:
I understand that they’re running a business and that they can’t support old OS’ forever and can’t appease every user, but the above was more than enough for me to jump ship.
Edit: sorry I realised after replying you meant red hat lol, @Valon_Blue@sh.itjust.works said exactly what I was referring to. For those looking for an alternative, Rocky OS is the new CentOS and is built by its original creator.
OpenSUSE on Desktop, macOS for laptop. I’ve used macOS on portables for years now but only in the last 3ish months have I gone the linux Desktop.
As to the “why” - macOS because it’s polished, tightly integrated with the hardware, the ecosystem works harmoniously, it’s secure and Unix-based (Darwin is the name of the base OS used for both macOS and iOS).
For Desktop - I used Windows pretty much all my life but it’s gradually turned into a bloated advertising and tracking engine. I’m speaking as a home user and a 10+ year IT professional. Linux has come in leaps and bounds and OpenSUSE is an enterprise-grade OS that also happens to run games and other personal things nicely. If I wasn’t using it I’d probably be using Red Hat but I dumped it largely due to their shitty business practices.
I’ll throw my hat in here too, I have capacity on my in-home infrastructure and will also be colocating a couple servers in a proper datacentre over the coming months. I back up everything to disks, minimum 2 week on-disk retention, then duplicate it onto tapes (don’t laugh - they’re rated for 30 years cold storage). I keep yearly backups infinitely, monthlys for 1-2 years, weeklys for 6 months iirc. Based in Australia if that helps. 10+ years experience as a sysadmin/cyber sec professional. Feel free to DM if I can help the cause as I’m happy to donate capacity
Coming back to update this thread after having stood up the server which I’ve called Krab Borg. All are welcome to join. As far as deploying it went, “Pretty easy” was subjective in this case; Docker itself is not inherently difficult to work with once you understand it, however Lemmy was super vague on how to deploy it.
A couple of things I got stitched up on that I hope save someone else the pain:
The docker compose file in the “main” Github branch is built for a non-production instance, so a bunch of unnecessary stuff is in there, and a bunch of necessary stuff isn’t. I basically took the compose file from the 0.17.4 tag here. I also generated a long password to use as the API key for pictrs.
I use an external NGINX server (running on a different server to Lemmy) as the SSL termination point and internet-facing reverse proxy. I had issues with federation “sort of” working; some sites would federate while others wouldn’t (I’d find the communities but get “Subscription Pending” when subscribing). It turns out I didn’t put the full intermediate SSL certificate chain into my certificate file, so even though the site appeared to be working, some servers wouldn’t accept the cert. This was hinted to me when I saw in packet traces that the remote side was sending RST packets after trying to subscribe to a community. Once I fixed the certificate chain in the file, this problem went away (Note - if you use Lets Encrypt this shouldn’t be a problem).
This is well documented but just to really emphasise it - searching for a community will pull in ~50 of the most popular posts and no comments to give you something to start. You will not receive any new posts (and their comments) unless you actually subscribe to the community. I created a “sub booster” account which I used to subscribe to all of the communities I searched for, so as not to fill my own feed with too much that isn’t relevant to my interests but to get content flowing into the server and make it diverse enough.
So far all is going well and now it’s over to the more “operational” side, like figuring out how to get people in, what communities I should create vs bring in from external sites, etc.
If you’d like to know more about the instance, setting it up or the architecture it sits on, I’m more than happy to share the info or help you if you’re stuck setting up your instance (I work in IT/Security which helps).