AList vs miniserve

TaglineFile list program supporting multiple storages, with WebDAV and web UISingle-binary CLI tool to serve files and directories over HTTP
CategoryFile Storage & SyncFile Storage & Sync
ReplacesGoogle Drive, DropboxDropbox, Google Drive
GitHub stars50k7.7k
LanguageGoRust
LicenseAGPL-3.0MIT
Self-host difficulty
2/5
Easy
2/5
Easy
Deploy options
Docker
Manual
Docker
Manual
Managed hosting
Last updated13 days ago17 days ago
View repoView repo

Where each falls short

The honest trade-offs — what you give up with each, versus the proprietary tools they replace.

AList
  • Primarily a read/list and aggregation layer; not a true two-way sync engine like Dropbox
  • No native desktop/mobile sync clients (relies on WebDAV)
  • Limited collaboration, versioning, and team permission features
  • Documentation is partly Chinese-first and can lag for some backends
miniserve
  • No user accounts or per-user permissions; authentication is a single shared password
  • No persistent file management, versioning, or trash/restore
  • Not designed for multi-user concurrent collaboration
  • No sync client; purely a temporary HTTP-based share mechanism

Bottom line

Both are a similar lift to self-host; choose AList for the larger community and ecosystem. AList has seen more recent development. Open each guide below for deploy steps and the full feature gap.

AList

File list program supporting multiple storages, with WebDAV and web UI

miniserve

Single-binary CLI tool to serve files and directories over HTTP