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Piero Bosio Social Web Site Personale Logo Fediverso

Social Forum federato con il resto del mondo. Non contano le istanze, contano le persone

I think the #ActivityPub client-to-server API is extremely important and underrated.

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Gli ultimi otto messaggi ricevuti dalla Federazione
  • @smallcircles @cwebber @steve

    Some implementations skip some of these steps, because they are focused only on processing messages as they arrive. So, I am reluctant to overemphasize the message processing at the expense of the personal datastore functionality.

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  • @smallcircles @cwebber @steve I'm fine with that.

    However, I think ActivityPub builds up persistent state on the server side which can be read and used by other processors.

    For example, when I `Like` something, it goes into my `liked` collection, and the activity goes into the `likes` for that object. The `Like` activity goes into my `outbox` and others' `inbox`. People can review that information and use it.

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  • @smallcircles what do you have in mind, and how is the Fediverse trending in the wrong direction for it?

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  • @evan @cwebber @steve

    Thank you, that is nice to hear. I am however not an expert, am but a humble generalist and a person who'd love to be in that Solution developer stakeholder role. Who however does not see the fediverse trend in a direction where I'd adopt the technology for what I have in mind. Drifting away from "the promise" that I read in the specs in 2017, and which at the time made me decide to lend a helping hand here and there as facilitator and tech advocate.

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  • @smallcircles @cwebber @steve I would personally really appreciate that. I also think it'd be helpful for the ecosystem. I like that you combine a high-level social and technical approach to discussions of ActivityPub and the Social Web with an almost encyclopedic knowledge of the details. It's a rare combination and extremely valuable.

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  • @evan @cwebber @steve

    Not needed. I hope to be able to add some feedback to the AP API repo.

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  • @smallcircles @cwebber @steve awesome.

    So, would you like me to review your diagram and give comments? I don't know what you're looking for from me in this conversation.

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  • @evan @cwebber @steve

    So why don't you use the word REST? I never encountered "read-write API". It is an informal term.

    But that is not the point. You can have a REST API, fine. But that says nothing in itself. What does it expose? You might say "Duh.. ActivityPub!" but that is not very informative either. There is the notion of message exchange, and of an addressing mechanism, indicating higher level abstractions that conform to well-known architecture patterns, and would allow us to have more productive communication, delve less in implementation details and confusions of protocol behavior with solution design functionality, for starters.

