Let’s say I decided that instead of blogging, I wanted to host my own Lemmy instance that contained a maximum of one (1) user– me, but allowing other users to subscribe.

To show what I’m talking about, look at how kaidomac uses Reddit as his own personal microblog, which people subscribe to.

What is the cheapest way to do this?

My mental model of Lemmy is that if I were to do this, the instance would still be caching information from other instances. This would– at least in my mine– add up in costs.

I’m a software engineer, so feel free to use technical jargon.

  • flashgnash
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    6 hours ago

    The problem for me is I believe you need to open your network firewall for Lemmy and other federated services to work right?

    Not really a fan of opening up more attack surface on my home network

    • 𝘋𝘪𝘳𝘬@lemmy.ml
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      2 hours ago

      The problem for me is I believe you need to open your network firewall for Lemmy and other federated services to work right?

      Yes, of course. Or search for an external reverse proxy. Cloudflare offers something like this. (You set a Cloudflare server IP as target for your domain and then tell Cloudflare your IP and all traffic is routed over the Cloudflare ecosystem so your actual IP is not publicly used.)

      I just opened port 443 and forwarded it to my Docker host and have NPM running there, handling all the forwarding to the individual containers, based on the request, but due to my day job I know what I’m doing :)

      • flashgnash
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        4 hours ago

        Is that not essentially the same issue as opening your firewall though? You’re still taking requests from outside your network into your network without any authentication until they actually hit the server