Notice: the default Send host is provided by @timvisee (info). Please consider to donate and help keep it running.
Easily and securely share files from the command line. A Send client.
Easily and securely share files and directories from the command line through a safe, private and encrypted link using a single simple command. Files are shared using the Send service and may be up to 1GB. Others are able to download these files with this tool, or through their web browser.
No demo visible here? View it on asciinema.
All files are always encrypted on the client, and secrets are never shared with the remote host. An optional password may be specified, and a default file lifetime of 1 (up to 20) download or 24 hours is enforced to ensure your stuff does not remain online forever. This provides a secure platform to share your files. Find out more about security here.
- Features
- Usage
- Requirements
- Install (Linux, macOS, Windows, FreeBSD, Android, Other OS/arch)
- Build
- Configuration and environment
- Security
- Help
- Special thanks
- License
The public Send service that is used as default host is provided by
@timvisee (info).
This application is not affiliated with Firefox or
Mozilla in any way.
Note: this tool is currently in beta, as some extra desired features are yet to be implemented
- Fully featured and friendly command line tool
- Upload and download files and directories securely, always encrypted on the client
- Additional password protection, generation and configurable download limits
- File and directory archiving and extraction
- Built-in share URL shortener and QR code generator
- Supports Send v3 (current) and v2
- History tracking your files for easy management
- Ability to use your own Send hosts
- Inspect or delete shared files
- Accurate error reporting
- Streaming encryption and uploading/downloading, very low memory footprint
- Intended for use in scripts without interaction
For a list of upcoming features and ideas, take a look at the current open issues over on GitLab.
Easily upload and download:
# Simple upload
$ ffsend upload my-file.txt
https://send.vis.ee/#sample-share-url
# Advanced upload
# - Specify a download limit of 1
# - Specify upload expiry time of 5 minutes
# - Enter a password to encrypt the file
# - Archive the file before uploading
# - Copy the shareable link to your clipboard
# - Open the shareable link in your browser
$ ffsend upload --downloads 1 --expiry-time 5m --password --archive --copy --open my-file.txt
Password: ******
https://send.vis.ee/#sample-share-url
# Upload to your own host
$ ffsend u -h https://example.com/ my-file.txt
https://example.com/#sample-share-url
# Simple download
$ ffsend download https://send.vis.ee/#sample-share-url
Inspect remote files:
# Check if a file exists
$ ffsend exists https://send.vis.ee/#sample-share-url
Exists: yes
# Fetch remote file info
$ ffsend info https://send.vis.ee/#sample-share-url
ID: b087066715
Name: my-file.txt
Size: 12 KiB
MIME: text/plain
Downloads: 0 of 10
Expiry: 18h2m (64928s)
Other commands include:
# View your file history
$ ffsend history
# LINK EXPIRE
1 https://send.vis.ee/#sample-share-url 23h57m
2 https://send.vis.ee/#other-sample-url 17h38m
3 https://example.com/#sample-share-url 37m30s
# Change the password after uploading
$ ffsend password https://send.vis.ee/#sample-share-url
Password: ******
# Delete a file
$ ffsend delete https://send.vis.ee/#sample-share-url
Use the --help
flag, help
subcommand, or see the help section for
all available subcommands.
- Linux, macOS, Windows, FreeBSD, Android (other BSDs might work)
- A terminal 😎
- Internet connection
- Linux:
- OpenSSL & CA certificates:
- Ubuntu, Debian and derivatives:
apt install openssl ca-certificates
- Ubuntu, Debian and derivatives:
- Optional:
xclip
orxsel
for clipboard support- Ubuntu, Debian and derivatives:
apt install xclip
- CentOS/Red Hat/openSUSE/Fedora:
yum install xclip
- Arch:
pacman -S xclip
- Ubuntu, Debian and derivatives:
- OpenSSL & CA certificates:
- Windows specific:
- Optional OpenSSL with
crypto-openssl
feature: » Installer (v1.1.0j
or above)
- Optional OpenSSL with
- macOS specific:
- Optional OpenSSL with
crypto-openssl
feature:brew install [email protected]
- Optional OpenSSL with
- FreeBSD specific:
- OpenSSL:
pkg install openssl
- CA certificates:
pkg install ca_root_nss
- Optional
xclip
&xsel
for clipboard support:pkg install xclip xsel-conrad
- OpenSSL:
- Android specific:
- Termux: » Termux
Because ffsend
is still in early stages, only limited installation options are
available right now. Feel free to contribute additional packages.
