the software we use to run awful.systems, which @dgerard@awful.systems suggested I call Philthy (and I agreed!), is seeking contributors.

like upstream Lemmy, this consists of a Rust backend and a Typescript+React frontend. contributions to both are welcome; use this thread to discuss ideas and collaborate.

here’s some contribution ideas off the top of my head (but all reasonable contributions are welcome):

  • (frontend & backend) actually rebrand to Philthy, to prevent confusion between us and upstream Lemmy
  • (frontend & backend) rewrite README.md to emphasize that this is a fork
  • (frontend) make the page header and footer more configurable; remove various links that aren’t relevant to awful.systems
  • (backend) delete posts from Mastodon when they’re deleted on our end
  • (frontend & backend) implement The Firehose, a big admin-only list of the posts and content leaving our instance
  • (frontend & backend, ongoing) merge in changes from upstream Lemmy if there are features you wish our instance had

or make suggestions in this thread!

one major blocker preventing folks from contributing to Lemmy-related development I’ve seen is that a lot of people don’t know Rust. if that’s the case, I can offer the following:

  • the Lemmy codebase is the worst possible place to learn Rust, but I’d love to start a thread for Rust tutorials and shared learning. it’s honestly an excellent language in its own right, so I’d love to teach folks about it even if they don’t end up contributing to Philthy.
  • if you’re good with React and/or Typescript and the feature you want to implement has a backend component, I don’t mind handling the backend portion if I’m able.
  • froztbyte@awful.systems
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    8 months ago

    lemmy depending so hard on its weird docker environment is something I really would like to fix very soon

    (to let this rant out just a tiny bit:) it is infuriating how much more rope container-based workflow has given the “works on my machine” dipshits of the world

    it has also minorly improved the problem in that if they have to ship container construction workflows (which by and large are Dockerfiles, but…) then you get to see what kind of insane bullshit they pull to do this. but then at the exact same time you get to see that bullshit, which instantly makes things worse again. 1 tiny step forward, 300 paces of frenetic running away in horror