Lemmy’s PostgreSQL was developed with this philosophy, intentional or otherwise:
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Real-time client connection and notification via websocket that gets every single action that passes through PostgreSQL. One upvote, instantly sent to client. One new comment, instantly appeared on Lemmy-ui with version 0.17.4
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INSERT overhead for PostgreSQL. As soon as a Lemmy post or comment is done, a parallel post_aggregate and comment_aggregate row is created.
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INSERT counting overhead. Extreme effort is made by Lemmy to count things, all the time. Every new INSERT of a comment or post does a real-time update of the total server count. This is done via a SQL UPDATE and not by just issuing a COUNT(*) on the rows when the data is requested.
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No archiving or secondary storage concept. PostgreSQL has it in the main tables or nothing.
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Raw numbers, local and unique for each instance, for comment and post. But community name and username tend to be more known than raw numbers.
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Sorting choices presented on many things: communities, posts, comments. And new methods of sorting and slicing the data keep being added in 2023.
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No caching of data. The developers of lemmy have gone to extremes to avoid caching on either lemmy-ui or within the Rust code of lemmy_server. Lemmy philosophy favors putting constant connection to a single PostgreSQL.
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User preferences and customization are offloaded to PostgreSQL do do the heavy lifting. PostgreSQL has to look at the activity of each user to know if they have saved a post, previously read a post, upvoted that post, or even blocked the person who created the post.
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Language choice is built into the system early, but I see no evidence it has proven to be useful. But it carries a high overhead in how many PostgreSQL database rows each site carries - and is used in filtering More often than not, I’ve found end-users confused why they can’t find content when they accidentally turned off choices in lemmy-ui
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All fields on SELECT. Throughout the Rust Diesel ORM code, it’s every field in every table being touched.
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SELECT statements are almost always ORM machine generated. TRIGGER FUNCTION logic is hand-written.
Screenshot of the sort choices in 0.18.4 on lemmy.ml for a single community: