I thought of this after a recent trip with some friends. We shared the photos when we were still in person. But sometimes we need to share a lot of photos over the internet. In the past, we have used a shared google drive directory for this. But I’d prefer a self-hosted option. There should be some sort of password protection as well (ideally per share, and no need for accounts). One should be able to both access the current files and upload new ones, just like google drive or dropbox.
I currently have FileShelter, which works for 1-to-1 sharing but not for groups. I guess something like ProjectSend would work, but it’s too complex for my usecase. I’d prefer something more lightweight since I’ll maybe use it once every few months. Also, it should be noob-friendly, and accessible using a browser.
Update: I’m very happy with copyparty. It does what I want, and much much more. I even replaced my older webdav server with it since it provides more granular control over share locations and permissions. Kudos to the developer @tripflag@lemmy.world!
Mind if I suggest my own software, copyparty?
Regarding authentication, someone who has an account (in this case just yourself) can create password-protected shares which other people can browse, or upload, or browse+upload to (configurable when creating the share).
There is WebDAV support, and it should integrate well enough with shares, but I haven’t tested that specifically.
It has photo and video thumbnails, and a basic image-viewer, and with some elbow-grease it can also show exif-tags (gps-coordinates etc).
There is also optional file dedup, so if two people upload the same file, it’ll detect and skip that during the 2nd upload (doesn’t waste any bandwidth) and swap out the new file with a symlink to the existing one. Default disabled to avoid surprising someone with symlinks.
I think the following command would be enough to get you started:
wget https://github.com/9001/copyparty/releases/latest/download/copyparty-sfx.py python3 copyparty-sfx.py -a sintan:yourpassword -v .::A,sintan --shr=/shr -e2dsa -e2ts
but since that’s entirely unreadable, you can do it with a config file instead,
[global] e2dsa # enable filesystem indexing e2ts # enable media indexing (music tags) shr: /shr # enable shares under this url [accounts] sintan: yourpassword [/] # create a volume at this url /srv/share/partypics # the filesystem path to share accs: sintan: A # give sintan read-write-move-delete-admin
and use it like this:
python3 copyparty-sfx.py -c the.conf
Hey, that looks awesome. I’ll try it out when I get back from work.
Edit: This is awesome! It satisfies my requirements and goes beyond. Great app!
To me, it’s always nice meeting the face behind the software. I have never used copyparty, but if I had a use case, it would be high on the list just based of the volume of detailed instructions. I think that is probably the most detailed selfhosted piece of software I’ve seen at GitHub…gotta be something good going on with that. And…and replete with pictures of the UI in a variety of scenarios. That’s just top drawer in my book. If a need ever arises, I have bookmarked it, because that’s where I’ll start. Awesome job my man, and thank you for your dedication to the craft.
Oh hey, this is just what I was looking for recently! I wanted to recommend PirateBox to another thread on here, but realised it was eol’ed six years back. This is pretty much similar usage, right?
Hadn’t heard about PirateBox before – love the concept, but nah aside from a small amount of overlap they’re very different things :-)
When users join the PirateBox wireless network and open a web browser, they are automatically redirected to the PirateBox welcome page. Users can anonymously chat, post images or comments on the bulletin board, watch or listen to streaming media, or upload and download files inside their web browser.
I guess if you put copyparty on a raspberry pi (or boot the copyparty live-cd on a nuc) then you get something vaguely similar – a wifi node where you can download and upload files, but none of the other stuff (chat, messageboard, captive portal). Maybe cool ideas for future spinoff projects hehe
Right, it was the local filesharing part (like at a W/LAN party) that I wanted to recommend pirate box for, so I overlooked the other functions 🙂
Either way, bookmarked your GH repo for future reference, excellent project!
Pictures specifically Immich.
But I don’t know how (well) it works without any password and shared albums.I use nextcloud for this. It’s a bit much for just simple file share, but it works for me.
Yeah, it’s a bit too much I think.
Too much what exactly? Don’t use the functionality you don’t want.
You still have manage upgrades due security vulns in all the features you are ignoring.
Storage, RAM, CPU usage. I prefer not to have such a large piece of software running for no reason. It might seem silly, but I hate using resources for no reason. I’ll rather have 5 lightweight apps running instead of a huge one, of which I’ll only use a few parts.
