what happens when user and community have the same name

submitted by ex_06

From mastodon to follow an account or a community on lemmy you use the @name@server format and there is no difference between a community name and a user-name

so i was wondering if anyone tried and checked what happened

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25 Comments

catloaf

On Lemmy? Nothing, works fine. On Mastodon? Not sure, maybe someone in a Mastodon community would know.

Mannivu

They would be identified by their instance. You can't have two identical usernames in the same instance. So you won't have John@mastodon.social twice. Buy you could have John@mastodon.social and John@mastodon.world, for example.

sugar_in_your_tea

That's not the question though. The question is what if I make a user called "@Lemmy@lemmy.ml" (i.e. this community)? That's probably allowed on Lemmy, but since Mastodon doesn't have the concept of communities in nearly the same way, what would happen?

fmstrat , edited

That's not how Lemmy works. Lemmy uses Actor URLs of https://host.tld/u/user which is referenced via @user@host.tld, and communities are https://host.tld/c/community referenced as !community@host.tld. So there is no overlap.

@ex_06@slrpnk.net

!lemmy@lemmy.ml

sugar_in_your_tea

I'm talking about mastodon interacting with Lemmy, not Lemmy interacting with itself.

ex_06 [OP]

Thank you for taking your time to answer for me!

fmstrat

I don't follow.. Lemmy and Mastodon both require port 443, so a single hostname of lemmy.ml can't run both. Lemmy and Mastodon handle users the same way, just Mastodon doesn't have !communities.

PhilipTheBucket

What should happen: The backend checks if you're trying to create a community that has the same name as a user, or vice versa, and refuses to do it because that would be confusing, since a lot of ways of referring to an entity on Lemmy use the exact same format for the user and the community.

What does happen: Have fun with confusing!

davel

Inside the Lemmyverse and its API, it’s not confusing at all. Outside of the Lemmyverse there be dragons.

PhilipTheBucket

I made an SMTP server that treats email addresses as case sensitive. When it gets mail for Philip@ponder.cat, it refuses to deliver it to philip@ponder.cat, and it allows users to create himbo@ponder.cat and Himbo@ponder.cat as two distinct addresses. Within my server, it's not confusing at all. Outside of my server, there be dragons.

Björn Tantau

You monster!

Now, what happens when one uses different cases in the domain part?

Poach

Round robin arbitration.

Billegh

You joke, but gmail does this with dots in email. There is no difference to gmail between fartmaster@gmail.com and f.a.r.t.m.a.s.t.e.r@gmail.com. Not really any dragons here, but can create confusion if you're unaware.

Björn Tantau

Nah, Gmail does the exact opposite of what their server does. Gmail is extra lenient with how an address may look. While their server is extra strict.

PhilipTheBucket

Correct. Gmail is doing it right, by anticipating how their server's behavior might confuse people or lead to email going to the wrong mailbox, and making extra complexity to make sure the behavior makes sense. Lemmy is doing it wrong, in this instance.

PhilipTheBucket

Just wanted to let you know: I was trying to resubscribe to !world@lemmy.world so I could say something. I went to the search box, typed "world@lemmy.world", got a bunch of results including world@lemmy.world at the end, clicked on it, but it was the user @world@lemmy.world, not the community. I couldn't find the community in the list.

It's no kind of difficulty to work around the problem, of course. But it was a clear instance of me wanting the software to do something, the software messing up because it's allowing multiple entities with the same identifier to exist, and me having to go back and try another way. It actually couldn't find the community when I limited the search to communities, either, and I had to type the URL. No idea what that's about. But yes, it's a cause of minor malfunctions like this.

davel , edited

When you do a search, the default is “All,” which is why your search results had a bit of everything. If you had chosen “Users” or “Communities” then you would have gotten only users or only communities, respectively.

PhilipTheBucket

It actually couldn’t find the community when I limited the search to communities, either, and I had to type the URL. No idea what that’s about

https://lemmy.ml/search?q=world%40lemmy.world&type=Communities&listingType=All&page=1&sort=TopAll

Notice no community result.

https://lemmy.ml/search?q=world%40lemmy.world&type=All&listingType=All&page=1&sort=TopAll

Also no community result. On my instance, I could scroll to the end of the list, and when the call to the resolve endpoint returns, the *user* but not the community gets added as a single entry to the very end. Like I say, no idea what that's about, although it seems to be a bug distinct from the bug I'm describing,

https://lemmy.ml/search?q=https%3A%2F%2Flemmy.world%2Fc%2Fworld&type=Communities&listingType=All&page=1&sort=TopAll

Also doesn't work? That's a little strange, honestly. Like I say, no idea. I'm just describing the somewhat different but also wrong behavior I see on my instance.

davel

You’re putting the instance name ("@lemmy.world") in the search term, which is why the searches are failing. If you already know the user or community you’re looking for, then why would you be searching for it? You already have it! - https://lemmy.ml/search?type=Communities&q=blah - https://lemmy.ml/search?type=Users&q=blah

fmstrat , edited

What formats are the same? Users are /u and @ while communities are /c and !. No overlap to check for. Mastodon is where the confusion comes in.

n2burns , edited

We can try it out since there is both @lemmy@lemmy.ml and !lemmy@lemmy.ml

When I searched for lemmy@lemmy.ml on Mastodon (specifically masto.ai), I got the community, not the user. Not sure *why*, but that's what I got.