miniserve vs Rclone

TaglineSingle-binary CLI tool to serve files and directories over HTTPCommand-line program to sync files across 70+ cloud storage providers
CategoryFile Storage & SyncFile Storage & Sync
ReplacesDropbox, Google DriveDropbox, Google Drive, Box
GitHub stars7.7k58k
LanguageRustGo
LicenseMITMIT
Self-host difficulty
2/5
Easy
2/5
Easy
Deploy options
Docker
Manual
Docker
Manual
Managed hosting
Last updated17 days agoyesterday
View repoView repo

Where each falls short

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

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
Rclone
  • Primarily a CLI tool; no polished consumer GUI or always-on sync daemon out of the box (the web GUI is experimental)
  • No multi-user accounts, sharing links, or collaboration features
  • Real-time continuous sync requires scripting or third-party scheduling
  • Steep learning curve for non-technical users compared to a Dropbox app

Bottom line

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

miniserve

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

Rclone

Command-line program to sync files across 70+ cloud storage providers