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This confuses me a bit, technically nextcloud is just a PHP script that only runs when you actually perform a page request.
If you don’t enable the Cron then it does even less than a normal install.
Many great options already but I would like to add filestash to the list. I did not test it out yet but maybe it fits your need.
I use https://filebrowser.org/ for this.
Nice lightweight filebrowsing/sharing with user management. Users can have their own dedicated directories, or collaborate.
You can also create share links that allow anyone with the link to view/download files. Optionally password protected.
Here’s a demo you can mess with: https://demo.filebrowser.org/ User: demo Pass: demo
Thanks, I took a look. It’s very close to what I want, but it still doesn’t support uploads in shared directories. It seems to be a pretty highly requested feature though. So maybe it’ll happen at some point.
You could setup a user account like the share you’re describing. There’s a setting to prevent the user from changing their password.
Just pass out those credentials to anyone you want to collaborate with; they don’t need their own individual accounts.
That’s a pretty good idea, actually. I’ll try that out. Thanks.
Yes, as @Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca says, just create a new user for each event you want to share photos about: ‘BeachBBQ’, ‘WeekendStay-July’ etc, then bind those user accounts to whatever folders you want to have the photos in and set the user restrictions to upload, share, but not delete for example.
I also use various FileBrowser instances, with a different subdomain pointing to them, also as a way to filter out usage as well.
collegefriends.mydomain.com
could take you to a FileBrowser instance that only has access to photos from a certain friend group. Not sure how useful that would be to you, but it’s another way of controlling the data flow.just create a new user for each event you want to share photos about: ‘BeachBBQ’, ‘WeekendStay-July’ etc
I use Immich for that. You just create a shared link and then tick the setting to allow other users to upload.
Won’t work for other filetypes though.
I’ve used WebDAV with Nephele:
https://hub.docker.com/r/sciactive/nephele
It works with multiple users and has built in browser support.
Owlfiles on mobile makes it easy to import all your photos to it.
Resilio Sync or Syncthing
Ah, just saw the browser requirement.
In nextcloud discussions I’ve heard of Seafile. I’ve never used it, so not sure what it’s capable of.
https://lychee.electerious.com/
Super small. Lightweight. Web focused. Only downside is no multi-user access. Setup an account to share between your friends, and give them the login information. Then they can upload albums, edit albums, whatever. Anything uploaded is private unless shared, then anyone with the link can view the photos.
Seems like a decent fit for you. They’re also working on multiple users.
I am currently super happy with https://sftpgo.com/
I think this one fits the bill ! From what I saw in the options you can even share a directory with multiple users while everyone has it’s own place and create public links… Never used these functions, but seems possible !
There’s also a webdav share functionality if thats something OP is interested in !
I still haven’t tried it but I think someone suggested sftpgo for a similar use case a couple of days ago.
Self-plug: PENEfiles! (yes it’s an unfortunate name but I didn’t know back then cuz I am not a native speaker). Comes with a tag system and file ownership management. Supports direct link sharing, and the whole website can be visited without logging in. Here is a detailed intro and here is the source code.
Seafile?
https://github.com/bewcloud/bewcloud
Is a new option I recently learned about.
Does this have a way of sharing a directory publicly?
Being worked on apparently.
Might take a look at NextCloud though it may be overkill as it’s intended to be a full Google Cloud or Office365 replacement. On the other hand, it is modular so you only have to set up what you actually need.
I’m strictly against Nextcloud or something similar. I prefer to run a bunch of lightweight apps, rather than one big one.
Maybe something like xbackbone? I’ve used it to share small-ish files and it works fine; I don’t know how much of a pain it would be to use for a group of people, but as long as everyone has an account they should be able to access files with a link.
This looks pretty promising. Do you know if it’s possible to add per-share passwords, so that I don’t need everyone to open an account?
Edit: It’s not.
Unfortunately that doesn’t seem possible, afaik. Although you could always create a zip file with a password, and share it with an open link (anyone with the link can download it, no need for account).
Yeah, but that’s already possible with my current setup using FileShelter. I’d like them to be able to upload as well.