This GitHub repository provides a simple script that can pull missing posts into Mastodon using the Mastodon API. FediFetcher has no further dependencies, and can be run as either a GitHub Action, as a scheduled cron job, or a pre-packaged container. Here is what FediFetcher can do:
- It can pull missing remote replies to posts that are already on your server into your server. Specifically, it can
- fetch missing replies to posts that users on your instance have already replied to,
- fetch missing replies to the most recent posts in your home timeline,
- fetch missing replies to your bookmarks.
- fetch missing replies to your favourites.
- It can also backfill profiles on your instance. In particular it can
- fetch missing posts from users that have recently appeared in your notifications,
- fetch missing posts from users that you have recently followed,
- fetch missing posts form users that have recently followed you,
- fetch missing posts form users that have recently sent you a follow request.
Each part of this script is fully configurable, and you can completely disable parts that you are not interested in.
FediFetcher will store posts and profiles it has already pulled in on disk, to prevent re-fetching the same info in subsequent executions.
Be aware, that this script may run for a very long time. This is particularly true, the first time this script runs, and/or if you enable all parts of this script. You should ensure that you take steps to prevent multiple overlapping executions of this script, as that will lead to unpleasant results. There are detailed instructions for this below.
For detailed information on the how and why, please read the FediFetcher for Mastodon page.
FediFetcher makes use of the Mastodon API. It'll run against any instance implementing this API, and whilst it was built for Mastodon, it's been confirmed working against Pleroma as well.
FediFetcher will pull in posts and profiles from any servers running the following software: Mastodon, Pleroma, Akkoma, Pixelfed, Hometown, Misskey, Firefish (Calckey), Foundkey, and Lemmy.
You can run FediFetcher either as a GitHub Action, as a scheduled cron job on your local machine/server, or from a pre-packed container.
Regardless of how you want to run FediFetcher, you must first get an access token:
- In Mastodon go to Preferences > Development > New Application
- Give it a nice name
- Enable the required scopes for your options. You could tick
read
andadmin:read:accounts
, or see below for a list of which scopes are required for which options. - Save
- Copy the value of
Your access token
- Go to GetAuth for Mastodon
- Type in your Mastodon instance's domain
- Copy the token.
Run FediFetcher as a GitHub Action, a cron job, or a container:
- Fork this repository
- Add your access token:
- Go to Settings > Secrets and Variables > Actions
- Click New Repository Secret
- Supply the Name
ACCESS_TOKEN
and provide the Token generated above as Secret
- Create a file called
config.json
with your configuration options in the repository root. Do NOT include the Access Token in yourconfig.json
! - Finally go to the Actions tab and enable the action. The action should now automatically run approximately once every 10 min.
Note
Keep in mind that the schedule event can be delayed during periods of high loads of GitHub Actions workflow runs.
- Clone this repository.
- Install requirements:
pip install -r requirements.txt
- Create a
json
file with your configuration options. You may wish to store this in the./artifacts
directory, as that directory is.gitignore
d - Then simply run this script like so:
python find_posts.py -c=./artifacts/config.json
.
If desired, all configuration options can be provided as command line flags, instead of through a JSON file. An example script can be found in the examples
folder.
When using a cronjob, we are using file based locking to avoid multiple overlapping executions of the script. The timeout period for the lock can be configured using lock-hours
.
Note
If you are running FediFetcher locally, my recommendation is to run it manually once, before turning on the cron job: The first run will be significantly slower than subsequent runs, and that will help you prevent overlapping during that first run.
FediFetcher is also available in a pre-packaged container, FediFetcher - Thank you @nikdoof.
- Pull the container from
ghcr.io
, using Docker or your container tool of choice:docker pull ghcr.io/nanos/fedifetcher:latest
- Run the container, passing the configurations options as command line arguments:
docker run -it ghcr.io/nanos/fedifetcher:latest --access-token=<TOKEN> --server=<SERVER>
Note
The same rules for running this as a cron job apply to running the container: don't overlap any executions.
Persistent files are stored in /app/artifacts
within the container, so you may want to map this to a local folder on your system.
An example Kubernetes CronJob for running the container is included in the examples
folder.
An example Docker Compose Script for running the container periodically is included in the examples
folder.
See systemd.md
FediFetcher has quite a few configuration options, so here is my quick configuration advice, that should probably work for most people:
Warning
Do NOT include your
access-token
in theconfig.json
when running FediFetcher as GitHub Action. When running FediFetcher as GitHub Action ALWAYS set the Access Token as an Action Secret.
{
"access-token": "Your access token",
"server": "your.mastodon.server",
"home-timeline-length": 200,
"max-followings": 80,
"from-notifications": 1
}
If you configure FediFetcher this way, it'll fetch missing remote replies to the last 200 posts in your home timeline. It'll additionally backfill profiles of the last 80 people you followed, and of every account who appeared in your notifications during the past hour.
