This adds an option to the prune_objects mix task.
The original way deleted all non-local public posts older than a certain time frame.
Here we add a different query which you can call using the option --keep-threads.
We query from the activities table all context id's where
1. the newest activity with this context is still old
2. none of the activities with this context is is local
3. none of the activities with this context is bookmarked
and delete all objects with these contexts.
The idea is that posts with local activities (posts, replies, likes, repeats...) may be intersesting to keep.
Besides that, a post lives in a certain context (the thread), so we keep the whole thread as well.
Caveats:
* Quotes have a different context. Therefore, when someone quotes a post, it's possible the quoted post will still be deleted.
* Although undocumented (in docs/docs/administration/CLI_tasks/database.md/#prune-old-remote-posts-from-the-database), the 'normal' delete action still keeps old remote non-public posts. With this option we don't care about scope.
* I ran this on my instance, but directly on the DB. I still need to test to be sure that we don't get a time-out error or something.
Some statistics from explain analyse:
(cost=1402845.92..1933782.00 rows=3810907 width=62) (actual time=2562455.486..2562455.495 rows=0 loops=1)
Planning Time: 505.327 ms
Trigger for constraint chat_message_references_object_id_fkey: time=651939.797 calls=921740
Trigger for constraint deliveries_object_id_fkey: time=52036.009 calls=921740
Trigger for constraint hashtags_objects_object_id_fkey: time=20665.778 calls=921740
Execution Time: 3287933.902 ms
See #350 (comment)
When making quotes through Mast-API, they will now have the same context as the quoted post. This also results in them being showed when fetching the thread. I checked Misskey to see how it's there, and they show the quotes there as well, see e.g. <https://mk.toast.cafe/notes/98u1g0tulg>.
An example from Akkoma:
Co-authored-by: ilja <git@ilja.space>
Reviewed-on: #379
Reviewed-by: floatingghost <hannah@coffee-and-dreams.uk>
Co-authored-by: ilja <akkoma.dev@ilja.space>
Co-committed-by: ilja <akkoma.dev@ilja.space>
I managed to steal some emoji, but I had to figure out the specifics the hard way. This should make it easier for future criminals.
Feel free to close if this documentation was omitted on purpose, I can imagine some reasons for why it might have.
Co-authored-by: timorl <timorl@disroot.org>
Reviewed-on: #364
Co-authored-by: timorl <timorl+akkomadev@disroot.org>
Co-committed-by: timorl <timorl+akkomadev@disroot.org>
Since Akkoma doesn't include precompiled frontends in the main repo anymore, it doesn't make sense to keep treating the few js/css files remaining as binary files.
Argos Translate is a Python module for translation and can be used as a command line tool.
This is also the engine for LibreTranslate, for which we already have a module.
Here we can use the engine directly from our server without doing requests to a third party or having to install our own LibreTranslate webservice (obviously you do have to install Argos Translate).
One thing that's currently still missing from Argos Translate is auto-detection of languages (see <https://github.com/argosopentech/argos-translate/issues/9>). For now, when no source language is provided, we just return the text unchanged, supposedly translated from the target language. That way you get a near immediate response in pleroma-fe when clicking Translate, after which you can select the source language from a dropdown.
Argos Translate also doesn't seem to handle html very well. Therefore we give admins the option to strip the html before translating. I made this an option because I'm unsure if/how this will change in the future.
Co-authored-by: ilja <git@ilja.space>
Reviewed-on: #351
Co-authored-by: ilja <akkoma.dev@ilja.space>
Co-committed-by: ilja <akkoma.dev@ilja.space>