I need a ps5 app - without that I can’t leave plex
I need a ps5 app - without that I can’t leave plex
If compiled languages bother you, then you’re gonna love assembly.
Everything starts somewhere, but I wonder what macOS cli’s are the target for this tool that doesn’t have a Linux equivalent
What do you mean “embedding lua into applications”?
I assume you mean you want an application extensible by user lua script?
You build an API that calls the lua interpreter and passes the script, and reads the output; same as you would for any other scripting language. You define what the inputs should be, create the interface for executing the user defined script through shell commands, and then retrieve the output.
For python you’re going to probably use this:
https://docs.python.org/3/library/subprocess.html#subprocess.check_output
For C# you’re going to use Process
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4291912/process-start-how-to-get-the-output
The complexities arise in your implementation and there’s no single guide.
The search process basically works by looking for the “@” sign in the search term, if the name isn’t found locally, then it uses the apub process called “webfinger” to identify the instance and request the information from it. This process relies on the host server being online, correctly receiving the request, correctly responding, and then your server correctly ingesting that response before emitting the reply to you.
So if no one on your instance has already gone through this process, then there’s a couple chances for the chain of actions to fail, but once that community is “subscribed” and created locally, then your search without the “@” will fetch the “local copy”. Once that local copy exists, it “announces” itself to the home instance, this then tells the home instance to start emitting all the apub info to your local instance (new posts, comments, votes, etc).
So I believe what you’re seeing is first the get_communities
takes a while to go through all of that. Because of that, while waiting the UI sets the results to “empty” until the actual return comes in, once the results come back and the UI updates the state, you see the community in the list. But until that community is “copied” locally, you can’t manually go that community from your local instance url simply because it doesn’t exist locally yet.
The issue also comes down to the fact that no instance needs to update. So if you’re requesting a v0.17.x instance community from a v0.18.x instance, the api’s changed and they may not communicate properly to your home instance. I’m sure there are other points of failure too.
But I believe the lingering “pending” state should be mostly fixed, if you’re using an instance that’s on 18.3 then I don’t think you should encounter that much…
EDIT: It should be noted, that once you search for the remote community, it will fetch the entire community, including all posts and comments, and populate the cache (which I believe lasts for 3 days as of 18.3 unless someone subscribes to it, at which point it’s effectively “saved” locally). This means big communities might be extremely slow to respond to the apub request
It would be better to replicate the db into a purpose built search engine like elasticsearch or TypeSense, and then modify the UI to use that. It’s dumb for lemmy to implement a search engine when there are better more supported systems out there. This isn’t really a lemmy feature, imo, outside of supporting deployments using those types of products.
I recently submitted a PR for stopping pictrs image federation. IMO the images themselves do not need to be downloaded when served by another pictrs instance. This would reduce the amount of diskspace and reduce the burden of hosting images that are unwanted by the instance owners.
What are your thoughts on this, and do you think this will be merged? https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/pull/3799
Do i need to use a vpn to use soulseek safely?
Seems to me that Reddit mods are too concerned with staying “in power” than actually building communities and sharing knowledge. Caving to reddits demands just to maintain their mod status is so sad to me
I use a greasemonkey script for a compact ui similar to old Reddit, it’s wonderful on web.
I completely agree, but I don’t agree that RHEL can’t pivot to this new model. And their first mover advantage as the “enterprise operating system” won’t go away.
I guess your point is that their mismanagement of this situation is evidence of their eventual downfall, but I just don’t know if I buy that
I think their position in the market allows them to make these types of bad decisions without much fallout. If anything this just buys them more time
If this concerns you, make your own instance and disable creating new communities. Plenty of instances are doing that to house the content they want and nothing more. Through federation you’d be able to be found and accessed by other instances so users can post and engage, and if you prevent user logins and interact only with your community through that instance user, you’ll never have to worry about pulling other federated instance content either.
I think you’re underestimating the value organizations and enterprises put on having high quality support available at a moments notice. Particularly first party support.
Hah get wrecked anna
You’re registered on your instance. that’s how federation works, you don’t register on each instance, you register on one and have access to all the rest that are federated with them. If lemmy.world decides to defederate your instance then you won’t be able to anymore
Congratulations on your post to c/selfhosted
Wordfence is a security and vulnerability monitor for Wordpress. The flaw is in the plugin “layerslider”