Creating a Custom Frontend

The backend and frontend are completely decoupled, and run in independent Docker containers. They only communicate over the Lemmy API, which makes it quite easy to write alternative frontends.

This creates a lot of potential for custom frontends, which could change much of the design and user experience of Lemmy. For example, it would be possible to create a frontend in the style of a traditional forum like phpBB, or a question-and-answer site like stackoverflow. All without having to think about database queries, authentification or ActivityPub, which you essentially get for free.

Development

You can use any language to create a custom frontend. The easiest option would be forking our official frontend, lemmy-lite, or the lemmy-frontend-example. In any case, the principle is the same: bind to LEMMY_EXTERNAL_HOST (default: localhost:8536) and handle requests using the Lemmy API at LEMMY_INTERNAL_HOST (default: lemmy:8536). Also use LEMMY_HTTPS to generate links with the correct protocol.

The next step is building a Docker image from your frontend. If you forked an existing project, it should already include a Dockerfile and instructions to build it. Otherwise, try searching for your language on dockerhub, official images usually have build instructions in their readme. Build a Docker image with a tag, then look for the following section in docker/dev/docker-compose.yml:

  lemmy-ui:
    image: dessalines/lemmy-ui:v0.8.10
    ports:
      - "1235:1234"
    restart: always
    environment:
      - LEMMY_INTERNAL_HOST=lemmy:8536
      - LEMMY_EXTERNAL_HOST=localhost:8536
      - LEMMY_HTTPS=false
    depends_on: 
      - lemmy

All you need to do is replace the value for image with the tag of your own Docker image (and possibly the environment variables if you need different ones). Then run ./docker_update.sh, and after compilation, your frontend will be available on http://localhost:1235. You can also make the same change to docker/federation/docker-compose.yml and run ./start-local-instances.bash to test federation with your frontend.

Deploy with Docker

After building the Docker image, you need to push it to a Docker registry (such as dockerhub). Then update the docker-compose.yml on your server, replacing the image for lemmy-ui, just as described above. Run docker-compose.yml, and after a short wait, your instance will use the new frontend.

Note, if your instance is deployed with Ansible, it will override docker-compose.yml with every run, reverting back to the default frontend. In that case you should copy the ansible/ folder from this project to your own repository, and adjust docker-compose.yml directly in the repo.

It is also possible to use multiple frontends for the same Lemmy instance, either using subdomains or subfolders. To do that, don't edit the lemmy-ui section in docker-compose.yml, but duplicate it, adjusting the name, image and port so they are distinct for each. Then edit your nginx config to pass requests to the appropriate frontend, depending on the subdomain or path.

Translations

You can add the lemmy-translations repository to your project as a git submodule. That way you can take advantage of same translations used in the official frontend, and you will also receive new translations contributed via weblate.

Rate limiting

Lemmy does rate limiting for many actions based on the client IP. But if you make any API calls on the server side (eg in the case of server-side rendering, or javascript pre-rendering), Lemmy will take the IP of the Docker container. Meaning that all requests come from the same IP, and get rate limited much earlier. To avoid this problem, you need to pass the headers X-REAL-IP and X-FORWARDED-FOR on to Lemmy (the headers are set by our nginx config).

Here is an example snipped for NodeJS:

function setForwardedHeaders(
  headers: IncomingHttpHeaders
): { [key: string]: string } {
  let out = {
    host: headers.host,
  };
  if (headers['x-real-ip']) {
    out['x-real-ip'] = headers['x-real-ip'];
  }
  if (headers['x-forwarded-for']) {
    out['x-forwarded-for'] = headers['x-forwarded-for'];
  }

  return out;
}

let headers = setForwardedHeaders(req.headers);
let client = new LemmyHttp(httpUri, headers);