Instances can grow fast, and that can be a problem if you have limited disk space. If you don't mind losing history that your users have not interacted with, LPP can help. It will purge posts along with their comments and media before a certain time period if no comments, likes, or saves exist for users on your instance.
This could be a very powerful tool if the right options are added. One of the things I'd like to see is the ability to set an upvote or comment threshold. If posts were popular, I would like to keep them. If, however, a post received very little upvotes and had little interaction, there's not much value in keeping it. And I'm talking about all interactions here, not just from members of our own instances.
This doesn't seem like a very hard thing to implement and would be well received.
I did a fresh git clone today, and when I try to npm start I am getting:
lemmy-subscriber@1.0.0 start
node index.js
undefined:1
undefined
^
SyntaxError: Unexpected token u in JSON at position 0
at JSON.parse (<anonymous>)
at Object.<anonymous> (/root/lcs/src/index.js:8:30)
at Module._compile (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:1191:14)
at Object.Module._extensions..js (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:1245:10)
at Module.load (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:1069:32)
at Function.Module._load (node:internal/modules/cjs/loader:904:12)
at Function.executeUserEntryPoint [as runMain] (node:internal/modules/run_main:81:12)
at node:internal/main/run_main_module:22:47
This is what I ran, I am using the Ansible install of the latest version of Lemmy.
cd src
export LOCAL_URL=https://my.full.TLD
export LOCAL_USERNAME=myadmin
export LOCAL_PASSWORD=myadminpass
export PURGE_OLDER_THAN_DAYS=14
export HOURS_BETWEEN_PURGES=4
export PG_HOST=172.18.0.3 #this is the local IP on my box that answers for the docker container that has postgres
export PG_PORT=5432
export PG_USERNAME=lemmy
export PG_PASSWORD=thelemmydb-password
npm install
npm start
If there is anything I can do to help test, let me know. I just reinstalled my server because it had 100 percent filled up and manually deleting files was not releasing the disk space.