Make sure you meet and install the requirements.
See the operating system specific instructions below:
Using the snap package is recommended if supported.
Alternatively you may install it manually using the
prebuilt binaries.
Only 64-bit (x86_64
) packages and binaries are provided.
For other architectures and configurations you may compile from source.
More packages options will be coming soon.
Note: The ffsend
snap
package is isolated, and can only access files in
your home directory. Choose a different installation option if you don't want
this limitation.
Note: due to how snap
is configured by default, you won't be able to use the
package from some contexts such as through SSH without manual modifications. If
you're experiencing problems, please refer to a different installation method
such as the prebuilt binaries, or open an issue.
snap install ffsend
ffsend --help
» ffsend-bin
(precompiled binary, latest release, recommended)
» ffsend
(compiles from source, latest release)
» ffsend-git
(compiles from source, latest master
commit)
yay -S ffsend
# or
aurto add ffsend-bin
sudo pacman -S ffsend-bin
# or using any other AUR helper
ffsend --help
Note: The Nix package is currently not automatically updated, and might be slightly outdated.
nix-channel --update
nix-env --install ffsend
ffsend --help
Note: The Fedora package is maintained by contributors, and might be slightly outdated.
sudo dnf install ffsend
ffsend --help
Note: The Alpine package is maintained by contributors, it might be outdated. Choose a different installation method if an important update is missing.
apk add ffsend --repository=http://dl-cdn.alpinelinux.org/alpine/edge/testing
ffsend --help
Check out the latest release assets for Linux binaries.
Use the ffsend-v*-linux-x64-static
binary, to minimize the chance for issues.
If it isn't available yet, you may use an artifact from a
previous version instead, until it is available.
Make sure you meet and install the requirements before you continue.
You must make the binary executable, and may want to move it into /usr/bin
to
make it easily executable:
# Rename binary to ffsend
mv ./ffsend-* ./ffsend
# Mark binary as executable
chmod a+x ./ffsend
# Move binary into path, to make it easily usable
sudo mv ./ffsend /usr/local/bin/
ffsend --help
Using the homebrew
package is recommended.
Alternatively you may install it via MacPorts, or manually using the
prebuilt binaries.
Make sure you've homebrew
installed, and run:
brew install ffsend
ffsend --help
Note: ffsend in MacPorts is currently not automatically updated, and might be slightly outdated.
Once you have MacPorts installed, you can run:
sudo port selfupdate
sudo port install ffsend
Note: The Nix package is currently not automatically updated, and might be slightly outdated.
nix-channel --update
nix-env --install ffsend
ffsend --help
Check out the latest release assets for a macOS binary. If it isn't available yet, you may use an artifact from a previous version instead, until it is available.
Then, mark the downloaded binary as an executable.
You then may want to move it into /usr/local/bin/
to make the ffsend
command
globally available:
# Rename file to ffsend
mv ./ffsend-* ./ffsend
# Mark binary as executable
chmod a+x ./ffsend
# Move binary into path, to make it easily usable
sudo mv ./ffsend /usr/local/bin/
ffsend
Using the scoop
package is recommended.
Alternatively you may install it manually using the
prebuilt binaries.
If you're using the Windows Subsystem for Linux, it's highly recommended to install the prebuilt Linux binary instead.
Only 64-bit (x86_64
) binaries are provided.
For other architectures and configurations you may compile from source.
A chocolatey
package along with an .msi
installer will be coming soon.
Make sure you've scoop
installed, and run:
scoop install ffsend
ffsend --help
Check out the latest release assets for Windows binaries.
Use the ffsend-v*-windows-x64-static
binary, to minimize the chance for issues.
If it isn't available yet, you may use an artifact from a
previous version instead, until it is available.
You can use ffsend
from the command line in the same directory:
.\ffsend.exe --help
To make it globally invocable as ffsend
, you must make the binary available in
your systems PATH
. The easiest solution is to move it into System32
:
move .\ffsend.exe C:\Windows\System32\ffsend.exe
Note: The FreeBSD package is currently maintained by FreeBSD contributors, and might be slightly outdated.
# Precompiled binary.
pkg install ffsend
# Compiles and installs from source.
cd /usr/ports/www/ffsend && make install
ffsend
can be used on Android through Termux, install it first:
» Termux
Note: The Android package is currently maintained by Termux contributors, and might be slightly outdated.
