What’s the context in which you’re needing to share files?
My first thought is host your own FTP server and send people credentials to log into it with and upload.
What’s the context in which you’re needing to share files?
My first thought is host your own FTP server and send people credentials to log into it with and upload.
I am a teaching assistant, and occasionally people ask me why their code isn't working. I take it to my device so they can continue their work whilst I figure out the issue. I want to minimise the uploading complexity, and the time it takes to upload one.
If you’re on the same network, take a look at snapdrop. It’s basically cross platform AirDrop.
"Snapdrop is now LimeWire". I didn't even know LimeWire still existed.
Looks like the project is dead…
I’m sure there’s a decent fork. Read the code; there’s not much to it!
There's PairDrop. It might have what you need. It's for transferring files rather than uploading and then downloading later. You could get creative with authentication. Maybe put files in an encrypted archive file.
I'll have to see if it works in my environment, but otherwise it looks cool! Thank you.
While I’m sure there’s a pre-canned tool out there for you, if you have basic software experience (which you seem to), this is one of those times where it’s usually most efficient to hack together a dumb CGI script and call it a day.
This prompt should get you most of the way there, using your llm of choice:
Write a minimalist cgi script to help upload files to a server. Upon a GET request, serve a light page with a centered form that takes in a file and a submission code. Submission codes will be stored on individual lines of a plaintext file. Adding new codes to this file is out of scope - but the codes will be 8-char hex strings (do validate that submission strings are not empty!). The script should accept the submission as a POST, and save the file to an upload dir if the submission code is valid.
Vet the output, harden as needed, setup a systemd service to serve with busybox httpd, and optionally reverse-proxy. If you’ve done this sorta thing before, you can probably knock it out in a half hour.
NextCloud allows you to share a folder but for upload only.
Is it a requirement that the files remain private? Because if what you're after is something more akin to publishing, distribution, or otherwise making them public for anyone to download, I might have something for you.
You could get around with a normal file share service (assuming you already are using one) via tinyurl or similar redirect. I don't know how much the free services track you or if they have other security implications, but I have couple of domains laying around and it would be pretty trivial to just create HTTP redirect from "class-a.up.mydomain.foo" to my nextcloud upload link.
Firefox Send is open source, even though the public service is no longer offered.
Here are some public instances and instructions for self hosting: https://github.com/timvisee/send-instances/tree/master?tab=readme-ov-file
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