I believe thunderbird has support for Gemini but I haven’t tried that out yet, might be wrong.
I believe thunderbird has support for Gemini but I haven’t tried that out yet, might be wrong.
That feels it went seriously bad
yea my bad, it looks open source :D
Then maybe I got confused sorry. Somebody mentioned it and then the post was saying it’s a service I thought it wasn’t open. Will check it properly later. Shouldn’t have spoke so quickly I guess
However it does not look like it is open source.
Isn’t that a (implementation) detail beyond the point of uselessness though? The big point for me is there. To keep it with the metaphor, that tree is also quite a complex structure, yet still useless.
However let me just bring into mind that we recently defederated from some Lemmy instances and for which reasons we did that (as beehaw I mean).
Friendica, I believe, federates their groups. You can see them from mastodon as a user. I guess in AP vocabulary they are an actor. You can post to the group from mastodon too.
Also how’s the setup? You setup for example 5 max children in fpm and 5 persistent connections? Per server? So your overall connections to the db server will be 5x your server instances?
If you setup 5 fpm children and less connections, one child will eventually reuse from another, but only when the connection is free (does not do a query for another process or pdo does not consume a resultset). If it tries to do a query at that time it will have to wait and it will block. This is my understanding. Also how you do transactions with persistent connections?
This has evolved into such an interesting conversation.
Hades was really good. Also Bastion from the same developers.
It’s not that there isn’t the option, it’s just that I don’t know how to help you. MySQL has an option to reconnect, I suppose might be the same for postgres?
The single running process that was so easily dismissed, could save tons of queries, for example! Sorry I keep thinking about that direction
Fair point.
However why do you need persistent connections ? I am thinking that the growing rate of the connections should be very low as the instances increase, given that the queries are quick.
I haven’t used persistent connections although I have been tempted in the past. I believe, if you haven’t used it before, it might come with more trouble than it solves.
As an alternative I could propose using amphp (or maybe react PHP) which will let you handle a pool of connections in a single long running process. But it’s a bigger change really, the more I think of it.
Any personal favourites that are not so linear that you would like to suggest?