PairDrop: Local/remote file sharing in your browser/mobile. Inspired by AirDrop. Fork & alternative of Snapdrop
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@necrevistonnezr As with any custom app, they're manual.
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@necrevistonnezr Adding to what @robi said, the easy installer method is just a way to help others to try and test the custom app. You should not use a custom app like a official Cloudron App. You may have seen the "unstable" marked Apps in Cloudron App Store? A custom App is much more "unstable" than that.
However, thank you for asking this question as it shows that we should put a Note of this to the custom Apps README to avoid misunderstandings.
What about something like this as a Disclaimer?
Warning: Not Production Ready
Please note that this project is not intended for production use. It is only a project to make it possible to deploy this app on Cloudron. Deploying this app manually on Cloudron requires advanced knowledge of Linux, the Cloudron CLI, and Docker.
Using a precreated Docker Image from an external source for easy installation comes with risks. You need to trust the Image Provider if you choose this installation method.
Before proceeding with the installation, please ensure that you understand the potential risks involved and take appropriate precautions to protect your system and data.
By continuing with the installation, you acknowledge and accept full responsibility for any consequences that may arise from using this project.
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@Kubernetes
It works! Really, you are brilliant and I absolutely love it when you make applications like this accessible to people like this. Thank you for your work on the easy-installer, which is really well named.Thanks also to @jdaviescoates for pointing me to this thread in so timely a fashion.
I might have found a bug. If you use this procedure to install the application, and then later change your mind about the location and try and run it on another sub-domain, it won't run. With Cloudron applications, that is usually very easy. I tried restarting and that didn't solve it.
For example, lets say you install here:
and later decide to change the location to:
that won't work.
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@LoudLemur Thank you for the feedback. Interesting use case, I never tried to move the application afterwards to another location. I may try myself, but what happens when you do that?
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@Kubernetes In my case, the application just didn't load. I waited a while. Maybe I should have waited even longer.
Also, it might or might not be a good idea to try installing it onto the Cloudron demo, and maybe even making that a standard procedure, though there may be strong arguments against this. Anyway, people might be able to use a demo instance to verify things are working.
I also think a short explainer video on how to use it could help.
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@LoudLemur Changing the subdomain is not supported for easy-installer apps. I have already put a comment to the package template for future use.
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I tried using my remote instance. I didn't have success.
I connected to the instance using a regular browser, and that went OK and I was able to enter a public room. Then, from the same machine, but using TOR, I tried to visit the instance again. The TOR visit never saw the file being shared, and the TOR visitor never appeared on the pairshare radar.
If you try this using Brave Browser's weak TOR, there is no error message, however on TOR Browser, the following is received:
To use this PairDrop instance, WebRTC must be enabled!
I think a note about enabling WebRTC and how to toggle/untoggle that would be a good addition to the documentation.
https://myownconference.com/blog/en/webrtc/
One piece of documentation that would be handy is a short "How To" explaining how to verify pairdrop is going OK, before you start letting others use it.
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@Kubernetes is amazing!
I got it going ok. I used a Brave browser nightly without any lockdowns or extensions that disable webRTC to e.g. prevent webRTC leaks.
I expect a ton of people are going to run into this webRTC issue and we should offer some guidance on how to make it work smoothly the first time.
Thank you very much, yet again, @kubernetes!
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@LoudLemur @girish posted that the Repo has been blocked by Github (for whatever reason)
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I have a feature I would like: anonymity.
Mouse wants to share a cheese picture with Hamster, so he sets it up and waits for Hamster to arrive. Whilst doing so, Mouse also wants to share a picture of some milk with Cat. However, Mouse doesn't want Cat to bump into Hamster on the pairdrop. Mouse doesn't want to give Cat the cheese or Hamster the milk.
Can this be accomplished?
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@girish said in PairDrop: Local/remote file sharing in your browser/mobile. Inspired by AirDrop. Fork & alternative of Snapdrop:
Repo is back https://github.com/schlagmichdoch/PairDrop/issues/284 . I think they wait for some clarity on how to proceed since GitHub is not responding.
His github was flagged as spam. Flagging a github as spam is sometimes a vindictive ploy used by horrible people. It is a good reason to self-host.
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I have been using @Kubernetes version, and it works very well. I think it is ready for the main Repo.
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@LoudLemur You can do that with VaulWarden, if you are running it - the function is called "send" very goop in my eyes and offers a TON of security features
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@RazielKanos said in PairDrop: Local/remote file sharing in your browser/mobile. Inspired by AirDrop. Fork & alternative of Snapdrop:
@LoudLemur You can do that with VaulWarden, if you are running it - the function is called "send" very goop in my eyes and offers a TON of security features
Yes, I love that feature - I use it all the time to transmit sensitive documents
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