Howdy folks!

I spun up my own Mastodon today and quickly realized there was a 500 character limit to posts. I googled around, found some good guides and decided to make a quick bash script for it. Replace the below values inside the carrots with your settings.

#!/bin/bash -x

docker exec -it mastodon_web sed -i ‘s/500/<desired_#of_chars>/g’ /opt/mastodon/app/javascript/mastodon/features/compose/components/compose_form.js
docker exec -it mastodon_web sed -i 's/500/<desired
#_of_chars>/g’ /opt/mastodon/app/validators/status_length_validator.rb
docker exec -it mastodon_web bundle exec rails assets:precompile
docker container restart <mastodon_web_container> <mastodon_streaming_container> <mastodon_sidekiq_container>

  • tidus@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Would a post with over 500 characters show up on an instance that has the 500 character limit?

  • ericjmorey@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    The 500 character limit is why I rarely use my fosstodon account. Maybe I’ll spin up my own instance. Although I said that about akkoma and I haven’t tried to spin that up.

  • drdaeman@lemmy.zhukov.al
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    1 year ago

    I don’t mean to discourage you - this is a good hack. But as a seasoned code monkey, I see a few things that can be possibly improved so they will have less chances of biting you in the future. Please feel free to disregard this, of course.

    s/500/…/g

    This is a bit overbroad, as it replaces any “500” in those files. It works now, as this is probably only occurrence is the limit you want to tweak, but it’s a crude approach that may inadvertently break at any moment.

    docker exec

    Those changes are ephemeral and won’t survive if container is re-created for any reason (unless /opt/mastodon is a volume - I guess this is how it survives docker container restart?). I would rather recommend building your own custom image. Start by making a patch file:

    docker run -it --rm -user root <mastodon image> bash
    cp -r /opt/mastodon /opt/mastodon.vanilla
    sed <your-updates-here> # or you can run vi or nano or any other editor
    diff -urN /opt/mastodon.vanilla /opt/mastodon
    exit
    

    Take diff’s output, save it to fix-limits.patch in a new empty directory, then write a brief Dockerfile next to it, that goes like this:

    FROM <base-mastodon-image>
    COPY fix-limits.patch ./
    RUN patch -p2 fix-limits.patch
    

    And finally run docker build -t my-mastodon . and use my-mastodon as a replacement image. This will ensure your changes will persist, plus you’ll have a proper patch file that you can use with any version (point is, it will warn you if something would change in a way that the patch would no longer apply cleanly).

    I’m writing this on a phone, from scratch, without any testing, so you may need to tweak things a little bit. E.g. I’m not sure what’s the WORKDIR in the base image - just assuming its /opt/mastodon (which it probably is), but you may need to edit the COPY command’s second argument and/or -p parameter to patch.> docker container restart

    • th0mcat@kbin.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      Oh I know my workaround is probably the worst possible correct answer for how to do this. Thanks for that, I’ll give it a shot!

      • drdaeman@lemmy.zhukov.al
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        1 year ago

        It’s OK. I do hacks like this all the time - no shame in this. However, when sharing a recipe with others it’s best to promote better practices :)

      • drdaeman@lemmy.zhukov.al
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        1 year ago

        Yes - same as with the original script, upgrades would require more manual steps than just updating the version in the Compose file. This is how it’s typically done.

        There are ways to automate this. Docker Hub used to have a feature for automatic rebuilds when base images had changed, but AFAIK this feature was removed some years ago. Now it’s a matter of setting up a CI with periodically (nightly or weekly) scheduled pipelines, but it’s not a trivial matter.

        Semi-automation can be achieved by using build-time arguments. I’m at my computer now, so here’s a revised process:

        First, a bunch of manual commands that would allow us to write a patch. I’ll use those crude sed statements - just because they work today, but YMMV.

        docker run -it --rm --user root tootsuite/mastodon bash
        cp -r /opt/mastodon /opt/mastodon.vanilla
        sed -i 's/500/1000/g' /opt/mastodon/app/javascript/mastodon/features/compose/components/compose_form.js
        sed -i 's/500/1000/g' /opt/mastodon/app/validators/status_length_validator.rb
        diff -urN /opt/mastodon.vanilla /opt/mastodon
        

