You can use a single domain and subdomains for each service. Once you start to host multi-services you will need more and more compute power and storage.
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Thanks for the response. Realistically what am I looking at if I want to do a weekly blog post, and then mostly only posting comments on the various service?
I figure if it is possible to have the actual website not publicly visible, sort of like everything is behind a paywall, but everything behind that pay wall still gets posted to the various services, this just preventing website traffic.
I wouldn't worry about 'website traffic' if you are using federated services: there is a shit ton of chatter back and forth between servers.
You could put the UI behind a simple password page but you will have to leave all the API urls open.
It takes time and effort to keep ALL the services update (as well as the host OS). So much so that I have actually taken down my wordpress blog
Thank you.
This has been a lot of help.
I'll show you how that back end works!
(I have no idea and hope you get the info you want)
Yes, you will need multiple servers and domains... but you can host them on one physical device, and put them as subdomains on one purchased domain, e.g lemmy.wamgans.com, mastodon.wamgams.com, and so on.
Thank you for this.
Any particular tutorials you recommend for setting up a first fediverse server?
It would work but I personally don't think hosting a personal instance for the fediverse is that practical/safe given how dumb and harsh laws can be, when you don't have an army of lawyers/strong public support
Thank you for this article.
However, if i am the only person on my instance and I am blocking federation from known bad actors, I should theoretically be protected.
its technically feasible, even with a single domain and just running multiple hosts off a single box... but it gets very complex. many of these products are designed for multi-user. its not a 'set it and forget it' process. its a constant battle keeping a lot of these systems running, let alone on a single box with a highly configured single-user use in mind.
mastondon/microblog products its fairly easy.. the threadiverse products require a ton more resources and connectivity.
good luck.
Any specific things you think I should prioritize first and then build out from?
I do like the idea of a federated passport essentially, where your subdomain acts as verification it is you.
Look up how to run Linux and docker containers. LearnLinuxTV on YouTube is an amazing start.
Data backup is super important.
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