Basically the title. I am thinking I want to start my own instance but not sure what is required? Can someone give me a tldr or link to proper webpage?

  • terribleplan@lemmy.nrd.li
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    1 year ago

    Asklemmy isn’t really a place to ask about lemmy, it’s for asking general questions to users of lemmy, jut like you wouldn’t ask for Reddit support in /r/askreddit.

    Regardless, this question gets asked and talked about in the !selfhosted@lemmy.world community fairly often, here is a (slightly edited) comment I made a while back.

    You will need a domain name, you can buy one from a registrar such as hover or namecheap (for the love of all that you consider holy do not use godaddy).

    You will need a way to expose the server that you set up via port forwarding or similar on your network.

    You will need to set up DNS records on the domain you buy to point to your home IP. You may want to figure out a different way to avoid just handing that information out, cloudflare can help with that. You will want to make sure the DNS records get automatically updated if your IP address changes, which is not uncommon for residential ISPs.

    You will need to figure out how to get an SSL certificate, Let’s Encrypt will issue them for free, cloudflare gives you one if you use them as a reverse proxy.

    Some of this would likely be easier to do on a cloud provider like digitalocean or linode and could be done reasonably cheaply.

    These are all common things for setting up any website, so lemmy docs won’t cover them. In addition to those (this answer was just addressing “how to get a URL”) you will need to install and configure lemmy, lemmy-ui, postgres, and pictrs somewhere (the join-lemmy docs cover this well).

    If you want your instance to send emails you will have to figure out how you want to do that (too many options to cover in this answer).

    When 0.18.1 gets released if you want captcha you’ll probably have to figure out an mCaptcha provider or set that up yourself.

    Not to mention thinking about backups, high availability, etc, etc.

    Best of luck.

    • MaDeX@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Oh so quite simple then…

      Here’s me looking at hosting on docker in my Synology lol

      • terribleplan@lemmy.nrd.li
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        1 year ago

        As someone who hosts a bunch of other stuff already including my own email (because I am a madman), does stuff like this as a job, has developer experience, etc. it was simple.

        Figuring each of these things out (and how they all work together) for the first time was a hell of a journey.

  • laenurd@lemmy.lemist.de
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    1 year ago

    This depends on how many users you are expecting. For a small instance of tens of users, a raspberry pi with a few gigabytes of storage on a home internet connection would suffice.

    If you plan on going big, I suggest you read the status posts here, where the admin of lemmy.world goes into depth on what hardware etc. is used for their huge instance.

  • dudeami0@lemmy.dudeami.win
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    1 year ago

    It all depends on the size of your instance, but surprisingly little. The most expensive part of running an instance at the moment seems to be users interacting/posting. I’ve had my single user instance running for 22 days, here’s what I have found.

    Hardware: I was running it on an HP Chromebox G1 i7-4600U just fine, I did move it to a HP DL360 G7 but this is overkill.

    Network: I have 100Mbit/s down and 24Mbit/s up, I can’t even tell when lemmy is federating on my bandwidth charts. It seems to use very minimal network data. Hosting content or users will increase the data requirements, you’d have to get data from larger instances for a perspective there.

    Disk: I’m using 4.7G for the postgres and 6.2G for the pictrs after having the instance online for 22 days. This will all depend on how active the communities you subscribe to are. My pictrs is only thumbnails sent during federation, and I have read these purge after some time but haven’t verified these claims.

    TLDR; if you have some old hardware around stick a decent sized HDD or SSD in it and you’ll be able to host your own instance for personal use. If you have more users or host images on your instance, the requirements will go up so avoid this if network/disk space is scarce.

  • Brad Ganley@toad.work
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    1 year ago

    I’ve been pretty surprised at how light it runs. I’m running a single-user instance and have a pretty decent amount of subscriptions to various different instances. I have it running on a thinkserver with a xeon at the moment but, even with like 10 other services (mostly chat protocols–zulip, synapse, thelounge, among other random things) running, my load average never breaks 1. If you don’t plan on having tons of users, you could probably get away with some pretty impressively modest hardware.

  • 512MB of RAM and a single CPU core should be enough for a private instance. How much storage space you need will depend on how many posts you’re planning on making and how many communities you plan on subscribing to. Network requirements are in the hundreds of kilobytes per second (continuously). I’ve estimated my own network requirements to about 2 terabit at the high end but your mileage may vary.

    I’d say: grab a free server over at Oracle, set up a test server, and see how it goes from there. Then set up a server on a real cloud host or in your basement based on those experiences.