pictrs isn’t even taking up that much space, postgres takes up most !
# du -sch volumes/*
8.0K volumes/lemmy-ui
3.4G volumes/pictrs
8.2G volumes/postgres
12G total
pictrs isn’t even taking up that much space, postgres takes up most !
# du -sch volumes/*
8.0K volumes/lemmy-ui
3.4G volumes/pictrs
8.2G volumes/postgres
12G total
I also noticed the logs were growing and taking up quite some gb’s. I’ve used truncate
to make the syslog smaller and journalctl
vacuum
to keep that smaller
i’m trying to find documentation for this config but can’t find any. Do you have a link maybe ?
thanks for your detailed how-to ! Will try this, hopefully it holds 2 more weeks I’m leaving for holidays now :)
oh it’s visible because I’m admin/ mod ?
actually I did delete the server (after creating a snapshot of it) a week or so ago. But this morning I wanted to check lemmyfly.org, couldn’t load the page. Checking my Hetzner dashboard I noticed CPU was spiked at 200%?! It did drop again though, but apparently had last for 2-3 minutes. But prometheus was down, so no graphs apart from the hetzner ones. I doesn’t relate to network traffic spikes, so I don’t know what caused it. I’ve started the prometheus server again (that snapshot was really useful :) ) and will leave it on for a couple of months now.
spikes as seen on hetzner graphs:
current system consumption:
I might need to get an extra volume for storage, Lemmy is starting to eat up the root filesystem… Does anyone know how I re-configure Lemmy to look at a different volume for storage ?
For me it were the last 30 or something entries in local_user. They all didn’t have email_verified. I access the db through Postico. Also removed all other older accounts that didn’t verify their email address
Mine too I see now. You can only ban a user when they have posted something right ? There is no list for admins of all users registered ? Maybe I’ll do it direct in the database…
with what purpose ? posting stuff, or some other use ?
http_response metrics are also up, using https://github.com/martin-helmich/prometheus-nginxlog-exporter
would be nice to see the numbers go up :)
Let us know your findings when you did!
i’m now looking into logging more specific http request data. Maybe https://github.com/martin-helmich/prometheus-nginxlog-exporter?
I use namecheap’s email service privateemail since a couple of years. Google workspace was great, but don’t need the other features anymore and this is fifth of the price https://www.namecheap.com/hosting/email/
Looking into the database, it contains many thousands of posts. I’m assuming this is stored in the local db for serving it to instance members. So when you open a post from instance B on instance A, A fetches post-data from B, stores it in A database, then serve the content from db A to the browser
every instance is sharing in the traffic to browse the fediverse. Not one service is responsible for serving content, you (the instance admin) are only serving for your members.
The downside of this is there is a huge amount of replicated data stored everywhere. Content of popular communities will be scraped by and stored on many many servers, filling up servers and increasing storage and bandwith bills for all those servers
Thanks for mentioning your provider, their prices are a lot cheaper then DO !
Yes indeed, request only showed up in overview once I clicked the confirm link from the email. Good idea about mentioning it in that text!
agree, there is quite a learning curve. I still don’t get why I can’t see comments to my post on a different server. But when I log in on another server thats also reading from that community I see the comments there
A user subscribes to a community, not the instance. I’ve emptied the Allowed list and now the All communities list is growing as users search for community-urls on other servers.
On browse.feddit.de you can find a list of all communities together, don’t know hoe they do that
14 days later, my postgres directory was 12GB. I was still on 18.1. Updated to 18.3 just now. Postgres directory was downscaled to 2.6GB !!! Thank you Lemmy dev’s and contributors !!