Hello, i am looking for a self hosted application for sharing files like with wetransfer. I have tried the discontinued Firefox Send which has nice features like link expiry and works great in general but lacks authentication (only offers simple password protection). I also want the option to share with registered users. Is there anything similar out there? Thanks
I guess nextcloud could do it, but you get a whole lot more in the same package.
Yeah, I’ve used Nextcloud for this in the past too, but it looks like there’s a ton of other options as well judging by this thread.
Yeah, sftpgo.com seems to have a nice web frontend for users while also benefitting from all that sftp offers. Free open-source with paid support. https://github.com/drakkan/sftpgo
This is a bit overkill for my purposes…i just need the filesharing part…
No personal experience with it but this project seem to be interesting for your use case and have a docker so it’s easy to test:
https://github.com/filebrowser/filebrowserFilebrowser is awesome, but I dont think you can share files with non users.
It supports sharing via public link. But I don’t think it has sharing with registered users via username.
Dang I didnt know that, my bad…
Croc has worked nicely for me when I had to transfer very large files. I’ll check out Korra next time if “async” means it will start transferring once the first file is hashed. That always annoyed me about Croc and I’d manually break my transfers into chunks because I didn’t want to wait 10min before even one file was transferred.
Not really. It’s async in the sense that you can send a file now, and the server will hold it in an encrypted state until your recipient comes to collect it.
Ah, so it’s not [necessarily] a direct transfer between peers.
Nope. It’s definitely not. The idea is just to make it safe® to share files within an organisation. The assumption is that for direct P2P sharing you’ll want something simpler like Croc.
Seafile. I’ve used it for years, but I’m moving over to nextcloud as I could use other features it provides. They have paid options too, but unless you need LDAP or something more sophisticated for user management the community edition works just fine.
Lufi is exaclly that, demo here: https://lufi.fiat-tux.fr/
Does it offer user registration?
Um, unfortunetly no, sorry.
I use Pingvin only thing it does not have is sharing with registered users but it seems that feature has been requested so might be added at some point.
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You mean https://www.liquidfiles.com/? I prefer open source…
I think http://www.youtransfer.io is a wettasfer clone. Works perfectly.
Looks like it does not have user registration, does it?
It does not, it’s meant to be single use as far as I know. But the link expiry can be customised
Try out fileshelter. It’s super lightweight and works pretty reliably.
Vault warden Send Pair drop is also neat (an airdrop replacement)
I use Gokapi
You can selfhost Bitwarden/Vaultwarden (which I recommend, since it’s rewritten in Rust and you get all the premium features for free) and use Bitwarden Send. This is probably more secure than most other options.
Though for the actual password selfhosting part of it, that is too much for my blood. Much higher chance that I would seriously fuck something up and lose access to hundreds of services than the remote bitwarden server gets compromised or becomes too shitty to use.
You can continue using the cloud hosted version of Bitwarden and only use your own instance for file sharing.
Or pay the astoundingly low $10/yr for Premium and use Send on the cloud servers.
Sure, I’ve been a premium customer for years because I find the service very useful, but this community is all about selfhosting.
True enough, but I like to slide in an ad in for Bitwarden every once in a while. I don’t think my $10 alone is going to keep them afloat :)
I’m pretty sure Bitwarden is profitable, about a year ago they even purchased another company: https://bitwarden.com/blog/bitwarden-extends-passwordless-leadership-with-acquisition/
Also, I don’t think they make that much money from individuals. They focus more on businesses, because they pay more and these customers stay around for a long time, they can’t easily switch to a different solution.
If you have regular backups, not an issue. I use bitwarden self hosted through home assistant, which makes daily backups trivial.
Since no one mentioned, there’s a Firefox send fork alive, send.vis.ee or src GitHub.com/timvisee/send
Send is super cool! Fixed you link: https://timvisee.com/projects/send/