Husband, father, kabab lover, history buff, chess fan and software engineer. Believes creating software must resemble art: intuitive creation and joyful discovery.
Views are my own.
Good question!
IMO a good way to help a FOSS maintainer is to actually use the software (esp pre-release) and report bugs instead of working around them. Besides helping the project quality, I’d find it very heart-warming to receive feedback from users; it means people out there are actually not only using the software but care enough for it to take their time, report bugs and test patches.
“Announcment”
It used to be quite common on mailing lists to categorise/tag threads by using subject prefixes such as “ANN”, “HELP”, “BUG” and “RESOLVED”.
It’s just an old habit but I feel my messages/posts lack some clarity if I don’t do it 😅
sh.itjust.works in now added to lemmy-meter 🥳 Thanks all.
Something that I’ll definitely keep an eye on. Thanks for sharing!
That sounds a great starting point!
🗣Thinking out loud here…
Say, if a crate implements the AutomatedContentFlagger
interface it would show up on the admin page as an “Automated Filter” and the admin could dis/enable it on demand. That way we can have more filters than CSAM using the same interface.
Thanks all for your feedback 🙏 I think everybody made a valid point that the OOTB configuration of 33 requests/min was quite useless and we can do better than that.
I reconfigured timeouts and probes and tuned it down to 4 HTTP GET requests/minute out of the box - see the configuration for details.
🌐 A pre-release version is available at lemmy-meter.info.
For the moment, it only probes the test instances
I’d very much appreciate your further thoughts and feedback.
Agreed. It was a mix of too ambitious standards for up-to-date data and poor configuration on my side.
sane defaults and a timeout period
I agree. This makes more sense.
Your name will be associated with abuse forevermore.
I was going to ignore your reply as a 🧌 given it’s an opt-in service for HTTP monitoring. But then you had a good point on the next line!
Let’s use such important labels where they actually make sense 🙂
beyond acceptable use
Since literally every aspect of lemmy-meter is configurable per instance, I’m not worried about that 😎 The admins can tell me what’s the frequency/number they’re comfortable w/ and I can reconfigure the solution.
You can hit the endpoint /api/v3/site for information about an instance including the admins list.
Exactly what I was looking for. Thanks very much 🙏
Thanks for the link. Had no idea about that.
This is quite intriguing. But DHH has left so many details out (at least in that post) as pointed out by @breadsmasher@lemmy.world - it makes it difficult to relate to.
On the other hand, like DHH said, one’s mileage may vary: it’s, in many ways, a case-by-case analysis that companies should do.
I know many businesses shrink the OPs team and hire less experienced OPs people to save $$$. But just to forward those saved $$$ to cloud providers. I can only assume DDH’s team is comprised of a bunch of experienced well-payed OPs people who can pull such feats off.
Nonetheless, looking forward to, hopefully, a follow up post that lays out some more details. Pray share if you come across it 🙏
Uh, I’m not sure I understand what you mean.
Love the attitude 💪 Let me know if you need help in your quest.
I see.
So what do you think would help w/ this particular challenge? What kinds of tools/facilities would help counter that?
Off the top of my head, do you think
Interesting topic - I’ve seen it surface up a few times recently.
I’ve never been a mod anywhere so I can’t accurately think what workflows/tools a mod needs to be satisfied w/ their, well, mod’ing.
For the sake of my education at least, can you elaborate what do you consider decent moderation tools/workflows? What gaps do you see between that and Lemmy?
PS: I genuinely want to understand this topic better but your post doesn’t provide any details. 😅
I just love the “Block User” feature. Immediate results w/ zero intervention by the mods 😆
Nice! Good to see this idea becoming more common 👍
I personally use Firefox Relay which gives me better control for my workflow - I usually need my temporary e-mails to last a bit longer, eg a week or a month.
On another note, the post clickable URL opens the Lemmy instace landing page and not that of the disposable email service.
Would be lovely to have a download per release diagram along w/ the release date (b/c Summer matters in the FOSS world 😆)
Thanks all for the input 🙏
I did a quick experiment w/ the APIs and I think I have identified the ones I’d need. Obviously, all is open source (GPLv3) available on github: lemmy-clerk
As the next step, I’m going to expose that data to Prometheus for scraping.
Thanks for the pointer! Very interesting. I actually may end up doing a prototype and see how far I can get.