This new version introduced a system so that your instance stops sending out
content to other instances that are supposedly dead / offline. Unfortunately for
some reason there’s false positives. When I checked comparing the results from a
curl request vs the information in our Lemmy database I found over 350+ false
positives. In the DB there is a table called “instance” which has a column
called “updated”. If the date on that column is older than 3 days, your server
will stop sending any content to those instances. For some reason I had entries
that were dated as last being alive in July, while actually they were always up.
If an entry is incorrect, you can fix it by manually using an update statement
and adding today’s date. If your instance is not too large you can safely update
all entries to today’s date and check if everything works as expected from then
on any new content created on your instances. The dead instances won’t have an
impact unless your instance is larger and generates more content, thus it might
be easier to simply update all entries and have Lemmy believe they’re all alive
if you start noticing wonky behavior and don’t want to check one by one. If you
don’t know how to access the database run this command where domaincom is your
instance domain without the dot. 1. docker exec -it domaincom_postgres_1 busybox
/bin/sh 2. psql -U (The default user is ‘lemmy’) You could technically do this
is one single step, but it’s good to know the command to get shell access to the
container itself if you didn’t know how to. This should give you access to a
postgres CLI interface. Use \c to connect, \dt to list tables and \d+ tablename
to list table definition. You can also run SQL queries from there. Try with this
query: SELECT * from instance to list all instances and their updated date. You
can use other SQL queries to get better results or correct false positives. Just
be careful with what you execute since there’s no undo.
There’s been some discussion about the dead instance checker over on !fediverse[email protected] being a bit overzealous but I didn’t see anything here, so I wanted to raise it.
I did some spot checking of the instance table and can confirm that several of the instances with an older updated date were indeed actually up.