FileGator vs Syncthing

TaglineMulti-user PHP file manager with a modern single-page frontendContinuous peer-to-peer file synchronization between your own devices
CategoryFile Storage & SyncFile Storage & Sync
ReplacesDropbox, Google Drive, BoxDropbox, Google Drive
GitHub stars3k85k
LanguagePHPGo
LicenseMITMPL-2.0
Self-host difficulty
2/5
Easy
2/5
Easy
Deploy options
Docker
Manual
Docker
Manual
Managed hosting
Last updated27 days ago2 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.

FileGator
  • No sync clients for desktop or mobile; purely web-based access
  • No file versioning or trash with recovery
  • No real-time collaborative editing or commenting on files
  • LDAP/SSO integration is not built-in; custom auth requires code changes
Syncthing
  • Pure peer-to-peer sync: no cloud copy, so files only exist where a device is online (no always-available server unless you run one)
  • No web file browser, sharing links, or per-file access control like Dropbox
  • No built-in versioning UI beyond simple file versioning options
  • Not designed for multi-user team sharing; it's device-to-device for one owner

Bottom line

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

FileGator

Multi-user PHP file manager with a modern single-page frontend

Syncthing

Continuous peer-to-peer file synchronization between your own devices