        This will produce a nice patch like this that you can copy. Create an empty directory and save as change-limits.patch in there:

        diff -urN /opt/mastodon.vanilla/app/javascript/mastodon/features/compose/components/compose_form.js /opt/mastodon/app/javascript/mastodon/features/compose/components/compose_form.js
        --- /opt/mastodon.vanilla/app/javascript/mastodon/features/compose/components/compose_form.js   2023-07-07 17:50:26.046682458 +0000
        +++ /opt/mastodon/app/javascript/mastodon/features/compose/components/compose_form.js   2023-07-07 17:50:49.626674917 +0000
        @@ -90,7 +90,7 @@
             const fulltext = this.getFulltextForCharacterCounting();
             const isOnlyWhitespace = fulltext.length !== 0 && fulltext.trim().length === 0;
        
        -    return !(isSubmitting || isUploading || isChangingUpload || length(fulltext) > 500 || (isOnlyWhitespace && !anyMedia));
        +    return !(isSubmitting || isUploading || isChangingUpload || length(fulltext) > 1000 || (isOnlyWhitespace && !anyMedia));
           };
        
           handleSubmit = (e) => {
        @@ -280,7 +280,7 @@
                   </div>
        
                   <div className='character-counter__wrapper'>
        -            <CharacterCounter max={500} text={this.getFulltextForCharacterCounting()} />
        +            <CharacterCounter max={1000} text={this.getFulltextForCharacterCounting()} />
                   </div>
                 </div>
        
        diff -urN /opt/mastodon.vanilla/app/validators/status_length_validator.rb /opt/mastodon/app/validators/status_length_validator.rb
        --- /opt/mastodon.vanilla/app/validators/status_length_validator.rb     2023-07-07 17:50:26.106682438 +0000
        +++ /opt/mastodon/app/validators/status_length_validator.rb     2023-07-07 17:51:00.796671166 +0000
        @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
         # frozen_string_literal: true
        
         class StatusLengthValidator < ActiveModel::Validator
        -  MAX_CHARS = 500
        +  MAX_CHARS = 1000
           URL_PLACEHOLDER_CHARS = 23
           URL_PLACEHOLDER = 'x' * 23
        

        Now, put the Dockerfile next to the patch:

        ARG MASTODON_VERSION=latest
        FROM tootsuite/mastodon:${MASTODON_VERSION}
        
        USER root
        RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y --no-install-recommends patch
        COPY change-limits.patch ./
        RUN patch -up3 < change-limits.patch
        
        USER mastodon
        RUN OTP_SECRET=precompile_placeholder SECRET_KEY_BASE=precompile_placeholder rails assets:precompile
        

        And a shell script to semi-automate the upgrades. Note it requires curl and jq to be available to parse JSON.

        #!/bin/sh
        
        set -e
        
        MASTODON_VERSION="$(curl -s "https://hub.docker.com/v2/namespaces/tootsuite/repositories/mastodon/tags?page_size=100" | jq -r '.results[]["name"]' | sort -rV | head -n 1)"
        echo "Latest version: ${MASTODON_VERSION}"
        docker pull "tootsuite/mastodon:${MASTODON_VERSION}"
        docker build --build-arg "MASTODON_VERSION=${MASTODON_VERSION}" -t "my-mastodon:${MASTODON_VERSION}" .
        

        And finally, create a file called .dockerignore that contains only one line that would say build.sh. That’s just minor cosmetic touch saying that our build.sh is not meant to be a part of the build context. If everything is correct, there should be now 4 files in the directory: .dockerignore, build.sh, change-limits.patch and Dockerfile.

        Now when you run build.sh it will automatically find the latest version and build you a custom image tagged as e.g. my-mastodon:v4.1.3, which you can use in your Compose file. For a distributed system like Docker Swarm, Nomad or Kubernetes you’ll want to tweak this script a little to use some registry (your-registry.example.org/your/mastodon:v4.1.3) and possibly even apply changes further (e.g. docker service update --image ...).

        Mutable tags like latest can become confusing or even problematic (e.g. if you’ll want to downgrade it’s best to have previous version image readily available for some time - even if the build process is reproducible), so I would really recommend to use explicit version number tags.

        Hope this helps.