#GoToSocial memory usage looking good now (the important line is the orange one - heap size); looks like @kim has fixed the increased memory usage we were seeing on main recently.
To help you understand the graph: the high yellow line is memory allocated to GoToSocial by the operating system, the blue and red lines are idle/released bytes respectively, and the orange line is actual memory currently in use.
That's on a config with 60MiB of cache space configured, with hydrated caches, so account for 60MiB of cache usage, and about 40MiB for everything else (running the web server, constantly responding to requests, processing incoming data, media, etc etc).
almost finished the self-serve email change mechanism for #GoToSocial, a nice simple form on the settings page with a little info thing to remind you if you already have an email change requested/pending
Every morning, an instance administrator wakes up knowing they need to keep the infrastructure running smoothly for their users, ensuring a good and free social experience.
Every morning, a Fediverse user wakes up knowing they will find many people eager to socialize and interact, who strive to keep the Internet a place for the free exchange of ideas and opinions, away from the dynamics of closed protocols and Big Tech monetization.
It doesn't matter if you are a server administrator or a Fediverse user, thank you for being here and for contributing every day with your efforts to keep the Internet a free place.
I'm mostly at my standalone GoToSocial server these days. I tried migrating this account again, and this time I figured out the problem: I'd misconfigured my server's proxy settings and everything was getting rate limited.
So next time it should finish - but I have to wait another 29 days for the cooldown. Meanwhile, if you'd like to see what I'm up to lately, feel free to follow me at @kelson
My recent try raises issues with missing css files. Weird thing is FreeBSD PLIST does not reference them either. And compiling from source does not seem to solve the problem.