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?

  • @BURN@lemmy.world
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    02 years ago

    It’s decent, but it isn’t scalable, at least not yet.

    Right now the entire Lemmy backend is one big “monolith”. One app does everything from logins and signups to posting and commenting. This makes it a little harder to scale, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see it split out into multiple micro services sooner rather than later so some of the bigger instances can scale better.

    I’d love to know where the higher level dev stuff is being discussed and if they’ve made a decision on why or why not microservices.

    • @sosodev@lemmy.world
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      02 years ago

      There’s no reason that a monolith can’t scale. In fact you scale a monolith the same way you scale micro services.

      The real reason to use micro services is because you can have individual teams own a small set of services. Lemmy isn’t built by a huge corporation though so that doesn’t really make sense.

        • @sosodev@lemmy.world
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          -12 years ago

          You can easily scale a monolith. You typically horizontally replicate any web server (monolith or not) to handle whatever traffic you’re getting. It shouldn’t really matter what type of traffic it is. Plenty of the world’s biggest websites run monoliths in production. You know how people used to say “rails doesn’t scale”? Well they were wrong because Rails monoliths are behind some huge companies like GitHub and Shopify.

          The lemmy backend is also quite lightweight and parallel so it’s cheap and effective to replicate.

          In my professional experience microservices are usually a dumpster fire from both the dev perspective and an ops perspective (I’m a Site Reliability Engineer).