So after we’ve extended the virtual cloud server twice, we’re at the max for the current configuration. And with this crazy growth (almost 12k users!!) even now the server is more and more reaching capacity.

Therefore I decided to order a dedicated server. Same one as used for mastodon.world.

So the bad news… we will need some downtime. Hopefully, not too much. I will prepare the new server, copy (rsync) stuff over, stop Lemmy, do last rsync and change the DNS. If all goes well it would take maybe 10 minutes downtime, 30 at most. (With mastodon.world it took 20 minutes, mainly because of a typo :-) )

For those who would like to donate, to cover server costs, you can do so at our OpenCollective or Patreon

Thanks!

Update The server was migrated. It took around 4 minutes downtime. For those who asked, it now uses a dedicated server with a AMD EPYC 7502P 32 Cores “Rome” CPU and 128GB RAM. Should be enough for now.

I will be tuning the database a bit, so that should give some extra seconds of downtime, but just refresh and it’s back. After that I’ll investigate further to the cause of the slow posting. Thanks @[email protected] for assisting with that.

  • @lp0101
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    31 year ago

    Man, the place I work at has a single DB instance (with a read replica) serving millions of users. I’m not saying this should be true everywhere, but I don’t understand how the postgres is buckling here. Does Lemmy have a bunch of horrifically unoptimized queries, or is the DB just on an underpowered machine?

    • NebLem
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      21 year ago

      Yes to both. Lemmy does have a few PRs to make the queries more efficient (and not just blind generic ORM calls) but most instances outside of lemmy.world are very underpowered (which makes federation synchronization slow).