• Jerry on PieFedOP
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    11 year ago

    It uses PostgrSQL. I’m paying an extra $2/month to keep the database on an external drive. So far, it’s only using 151 MB of the 20 GB. I don’t think I’ll run out of space for a while. But, this weekend, the larger server I move to will come with an 80 GB drive so I don’t think I really need an external drive. Currently, the DB doesn’t cost anything extra.

    But, you reminded me, there is a cost to keeping a database backup. My server is in NYC1. I have an S3 bucket in NYC3 that will be use to hold 5 days of daily database backup, compressed. I pay $5/month for the 250 GB Digital Ocean S3 bucket, I believe.

    • UnshavedYak
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      11 year ago

      So you’re running a local DB and backing up the external drive? Neat. What about static storage? Images/videos/etc? How are you handling backup?

      I’m interested in this space because i’m writing an experimental ActivityPub client and one of my goals is to make it “as cheap as possible” to run a micro-instance. I plan on exploiting a single directory, sqlite and file storage, that users can just rsync or backup however they wish. Cheap is tough hah.

      • Jerry on PieFedOP
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        11 year ago

        I was hoping to store the images directly in an S3 bucket at Wasabi, which is what I do for Mastodon, Calckey, and Peertube. However, this is not yet supported in KBIN. I think only AWS is supported as a hard-coded option.

        I tried setting up a FUSE drive connected to Wasabi and I used a symbolic link to point public/image to it, but, alas, the Symfony framework does not support symlinks. Until external S3 is supported, I have to store the images locally. Ernest did post today that external storage for thumbnails is on the horizon. So maybe all media can be externally stored.

        Until then, I’m storing them on the local disk. This weekend I’m going to see if I can set up rclone to automatically synchronize the public/image directory to a Wasabi S3 bucket so at least it will be constantly backed up.

        When external S3 becomes an option, I’ll move the media folder to the S3 bucket and hook it up.