# Install package.
pkg install ffsend
ffsend help
If your system runs Docker, you can use the docker image. There are currently no other binaries or packages available.
You can build the project from source instead.
A Docker image is available for using ffsend
running in a container.
Mount a directory to /data
, so it's accessible for ffsend
in the container,
and use the command as you normally would.
# Invoke without arguments
docker run --rm -it -v $(pwd):/data timvisee/ffsend
# Upload my-file.txt
docker run --rm -it -v $(pwd):/data timvisee/ffsend upload my-file.txt
# Download from specified link
docker run --rm -it -v $(pwd):/data timvisee/ffsend download https://send.vis.ee/#sample-share-url
# Show help
docker run --rm -it -v $(pwd):/data timvisee/ffsend help
# To update the used image
docker pull timvisee/ffsend
On Linux or macOS you might define a alias in your shell configuration, to make
it invocable as ffsend
:
alias ffsend='docker run --rm -it -v "$(pwd):/data" timvisee/ffsend'
Note: This implementation is limited to accessing the paths you make available through the specified mount.
To build and install ffsend
yourself, you meet the following requirements
before proceeding:
- Runtime requirements
git
rust
v1.63
(MSRV) or higher (install usingrustup
)- OpenSSL or LibreSSL libraries/headers:
- Linux:
- Ubuntu, Debian and derivatives:
apt install build-essential cmake pkg-config libssl-dev
- CentOS/Red Hat/openSUSE:
yum install gcc gcc-c++ make cmake openssl-devel
- Arch:
pacman -S openssl base-devel
- Gentoo:
emerge -a dev-util/pkgconfig dev-util/cmake dev-libs/openssl
- Fedora:
dnf install gcc gcc-c++ make cmake openssl-devel
- Or see instructions here
- Ubuntu, Debian and derivatives:
- Windows:
- Optional with
crypto-openssl
feature: See instructions here here
- Optional with
- macOS:
- Optional with
crypto-openssl
feature:brew install cmake pkg-config openssl
or see instructions here
- Optional with
- FreeBSD:
pkg install rust gmake pkgconf python36 libxcb xclip ca_root_nss xsel-conrad
- It is a better idea to use & modify the existing
ffsend
port, which manages dependencies for you.
- Linux:
Then, walk through one of the following steps to compile and install ffsend
:
-
Compile and install it directly from cargo:
# Compile and install from cargo cargo install ffsend -f # Start using ffsend ffsend --help
-
Or clone the repository and install it with
cargo
:# Clone the project git clone https://github.com/timvisee/ffsend.git cd ffsend # Compile and install cargo install --path . -f # Start using ffsend ffsend --help # or run it directly from cargo cargo run --release -- --help
-
Or clone the repository and invoke the binary directly (Linux/macOS):
# Clone the project git clone https://github.com/timvisee/ffsend.git cd ffsend # Build the project (release version) cargo build --release # Start using ffsend ./target/release/ffsend --help
Different use flags are available for ffsend
to toggle whether to include
various features.
The following features are available, some of which are enabled by default:
Feature | Enabled | Description |
---|---|---|
send2 |
Default | Support for Send v2 servers |
send3 |
Default | Support for Send v3 servers |
crypto-ring |
Default | Use ring as cryptography backend |
crypto-openssl |
Use OpenSSL as cryptography backend | |
clipboard |
Default | Support for copying links to the clipboard |
history |
Default | Support for tracking files in history |
archive |
Default | Support for archiving and extracting uploads and downloads |
qrcode |
Default | Support for rendering a QR code for a share URL |
urlshorten |
Default | Support for shortening share URLs |
infer-command |
Default | Support for inferring subcommand based on binary name |
no-color |
Compile without color support in error and help messages |
To enable features during building or installation, specify them with
--features <features...>
when using cargo
.
You may want to disable default features first using
--no-default-features
.
Here are some examples:
# Defaults set of features with no-color, one of
cargo install --features no-color
cargo build --release --features no-color
# No default features, except required
cargo install --no-default-features --features send3,crypto-ring
# With history and clipboard support
cargo install --no-default--features --features send3,crypto-ring,history,clipboard
For Windows systems it is recommended to provide the no-color
flag, as color
support in Windows terminals is flaky.
