lemmy/docs/src/contributing_federation_development.md

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Federation Development

Setup

If you don't have a local clone of the Lemmy repo yet, just run the following command:

git clone https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy

Running locally

You need to have the following packages installed, the Docker service needs to be running.

  • docker
  • docker-compose
  • cargo
  • yarn

Then run the following

cd docker/federation
./run-federation-test.bash -yarn

The federation test sets up 3 instances:

Instance / Username Location
lemmy_alpha 127.0.0.1:8540
lemmy_beta 127.0.0.1:8550
lemmy_gamma 127.0.0.1:8560

You can log into each using the instance name, and lemmy as the password, IE (lemmy_alpha, lemmy).

Firefox containers are a good way to test them interacting.

Integration tests

To run a suite of suite of federation integration tests:

cd docker/federation-test
./run-tests.sh

Running on a server

Note that federation is currently in alpha. Only use it for testing, not on any production server, and be aware that turning on federation may break your instance.

Follow the normal installation instructions, either with Ansible or manually. Then replace the line image: dessalines/lemmy:v0.x.x in /lemmy/docker-compose.yml with image: dessalines/lemmy:federation. Also add the following in /lemmy/lemmy.hjson:

    federation: {
        enabled: true
        tls_enabled: true,
        allowed_instances: example.com,
    }

Afterwards, and whenever you want to update to the latest version, run these commands on the server:

cd /lemmy/
sudo docker-compose pull
sudo docker-compose up -d

Security Model

  • HTTP signature verify: This ensures that activity really comes from the activity that it claims
  • check_is_apub_valid : Makes sure its in our allowed instances list
  • Lower level checks: To make sure that the user that creates/updates/removes a post is actually on the same instance as that post

For the last point, note that we are not checking whether the actor that sends the create activity for a post is actually identical to the post's creator, or that the user that removes a post is a mod/admin. These things are checked by the API code, and its the responsibility of each instance to check user permissions. This does not leave any attack vector, as a normal instance user cant do actions that violate the API rules. The only one who could do that is the admin (and the software deployed by the admin). But the admin can do anything on the instance, including send activities from other user accounts. So we wouldnt actually gain any security by checking mod permissions or similar.