

FFS. Literally no free fun allowed. Bare minimum to appease players.
Eskating cyclist, gamer and enjoyer of anime. Probably an artist. Also I code sometimes, pretty much just to mod titanfall 2 tho.
Introverted, yet I enjoy discussion to a fault.
FFS. Literally no free fun allowed. Bare minimum to appease players.
Wait. Loot boxes are back?
Stalk active users and see where they post.
You should look for room-directories.
These are matrix spaces that collect public rooms on various topics.
I only know of matrix-suomi, a space for a bunch of finnish rooms. #matrix-suomi:kapsi.fi
Weird.
I’m not sure what you should try next, but it seems pretty clear the problem lies eith your cinny instance.
This should not matter. If you already have it working with client not hosted by you, ports aren’t the problem.
No.
I meant loading up your instance of cinny, but on a different device.
Then, for some reason, the cinny client can’t connect to your homeserver.
Did you try loading up the client on a different device?
With the config file, does matrix.org still work?
Try running it without a config?
It won’t default to your server, but if it works, then you’ll know that’s where the problem lies.
Either of those are only options for someone who runs an instance.
I agree running things the other way around would be better, but monitoring about a dozen communities, I get away with a call every 5 minutes, and it almost never needs to load a second page. That is not significant afaik.
How would it miss stuff? You’d always use “new” sort and load pages until you run into content from the last update. Stuff from the last page appearing again because new content moved the content along, shouldn’t stop you from loading another page, and any new content will be caught in the next update.
Only way I know to do this, is to just regularly check the comment and post feeds, loading more pages until you get content you’ve already ingested.
This is how @saucechan@ani.social works. It also responds to mentions using notifications, but mentions in post bodies don’t create notifications, so the work-around was necessary.
If you didn’t know, there is a comment feed endpoint, which will contain new comments from all posts, without requiring you to check every post for new comments. It’s not used by most clients, but it’s available in the default webUI, and hence the API.
You can make it a little simpler, by only loading the subscribed feed, and making sure you sub to the relevant communities on the bot account.
Hm.
Making and running fediverse bots is very easy right now. The APIs are well documented and libraries exist for almost every platform and programming language to make things even simpler. All the parts you’d need for every bot anyway, are done and available. You only need to write the code that does what your specific use-case requires.
I’ve made four now. Lemmytrix, @dailycomic@sh.itjust.works, @saucechan@ani.social, and @mofumatic@sakurajima.moe.
At the same time, it should have some barrier for entry.
If you need a piece of software to hold your hand every step of the way, you maybe shouldn’t be responsible for a bot.
And it’s not really something you can easily make general purpose software for. There is the RED bot for discord, but it is a huge project and still relies on user-created add-ons to do more specific things.
This is already a thing. Here is what I see on subordinate mods in communities I created.
Are you sure you’re not just getting back what you’re putting in?
My experience has been so completely opposite, I simply have to assume we are using the platform in some fundamentally different way.
What communities are you frequenting?
The ones I sub and post to have been nice.
My guess it just doesn’t evict stuff from before the suspend, starts re-loading stuff after the resume, which makes the apparent amount “used” go up.
On a normal linux system, “free” RAM will over time drop down to zero, as the kernel puts the extra memory available to use. But it doesn’t mean there isn’t room to evict less-needed stuff if necessary.
AFAIK linux only starts actively evicting RAM once it fills up.
Like the other guy mentioned, drill down and see if you can find the actual program causing the problem.
Communities cannot be fully “deleted”.
They can only be “deleted” in the sense that they disappear for everyone.
You, as a mod, can still see and restore the community. To get rid of it from your list, you’d have to be unassigned as a mod. I don’t think that’s possible if you’re the only mod in a community.