The following environment variables may be used to configure the following defaults. The CLI flag is shown along with it, to better describe the relation to command line arguments:
Variable | CLI flag | Description |
---|---|---|
FFSEND_HISTORY |
--history <FILE> |
History file path |
FFSEND_HOST |
--host <URL> |
Upload host |
FFSEND_TIMEOUT |
--timeout <SECONDS> |
Request timeout (0 to disable) |
FFSEND_TRANSFER_TIMEOUT |
--transfer-timeout <SECONDS> |
Transfer timeout (0 to disable) |
FFSEND_EXPIRY_TIME |
--expiry-time <SECONDS> |
Default upload expiry time |
FFSEND_DOWNLOAD_LIMIT |
--download-limit <DOWNLOADS> |
Default download limit |
FFSEND_API |
--api <VERSION> |
Server API version, - to lookup |
FFSEND_BASIC_AUTH |
--basic-auth <USER:PASSWORD> |
Basic HTTP authentication credentials to use. |
These environment variables may be used to toggle a flag, simply by making them available. The actual value of these variables is ignored, and variables may be empty.
Variable | CLI flag | Description |
---|---|---|
FFSEND_FORCE |
--force |
Force operations |
FFSEND_NO_INTERACT |
--no-interact |
No interaction for prompts |
FFSEND_YES |
--yes |
Assume yes for prompts |
FFSEND_INCOGNITO |
--incognito |
Incognito mode, don't use history |
FFSEND_OPEN |
--open |
Open share link of uploaded file |
FFSEND_ARCHIVE |
--archive |
Archive files uploaded |
FFSEND_EXTRACT |
--extract |
Extract files downloaded |
FFSEND_COPY |
--copy |
Copy share link to clipboard |
FFSEND_COPY_CMD |
--copy-cmd |
Copy download command to clipboard |
FFSEND_QUIET |
--quiet |
Log quiet information |
FFSEND_VERBOSE |
--verbose |
Log verbose information |
Some environment variables may be set at compile time to tweak some defaults.
Variable | Description |
---|---|
XCLIP_PATH |
Set fixed xclip binary path when using clipboard-bin (Linux, *BSD) |
XSEL_PATH |
Set fixed xsel binary path when using clipboard-bin (Linux, *BSD) |
At this time, no configuration or dotfile file support is available. This will be something added in a later release.
ffsend
supports having a separate binaries for single subcommands, such as
having ffput
and ffget
just for to upload and download using ffsend
.
This allows simple and direct commands like:
ffput my-file.txt
ffget https://send.vis.ee/#sample-share-url
This works for a predefined list of binary names:
ffput
→ffsend upload ...
ffget
→ffsend download ...
ffdel
→ffsend delete ...
- This list is defined in
src/config.rs
asINFER_COMMANDS
You can use the following methods to set up these single-command binaries:
- Create a properly named symbolic link (recommended)
- Create a properly named hard link
- Clone the
ffsend
binary, and rename it
On Linux and macOS you can use the following command to set up symbolic links in the current directory:
ln -s $(which ffsend) ./ffput
ln -s $(which ffsend) ./ffget
Support for this feature is only available when ffsend
is compiled with the
infer-command
feature flag.
This is usually enabled by default.
To verify support is available with an existing installation, make sure the
feature is listed when invoking ffsend debug
.
Note that the snap
package does currently not support this due to how this
package format works.
ffsend
is optimized for use in automated scripts. It provides some specialized
arguments to control ffsend
without user interaction.
--no-interact
(-I
): do not allow user interaction. For prompts not having a default value, the application will quit with an error, unless--yes
or--force
is provided. This should always be given when using automated scripting.
Example: when uploading a directory, providing this flag will stop the archive question prompt form popping up, and will archive the directory as default option.--yes
(-y
): assume the yes option for yes/no prompt by default.
Example: when downloading a file that already exists, providing this flag will assume yes when asking to overwrite a file.--force
(-f
): force to continue with the action, skips any warnings that would otherwise quit the application.
Example: when uploading a file that is too big, providing this flag will ignore the file size warning and forcefully continues.--quiet
(-q
): be quiet, print as little information as possible.
Example: when uploading a file, providing this flag will only output the final share URL.
Generally speaking, use the following rules when automating:
- Always provide
--no-interact
(-I
). - Provide any combination of
--yes
(-y
) and--force
(-f
) for actions you want to complete no matter what. - When passing share URLs along, provide the
--quiet
(-q
) flag, when uploading for example.
