Minifedi is a tool to quickly spin up a bunch of ActivityPub servers for local testing.
Minifedi is entirely self-contained and needs no changes to your system configuration besides installing Nix; you can install it with a git clone, delete it with rm -rf
, and your system will be exactly the way it was before.
- macOS or Linux (any distribution). Tested on x86_64, aarch64 should work. Other architectues probably won't due to poor Nix support, unfortunately.
- Windows isn't natively supported, but might work under WSL.
- A recent version of Nix.
- This doesn't mean you need to be on NixOS; Nix can be installed on more or less any distribution, and is happy to do its own thing without interfering with your system.
- ~4GB free on disk.
- ~4GB free in /tmp.
- On many Linux distributions, this means you'll need ~8GB of RAM.
- You might be able to get away with less if you disable GoToSocial.
- Ports 80 and 443 free.
- This is required because some (all) fedi software is only willing to federate with servers on the standard ports.
- macOS lets any user listen on these ports. On Linux, Minifedi will use sudo to gain the capability required to listen on these ports, then immediately switch back to your user and relinquish all other capabilties.
Minifedi is very new software. I'm fairly sure it won't break your system (it's designed very specifically to not do anything that possibly could) but it might not work either.
Minifedi is designed for testing only. The assumption is you'll happily throw out everything stored in it when you're done. Don't store anything you care about in an instance run by Minifedi.
Minifedi's goal is to "just work" on every machine. If the instructions below fail for you, please file an issue; I'll fix it if at all possible.
- Install Nix, if you haven't.
- If you install Nix through your OS package manager, you may need to add yourself to the
nix-users
group and/or ensure thenix-daemon
service is enabled.
- If you install Nix through your OS package manager, you may need to add yourself to the
-
git clone https://github.com/Gaelan/minifedi.git cd minifedi
- If you'd like, edit
config.nix
to customize which instances you get. By default, you get one each of Mastodon, Glitch, Akkoma, and GoToSocial, but you're welcome to disable some or run multiple copies of the same type. ./minifedi start
- Wait for stuff to build then start up; this should take 20-30 minutes.
- Semi-optional: Run
./minifedi install-cert
in another terminal to add Minifedi's root to your system certificate store.- This is a change to your system configuration, albeit a small one; as such, we'd like to make it optional. Currently, there are a few caveats if you don't:
- You'll see HTTPS errors in the browser. These can usually be clicked through; if they can't (possible after deleting
data
with software that enforces HSTS, like Mastodon), clear your browser's data for lvh.me and try again. - GoToSocial won't be able to federate on macOS. (It will on Linux, I think, but I haven't tested this.)
- You'll see HTTPS errors in the browser. These can usually be clicked through; if they can't (possible after deleting
- This is a change to your system configuration, albeit a small one; as such, we'd like to make it optional. Currently, there are a few caveats if you don't:
- Your instances should be running and accessible at INSTANCENAME.lvh.me (e.g. https://mastodon.lvh.me).
Each instance is created by default with five users:
- username
a
, email[email protected]
, passwordMiniFediA1!
, admin - username
b
, email[email protected]
, passwordMiniFediB1!
- username
c
, email[email protected]
, passwordMiniFediC1!
- username
d
, email[email protected]
, passwordMiniFediD1!
- username
e
, email[email protected]
, passwordMiniFediE1!
Enjoy your testing!
Minifedi currently supports the following:
- Mastodon
- Akkoma
- GoToSocial
Forks of the above should work fine as well, as long as they haven't changed anything about the build, installation, or configuration process.
Minifedi has built-in integration with mitmproxy, allowing you to see a lot of every HTTP request an instance sends to another instance. To use this, set mitmproxy = true;
in your config.nix
, start minifedi, then go to http://localhost:8081
. The mitmproxy integration currently requires ports 8080 and 8081 to be open.
rm -r data/
./minifedi mk-mastodon NAME REPO COMMIT-OR-TAG
# eg
./minifedi mk-mastodon mastodon-4.1.4 https://github.com/Mastodon/Mastodon.git v4.1.4
This'll create a directory in versions/mastodon
, which you can then refer to from your config.nix
.
Custom versions for Akkoma and GoToSocial aren't supported yet.
There isn't a good solution for this yet, but the plan is that you'll run your software locally however you usually do, with Minifedi's nginx running in front to serve it from a domain accessible to the other instances.