Edit : OK so the outage was less brief than expected. The upgrade of the 3GB pictrs database took over 1 hour, and the version 0.4 database is now 14.5 GB… But anyway, it seems to be working alright now!

We will upgrade pictrs today, from 0.3.1 to 0.4.4. This will enable us to switch to S3 storage later on, and is needed for more anti-CSAM tools. Outage should only involve picture uploads, and should be brief.

  • RuudMA
    link
    101 year ago

    It’s building a 0.4 database, which is already twice as big as the 0.3 one

    • RuudMA
      link
      91 year ago

      It’s grown from 3.1 GB to over 8GB and still running…

        • Antik 👾
          link
          161 year ago

          And that’s just his personal collection of feet pics

          • RuudMA
            link
            131 year ago

            Don’t tell them about the feetish

        • RuudMA
          link
          131 year ago

          That’s not the pictures… The picture take up 1.2 TB… it’s just the database with the metadata about the pictures. (11.8 GB now…)

          • @9point6
            link
            5
            edit-2
            1 year ago

            I’m curious, how much storage in total is needed for a Lemmy instance like this one currently?

            • RuudMA
              link
              71 year ago

              1.2 TB for pictures and 100GB for Postgres

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              51 year ago

              For reference I run a pretty small instance. I’m at 34GB for the main database, and about 120GB of media. (Doesn’t count backups)

              My instance is much, much smaller though. A few hundred users, and probably only a couple dozen actually active.

            • RuudMA
              link
              91 year ago

              The people that donate to lemmy.world

            • RuudMA
              link
              61 year ago

              But it’s not in S3 yet. Still on disk.

          • ɐɥO
            link
            fedilink
            21 year ago

            I know. Giant database = Giant × 10² amount of Pictures