Transfer files with ease over a network.
QRServ is a file sharing application that utilises its own HTTP server to serve files while having a clean & functional user interface.
- QR Code
- Tap on the QR code to show full URL in a tooltip
- Press and hold on the QR code to copy full URL to clipboard
- Share / Copy to clipboard option
- Multi-file selection support (Android only)
- Multi-file selection would result in a ZIP archive
- Tooltip when press and holding on the resulting archive file name will reveal the originally selected files
- Multi-file selection would result in a ZIP archive
- Direct Access Mode (Android only)
- Large files? Use direct access mode to use direct access to internal storage as to avoid attempting to copy the selection into app cache
- The file manager for this mode only supports single file selection
- The mode can be toggled by pressing on the SD card icon
- File selection removal and modification detection (latter only available with DAM)
- Import via sharesheet (Android only)
- Show and hide filename in download URL path
- Long press the share button to toggle
- Notify when a client requested the hosted file and when that download finishes (includes IP address of requestor)
- Various IP addresses from different network interfaces can be chosen
- HTTP server uses an unused ("random") port
- Supports Android, Windows and Linux platforms
- Supports various languages:
- English
- French (Français)
- German (Deutsch)
- Hungarian (Magyar)
- Italian (Italiano)
- Polish (Polski)
- Portuguese (Português)
- Spanish (Español)
- Russian (Русский)
- Turkish (Türkçe)
- Persian (فارسی)
Android builds can be found in the releases section of this repository.
Last desktop builds (Windows, Linux) can be found in the releases section under v1.1.1.
Note: Android builds on GitHub will have a different certificate than builds on the Play Store. In other words, you cannot upgrade a build from installation source A via source B and vice versa.
Before creating a new issue or putting together a pull request (particularly regarding feature requests or potential improvements), please refer to the design philosophy. It also serves as a Q&A.
If you wish to have debugging symbols for an app bundle release, ensure you have the Android NDK installed. You may need to specify the ndk.dir
in the local.properties
file.
However, if you do not plan to do a Play Store release, you may remove the ndk
block from android.defaultConfig
in the gradle build file.
Windows builds normally require Visual C++ Redistributable for Visual Studio 2015
to run. There are two ways you could go about it:
- Install Visual C++ Redistributable for Visual Studio 2015
- Bundle the required files in the root directory of the compiled executable (
msvcp140.dll
,vcruntime140.dll
,vcruntime140_1.dll
) -- ideal when distributing
You could package builds as a MSIX but that is only practical if you plan to get or already have a code signing certificate.
Google Play and the Google Play logo are trademarks of Google LLC.
Poppins (the font) is licenced under OFL-1.1.
QRServ is licenced under the MIT license.
New and existing translations are very welcome. Via issue, pull request, or even email. Credit will be given unless opted out.
Thanks to the following users for helping out with language translation:
User | Language(s) |
---|---|
miklosakos | Hungarian |
MrRocketFX | Polish |
utf-4096 | French |
SimoneG97 | Italian |
guidov2006 | Spanish |
solelychloe | Russian |
metezd | Turkish |
princessmortix | Portuguese |
alr86 | Persian |