With vlemmy disappearing, I’m considering spinning up a VM and sticking it in a DMZ for my own personal use (and any friends who wish to use Lemmy).

I believe there is caching involved, so does anybody have a good idea of how much disk space an instance for say ~10 users would require?

  • Shortbus@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    日本語
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    I’ve been wondering this myself but haven’t asked/looked into it yet. I’m starting to wrap my head around how this works. If I understand correctly you would obviously have the communities you host and would also cache the communities the users of your instance subscribe to or interact with.

    Does “interact” mean any interaction is what I’m not sure of. Simply upvoting a post? Simply viewing it? Is viewing it from /all considered viewing it?

    I may be completely wrong… So looking forward to someone who does know to respond or link you to something that explains it.

    Having a homelab myself and running quite a few services I’m still so iffy on allowing anything out on the wider web in such a public way.

    • devdad@programming.devOP
      link
      fedilink
      日本語
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      1 year ago

      Having a homelab myself and running quite a few services I’m still so iffy on allowing anything out on the wider web in such a public way.

      Yeah, this would be the first that would be so openly accessible (I do host other things but they are severely locked down). That’s why, if I do it, I’ll create another VLAN, with zero access to my network/other VLANs.

      That’s why I was asking about disk space, as I wouldn’t connect it to my NAS. If I do it, I’ll probably do it on dedicated hardware with it’s own drive.