This project is supported by GitHub sponsors.
croc
is a tool that allows any two computers to simply and securely transfer files and folders. AFAIK, croc is the only CLI file-transfer tool that does all of the following:
- Allows any two computers to transfer data (using a relay)
- Provides end-to-end encryption (using PAKE)
- Enables easy cross-platform transfers (Windows, Linux, Mac)
- Allows multiple file transfers
- Allows resuming transfers that are interrupted
- No need for local server or port-forwarding
- IPv6-first with IPv4 fallback
- Can use a proxy, like Tor
For more information about croc
, see my blog post or read a recent interview I did.
You can download the latest release for your system, or install a release from the command-line:
curl https://getcroc.schollz.com | bash
Using Homebrew:
brew install croc
Using MacPorts:
sudo port selfupdate
sudo port install croc
You can install the latest release with Scoop, Chocolatey, or Winget:
scoop install croc
choco install croc
winget install schollz.croc
You can install the latest release with Nix:
nix-env -i croc
First, install dependencies:
apk add bash coreutils
wget -qO- https://getcroc.schollz.com | bash
Install with pacman
:
pacman -S croc
Install with dnf
:
dnf install croc
Install with portage
:
emerge net-misc/croc
Install with pkg
:
pkg install croc
Install with pkg
:
pkg install croc
You can install from conda-forge globally with pixi
:
pixi global install croc
Or install into a particular environment with conda
:
conda install --channel conda-forge croc
If you prefer, you can install Go and build from source (requires Go 1.22+):
go install github.com/schollz/croc/v10@latest
There is a 3rd-party F-Droid app available to download.
To send a file, simply do:
$ croc send [file(s)-or-folder]
Sending 'file-or-folder' (X MB)
Code is: code-phrase
Then, to receive the file (or folder) on another computer, run:
croc code-phrase
The code phrase is used to establish password-authenticated key agreement (PAKE) which generates a secret key for the sender and recipient to use for end-to-end encryption.
On Linux and macOS, the sending and receiving process is slightly different to avoid leaking the secret via the process name. You will need to run croc
with the secret as an environment variable. For example, to receive with the secret ***
:
CROC_SECRET=*** croc
For single-user systems, the default behavior can be permanently enabled by running:
croc --classic
You can send with your own code phrase (must be more than 6 characters):
croc send --code [code-phrase] [file(s)-or-folder]
To automatically overwrite files without prompting, use the --overwrite
flag:
croc --yes --overwrite <code>
To exclude folders from being sent, use the --exclude
flag with comma-delimited exclusions:
croc send --exclude "node_modules,.venv" [folder]
You can pipe to croc
:
cat [filename] | croc send
To receive the file to stdout
, you can use:
croc --yes [code-phrase] > out
To send URLs or short text, use:
croc send --text "hello world"
You can send files via a proxy by adding --socks5
:
croc --socks5 "127.0.0.1:9050" send SOMEFILE
To choose a different elliptic curve for encryption, use the --curve
flag:
croc --curve p521 <codephrase>
For faster hashing, use the imohash
algorithm:
croc send --hash imohash SOMEFILE
You can run your own relay:
croc relay
By default, it uses TCP ports 9009-9013. You can customize the ports (e.g., croc relay --ports 1111,1112
), but at least 2 ports are required.
To send files using your relay:
croc --relay "myrelay.example.com:9009" send [filename]
You can also run a relay with Docker:
docker run -d -p 9009-9013:9009-9013 -e CROC_PASS='YOURPASSWORD' schollz/croc
To send files using your custom relay:
croc --pass YOURPASSWORD --relay "myreal.example.com:9009" send [filename]
croc
has evolved through many iterations, and I am thankful for the contributions! Special thanks to:
- @warner for the idea
- @tscholl2 for the encryption gists
- @skorokithakis for proxying two connections
And many more!