These flags can also automatically be set by defining environment variables as
specified here:
» Configuration and environment
Here are some examples commands in bash
:
# Stop on error
set -e
# Upload a file
# -I: no interaction
# -y: assume yes
# -q: quiet output, just return the share link
URL=$(ffsend -Iy upload -q my-file.txt)
# Render file information
# -I: no interaction
# -f: force, just show the info
ffsend -If info $URL
# Set a password for the uploaded file
ffsend -I password $URL --password="secret"
# Use the following flags automatically from now on
# -I: no interaction
# -f: force
# -y: yes
export FFSEND_NO_INTERACT=1 FFSEND_FORCE=1 FFSEND_YES=1
# Download the uploaded file, overwriting the local variant due to variables
ffsend download $URL --password="secret"
For more information on these arguments, invoke ffsend help
and check out:
» Configuration and environment
For other questions regarding automation or feature requests, be sure to open an issue.
In short; the ffsend
tool and the Send service can be considered
secure, and may be used to share sensitive files. Note though that the
created share link for an upload will allow anyone to download the file.
Make sure you don't share this link with unauthorized people.
For more detailed information on encryption, please read the rest of the paragraphs in this security section.
Note: even though the encryption method is considered secure, this ffsend
tool does not provide any warranty in any way, shape or form for files that
somehow got decrypted without proper authorization.
ffsend
uses client side encryption, to ensure your files are securely
encrypted before they are uploaded to the remote host. This makes it impossible
for third parties to decrypt your file without having the secret (encryption
key). The file and its metadata are encrypted using 128-bit AES-GCM
, and a
HMAC SHA-256
signing key is used for request authentication.
This is consistent with the encryption documentation provided by the
Send service, ffsend
is a tool for.
A detailed list on the encryption/decryption steps, and on what encryption is exactly used can be found here in the official service documentation.
The encryption secret, that is used to decrypt the file when downloading,
is included in the share URL behind the #
(hash). This secret is never sent
the remote server directly when using the share link in your browser.
It would be possible however for a webpage to load some malicious JavaScript
snippet that eventually steals the secret from the link once the page is loaded.
Although this scenario is extremely unlikely, there are some options to prevent
this from happening:
- Only use this
ffsend
tool, do not use the share link in your browser. - Add additional protection by specifying a password using
--password
while uploading, or using thepassword
subcommand afterwards. - Host a secure Send service instance yourself.
A complete overview on encryption can be found in the official service documentation here.
$ ffsend help
ffsend 0.2.72
Tim Visee <[email protected]>
Easily and securely share files from the command line.
A fully featured Send client.
The default public Send host is provided by Tim Visee, @timvisee.
Please consider to donate and help keep it running: https://vis.ee/donate
USAGE:
ffsend [FLAGS] [OPTIONS] [SUBCOMMAND]
FLAGS:
-f, --force Force the action, ignore warnings
-h, --help Prints help information
-i, --incognito Don't update local history for actions
-I, --no-interact Not interactive, do not prompt
-q, --quiet Produce output suitable for logging and automation
-V, --version Prints version information
-v, --verbose Enable verbose information and logging
-y, --yes Assume yes for prompts
OPTIONS:
-A, --api <VERSION> Server API version to use, '-' to lookup [env: FFSEND_API]
--basic-auth <USER:PASSWORD> Protected proxy HTTP basic authentication credentials (not FxA) [env: FFSEND_BASIC_AUTH]
-H, --history <FILE> Use the specified history file [env: FFSEND_HISTORY]
-t, --timeout <SECONDS> Request timeout (0 to disable) [env: FFSEND_TIMEOUT]
-T, --transfer-timeout <SECONDS> Transfer timeout (0 to disable) [env: FFSEND_TRANSFER_TIMEOUT]
SUBCOMMANDS:
upload Upload files [aliases: u, up]
download Download files [aliases: d, down]
debug View debug information [aliases: dbg]
delete Delete a shared file [aliases: del, rm]
exists Check whether a remote file exists [aliases: e]
generate Generate assets [aliases: gen]
help Prints this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)
history View file history [aliases: h]
info Fetch info about a shared file [aliases: i]
parameters Change parameters of a shared file [aliases: params]
password Change the password of a shared file [aliases: pass, p]
version Determine the Send server version [aliases: v]
This application is not affiliated with Firefox or Mozilla.
- to all
ffsend
source/package contributors - to Mozilla for building the amazing Firefox Send service (fork)
- to everyone involved with asciinema and svg-term for providing tools to make great visual demos
- to everyone involved in all crate dependencies used
This project is released under the GNU GPL-3.0 license. Check out the LICENSE file for more information.