this post was submitted on 03 Jul 2023
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I know that Lemmy is open source and it can only get better from here on out, but I do wonder if any experts can weigh in whether the foundation is well written? Or are we building on top of 4 years worth of tech debt?

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[–] [email protected] 19 points 1 year ago (12 children)

I disagree that it being a monolith is immediately a problem, but also

In fact you scale a monolith the same way you scale micro services.

This is just not true. With microservices, it is easy to scale out individual services to multiple instances as demand requires them. Hosting a fleet of entire Lemmy instances is far more expensive than just small slices of it that may require the additional processing power.

[–] [email protected] 16 points 1 year ago (3 children)

What microservices would you split Lemmy into? The database, image hosting and the UI are already separate.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Well, I'm going to start by repeating that I don't necessarily agree that it being monolithic is necessarily a problem right now.

The immediate thought in my mind would be all of the federation logic. That's where all of the instances seem to be lagging behind, and it seems the common fix is "just increase the workers to one billion". Apparently that does something meaningful, but the developer in me wants to know how a few cores can put so many workers to use.

Spinning federation off into a microservice means you could deploy it on something like Cloud Run or AWS ECS, and have it autoscale as the workload demands it. Seems like a pretty prime candidate to me.

[–] Fauzruk 2 points 1 year ago

To me this sounds like a code / DB problem more so than a monolith vs microservice issue. You can totally run only the worker part of a monolith inside AWS ECS and have it autoscale, this is not specific to microservices.

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