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Post suggeriti
  • 0 Votes
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    Fedify 1.10.0: Observability foundations for the future debug dashboard Fedify is a #TypeScript framework for building #ActivityPub servers that participate in the #fediverse. It reduces the complexity and boilerplate typically required for ActivityPub implementation while providing comprehensive federation capabilities. We're excited to announce #Fedify 1.10.0, a focused release that lays critical groundwork for future debugging and observability features. Released on December 24, 2025, this version introduces infrastructure improvements that will enable the upcoming debug dashboard while maintaining full backward compatibility with existing Fedify applications. This release represents a transitional step toward Fedify 2.0.0, introducing optional capabilities that will become standard in the next major version. The changes focus on enabling richer observability through OpenTelemetry enhancements and adding prefix scanning capabilities to the key–value store interface. Enhanced OpenTelemetry instrumentation Fedify 1.10.0 significantly expands OpenTelemetry instrumentation with span events that capture detailed ActivityPub data. These enhancements enable richer observability and debugging capabilities without relying solely on span attributes, which are limited to primitive values. The new span events provide complete activity payloads and verification status, making it possible to build comprehensive debugging tools that show the full context of federation operations: activitypub.activity.received event on activitypub.inbox span — records the full activity JSON, verification status (activity verified, HTTP signatures verified, Linked Data signatures verified), and actor information activitypub.activity.sent event on activitypub.send_activity span — records the full activity JSON and target inbox URL activitypub.object.fetched event on activitypub.lookup_object span — records the fetched object's type and complete JSON-LD representation Additionally, Fedify now instruments previously uncovered operations: activitypub.fetch_document span for document loader operations, tracking URL fetching, HTTP redirects, and final document URLs activitypub.verify_key_ownership span for cryptographic key ownership verification, recording actor ID, key ID, verification result, and the verification method used These instrumentation improvements emerged from work on issue #234 (Real-time ActivityPub debug dashboard). Rather than introducing a custom observer interface as originally proposed in #323, we leveraged Fedify's existing OpenTelemetry infrastructure to capture rich federation data through span events. This approach provides a standards-based foundation that's composable with existing observability tools like Jaeger, Zipkin, and Grafana Tempo. Distributed trace storage with FedifySpanExporter Building on the enhanced instrumentation, Fedify 1.10.0 introduces FedifySpanExporter, a new OpenTelemetry SpanExporter that persists ActivityPub activity traces to a KvStore. This enables distributed tracing support across multiple nodes in a Fedify deployment, which is essential for building debug dashboards that can show complete request flows across web servers and background workers. The new @fedify/fedify/otel module provides the following types and interfaces: import { MemoryKvStore } from "@fedify/fedify"; import { FedifySpanExporter } from "@fedify/fedify/otel"; import { BasicTracerProvider, SimpleSpanProcessor, } from "@opentelemetry/sdk-trace-base"; const kv = new MemoryKvStore(); const exporter = new FedifySpanExporter(kv, { ttl: Temporal.Duration.from({ hours: 1 }), }); const provider = new BasicTracerProvider(); provider.addSpanProcessor(new SimpleSpanProcessor(exporter)); The stored traces can be queried for display in debugging interfaces: // Get all activities for a specific trace const activities = await exporter.getActivitiesByTraceId(traceId); // Get recent traces with summary information const recentTraces = await exporter.getRecentTraces({ limit: 100 }); The exporter supports two storage strategies depending on the KvStore capabilities. When the list() method is available (preferred), it stores individual records with keys like [prefix, traceId, spanId]. When only cas() is available, it uses compare-and-swap operations to append records to arrays stored per trace. This infrastructure provides the foundation for implementing a comprehensive debug dashboard as a custom SpanExporter, as outlined in the updated implementation plan for issue #234. Optional list() method for KvStore interface Fedify 1.10.0 adds an optional list() method to the KvStore interface for enumerating entries by key prefix. This method enables efficient prefix scanning, which is useful for implementing features like distributed trace storage, cache invalidation by prefix, and listing related entries. interface KvStore { // ... existing methods list?(prefix?: KvKey): AsyncIterable<KvStoreListEntry>; } When the prefix parameter is omitted or empty, list() returns all entries in the store. This is useful for debugging and administrative purposes. All official KvStore implementations have been updated to support this method: MemoryKvStore — filters in-memory keys by prefix SqliteKvStore — uses LIKE query with JSON key pattern PostgresKvStore — uses array slice comparison RedisKvStore — uses SCAN with pattern matching and key deserialization DenoKvStore — delegates to Deno KV's built-in list() API WorkersKvStore — uses Cloudflare Workers KV list() with JSON key prefix pattern While list() is currently optional to give existing custom KvStore implementations time to add support, it will become a required method in Fedify 2.0.0 (tracked in issue #499). This migration path allows implementers to gradually adopt the new capability throughout the 1.x release cycle. The addition of list() support was implemented in pull request #500, which also included the setup of proper testing infrastructure for WorkersKvStore using Vitest with @cloudflare/vitest-pool-workers. NestJS 11 and Express 5 support Thanks to a contribution from Cho Hasang (@crohasang@hackers.pub), the @fedify/nestjs package now supports NestJS 11 environments that use Express 5. The peer dependency range for Express has been widened to ^4.0.0 || ^5.0.0, eliminating peer dependency conflicts in modern NestJS projects while maintaining backward compatibility with Express 4. This change, implemented in pull request #493, keeps the workspace catalog pinned to Express 4 for internal development and test stability while allowing Express 5 in consuming applications. What's next Fedify 1.10.0 serves as a stepping stone toward the upcoming 2.0.0 release. The optional list() method introduced in this version will become required in 2.0.0, simplifying the interface contract and allowing Fedify internals to rely on prefix scanning being universally available. The enhanced #OpenTelemetry instrumentation and FedifySpanExporter provide the foundation for implementing the debug dashboard proposed in issue #234. The next steps include building the web dashboard UI with real-time activity lists, filtering, and JSON inspection capabilities—all as a separate package that leverages the standards-based observability infrastructure introduced in this release. Depending on the development timeline and feature priorities, there may be additional 1.x releases before the 2.0.0 migration. For developers building custom KvStore implementations, now is the time to add list() support to prepare for the eventual 2.0.0 upgrade. The implementation patterns used in the official backends provide clear guidance for various storage strategies. Acknowledgments Special thanks to Cho Hasang (@crohasang@hackers.pub) for the NestJS 11 compatibility improvements, and to all community members who provided feedback and testing for the new observability features. For the complete list of changes, bug fixes, and improvements, please refer to the CHANGES.md file in the repository. #fedidev #release
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    I hate to glaze anything too much... but Fosstodon is pretty cool, I'd say. If you moved instances during the troubles you should really consider making your way back home! Miss u <3#Mastodon #Fosstodon #Fediverse #ActivityPub
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    https://fedidb.com/software "By platform" is a fuzzy request given the interoperable nature of the fediverse. This list is broken up by software, so Lemmy/PieFed/mbin are listed separately even though their users share and interact as if they were all on one platform.
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    @linuxeasy Ciao 🙂 un consiglio per usare al meglio Mastodon: gli hashtag è meglio metterli alla fine del post, separati da una riga vuota dal testo.In questo modo risultano meno invasivi nella lettura e il link diventa molto più chiaro e comodo da cliccare 😉così:Mastodon evolve: nuovi servizi a pagamento per aziende e istituzioni, tra hosting, moderazione e supporto. Ma il Fediverse resta decentralizzato e libero.https://www.linuxeasy.org/mastodon-servizi-a-pagamento/?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=jetpack_social#Mastodon #Fediverse #OpenSource #SocialMedia #Linux