Well, I have an instance running. At startup it outputs federation enabled, host is redacted, but I don't see anything when looking at all. I can't search for other instance communities. I thought I would be able to use my local instance to browse other instance/communities and post there from my instance. Is that not how this works? Did I miss a step setting it up?
Some more details:
Any search I do results in a timeout error. This is from the lemmy logs.
In all my years of software development and testing, I've never seen an HTTP status code 101... 101: switching protocols
UPDATE: it's fixed!
Thanks to @[email protected] who pointed me in the right direction, and thank you everyone who contributed to this post in the comments with suggestions and support!
Here are the steps:
add a new network interface
docker network create lemmyexternal
connect the lemmy container (lemmy_lemmy_1, unless you renamed it)
docker network connect NETWORK_ID CONTAINER_ID
(you can get the network and container IDs with docker network ls and docker container ls)
modify the docker-compose.yml to add the new network, and link it to the lemmy service
networks:
# communication to web and clients
lemmyexternalproxy:
lemmyexternal:
# communication between lemmy services
lemmyinternal:
driver: bridge
internal: true
Thanks! I've been searching for known communities I have posts in, but not getting any hits. Using the full shorthand, like: [email protected] there are no results.
I just had to bash the search form a few times. Intra-instance community discovery/seraching seems to be a bit "sticky" for lack of a better way to describe.
Also, as the "prime" instance lemmy.ml is getting hammered with new Reddit exodus users at the moment, so I suspect lemmy.ml may not be the most responsive atm.
Yes, I have a few comments in the world of warcraft community on lemmy.ml. When I search for that using the shortcode: [email protected] , I get an immediate response with no results.
Server side, there is a timeout error in the log, but that is timing out in less than a second.
I wonder if instances need to be allowed to interact with lemmy.ml?