Please find the list of all configuration options, including descriptions, below:
Option | Required? | Notes |
---|---|---|
access-token |
Yes | The access token. If using GitHub action, this needs to be provided as a Secret called ACCESS_TOKEN . If running as a cron job or a container, you can supply this option as array, to fetch posts for multiple users on your instance. |
server |
Yes | The domain only of your mastodon server (without https:// prefix) e.g. mstdn.thms.uk . |
home-timeline-length |
No | Provide to fetch remote replies to posts in the API-Key owner's home timeline. Determines how many posts we'll fetch replies for. Recommended value: 200 . |
max-bookmarks |
No | Provide to fetch remote replies to any posts you have bookmarked. Determines how many of your bookmarks you want to get replies to. Recommended value: 80 . Requires an access token with read:bookmarks scope. |
max-favourites |
No | Provide to fetch remote replies to any posts you have favourited. Determines how many of your favourites you want to get replies to. Recommended value: 40 . Requires an access token with read:favourites scope. |
max-followings |
No | Provide to backfill profiles for your most recent followings. Determines how many of your last followings you want to backfill. Recommended value: 80 . |
max-followers |
No | Provide to backfill profiles for your most recent followers. Determines how many of your last followers you want to backfill. Recommended value: 80 . |
max-follow-requests |
No | Provide to backfill profiles for the API key owner's most recent pending follow requests. Determines how many of your last follow requests you want to backfill. Recommended value: 80 . |
from-notifications |
No | Provide to backfill profiles of anyone mentioned in your recent notifications. Determines how many hours of notifications you want to look at. Requires an access token with read:notifications scope. Recommended value: 1 , unless you run FediFetcher less than once per hour. |
reply-interval-in-hours |
No | Provide to fetch remote replies to posts that have received replies from users on your own instance. Determines how far back in time we'll go to find posts that have received replies. You must be administrator on your instance to use this option, and this option is not supported on Pleroma / Akkoma and its forks. Recommend value: 0 (disabled). Requires an access token with admin:read:accounts . |
backfill-with-context |
No | Set to 0 to disable fetching remote replies while backfilling profiles. This is enabled by default, but you can disable it, if it's too slow for you. |
backfill-mentioned-users |
No | Set to 0 to disable backfilling any mentioned users when fetching the home timeline. This is enabled by default, but you can disable it, if it's too slow for you. |
remember-users-for-hours |
No | How long between back-filling attempts for non-followed accounts? Defaults to 168 , i.e. one week. |
remember-hosts-for-days |
No | How long should FediFetcher cache host info for? Defaults to 30 . |
http-timeout |
No | The timeout for any HTTP requests to the Mastodon API in seconds. Defaults to 5 . |
lock-hours |
No | Determines after how many hours a lock file should be discarded. Not relevant when running the script as GitHub Action, as concurrency is prevented using a different mechanism. Recommended value: 24 . |
lock-file |
No | Location for the lock file. If not specified, will use lock.lock under the state directory. Not relevant when running the script as GitHub Action. |
state-dir |
No | Directory storing persistent files, and the default location for lock file. Not relevant when running the script as GitHub Action. |
on-start |
No | Optionally provide a callback URL that will be pinged when processing is starting. A query parameter rid={uuid} will automatically be appended to uniquely identify each execution. This can be used to monitor your script using a service such as healthchecks.io. |
on-done |
No | Optionally provide a callback URL that will be called when processing is finished. A query parameter rid={uuid} will automatically be appended to uniquely identify each execution. This can be used to monitor your script using a service such as healthchecks.io. |
on-fail |
No | Optionally provide a callback URL that will be called when processing has failed. A query parameter rid={uuid} will automatically be appended to uniquely identify each execution. This can be used to monitor your script using a service such as healthchecks.io. |
If you wish to run FediFetcher for multiple users on your instance, you can supply the access-token
as an array, with different access tokens for different users. That will allow you to fetch replies and/or backfill profiles for multiple users on your account.
This is only supported when running FediFetcher as cron job, or container. Multi-user support is not available when running FediFetcher as GitHub Action.
- For all actions, your access token must include these scopes:
read:search
read:statuses
read:accounts
- If you are supplying
reply-interval-in-hours
you must additionally enable this scope:admin:read:accounts
- If you are supplying
max-follow-requests
you must additionally enable this scope:read:follows
- If you are supplying
max-bookmarks
you must additionally enable this scope:read:bookmarks
- If you are supplying
max-favourites
you must additionally enable this scope:read:favourites
- If you are supplying
from-notifications
you must additionally enable this scope:read:notifications
The original inspiration of this script, as well as parts of its implementation are taken from Abhinav Sarkar. Thank you Abhinav!