The Filen CLI provides a set of useful tools for interacting with the cloud:
- Accessing your Filen Drive in a stateless environment or interactive mode
- Syncing locations with the cloud (just like the Desktop app)
- Mounting a network drive
- Running a WebDAV mirror server of your personal drive, or multiple drives in proxy mode
- Running an S3 mirror server
You can download the latest binaries from the release page. Docker images are also available as filen/cli.
The Filen CLI includes an automatic updater that checks for a new release every time the CLI is invoked
(after checking for updates, it will not check again for the next 10 minutes).
Invoke the CLI with the --skip-update
flag to skip checking for updates.
(Use the --force-update
flag to check for updates even if it was recently checked.)
$ filen [options...]
Options:
--help
,-h
: display usage information--verbose
,-v
: display additional information--quiet
,-q
: hide things like progress bars and additional logs--email <email>
and--password <password>
(optionally--two-factor-code <code>
,-c <code>
): specify credentials--log-file <file>
: write logs to a file
There are several ways to authenticate:
- Invoke the CLI and specify your Filen email and password. You can then choose to save them in a local encrypted configuration file. You can delete them later using
filen delete-credentials
. - Invoke the CLI with the
--email
and--password
(optionally--two-factor-code
) arguments set. - Put your credentials in the
FILEN_EMAIL
andFILEN_PASSWORD
(optionallyFILEN_2FA_CODE
) environment variables. - Store your Filen email and password in a file named
.filen-cli-credentials
where you invoke the CLI. Put your email and password in separate lines, in plain text (optionally 2FA code in third line). - Export an "auth config" (which includes your Filen email, password and other details) using
filen export-auth-config
. This will produce a file named.filen-cli-auth-config
, which you need to place where you invoke the CLI from. This option can be useful especially for clustered WebDAV/S3 servers, where otherwise too many login requests result in rate limiting.
If you have 2FA enabled and don't specify a 2FA code, you will be prompted for it.
$ filen [options...] <cmd...>
Options:
--root <path>
,-r <path
: execute a stateless command from a different working directory--json
: format output as JSON--no-autocomplete
: disable autocompletion (for performance or bandwidth reasons)
Many common Unix-style commands are available:
ls <path to directory>
: list items inside a directory (pass-l
for more detailed output)cat <path to file>
: print content of a text filehead <path to file>
/tail <path to file>
: print first / last 10 lines of a text file (pass-n 3
for only 3 lines etc.)mkdir <path to directory>
: create a directoryrm <path>
: delete a file or directory (--no-trash
to delete permanently)stat <path>
: display information about a file or directorystatfs
: display information about your Filen cloud drivewhoami
: print the current usermv <from> <to>
/cp <from> <to>
: move or copy a file to a path (parent directory or file)
There are also non-standard commands specific to Filen:
download <cloud path> <local destination>
: download a file or directory from the cloud into a local destinationupload <local file> <cloud path>
: upload a local file into the cloud at a specified pathwrite <file> <content...>
: write text to a fileopen <file>
: open a file locally in the associated applicationedit <file>
: edit a file locally in the associated application (save and close to re-upload)view <path>
: view a directory in the Web Drive (you can also invokefilen drive
to quickly open the Web Drive)favorites
/recents
: display favorites or recentsfavorite <path>
/unfavorite <path>
: favorite or unfavorite a file or directory
Invoke the Filen CLI without any specified commands to enter interactive mode.
There you can specify paths as absolute (starting with /
) or relative to the current working directory (supports .
and ..
).
Additional available commands:
help
: display available commandscd <path>
: navigate to a different pathls
: list items inside current directoryexit
: exit interactive mode
filen trash
: view trash itemsfilen trash restore
: restore a trash itemfilen trash delete
: permanently delete a trash itemfilen trash empty
: permanently delete all trash items
filen links
: view all public linksfilen links <path>
: create, view, edit or delete a public link for the given path
$ filen sync [sync pairs...] [--continuous]
Invoke filen sync
to sync any locations with your Filen Drive. This is the same functionality you get with the Desktop app.
You must specify the sync pairs ([sync pairs...]
above) as follows:
- (central registry)
filen sync
: Read the sync pairs from$APP_DATA/filen_cli/syncPairs.json
. This file must contain JSON of the type{local: string, remote: string, syncMode: string, alias?: string, disableLocalTrash?: boolean, ignore?: string[]}[]
.syncMode
can betwoWay
,localToCloud
,localBackup
,cloudToLocal
orcloudBackup
(see the FAQ here on what that means). - (custom registry)
filen sync <file>
: Read the sync pairs from a custom JSON file (same type as above). - (aliases)
filen sync mypair myotherpair
: Sync the sync pairs from the central registry that were given the aliasesmypair
andmyotherpair
. - (literal pair)
filen sync /local/path:twoWay:/cloud/path
: Sync the local path/local/path
with the cloud path/cloud/path
in two-way sync. - (shorthand for two-way pairs)
filen sync /local:/cloud
: Sync/local
with/cloud
in two-way sync. - (other sync modes and abbreviations)
filen sync /local1:localToCloud:/cloud1 /local2:ltc:/cloud2
: Sync/local1
with/cloud1
(and/local2
with/cloud2
) in local-to-cloud sync (other abbreviations aretw
=twoWay
,ltc
=localToCloud
,lb
=localBackup
,ctl
=cloudToLocal
,cb
=cloudBackup
). - (disable local trash)
filen sync /local:/cloud --disable-local-trash
: Disable local trash
You can set the --continuous
flag to keep syncing (instead of only syncing once).
$ filen mount [mount point]
Invoke filen mount
to mount a network drive that mirrors your Filen Drive. The default mount point is X:
(Windows) / /tmp/filen
(UNIX).
On Windows, WinFSP needs to be installed. On Linux, FUSE3 needs to be installed. On macOS, FUSE-T or macFUSE needs to be installed.
For more information, see also FilenCloudDienste/filen-network-drive.
You can use the Filen CLI to start a WebDAV server that acts as a mirror server of your Filen Drive.
For more information, see also FilenCloudDienste/filen-webdav.
$ filen webdav --w-user <...> --w-password <...> [options...]
Invoke filen webdav
to start a local WebDAV server that mirrors your personal Filen Drive.
This might be useful for allowing local applications to access your Filen Drive via WebDAV.
You must specify login credentials for connecting to the server using the --w-user
and --w-password
options (these credentials should be different from your Filen account credentials).
Options:
--w-https
: run the server on HTTPS instead of HTTP (using a self-signed certificate)--w-hostname
: which hostname the server should be started on (default is 0.0.0.0)--w-port
: which port the server should be started on (default is 80 or 443)--w-auth-scheme
: the authentication scheme the server should use, "basic" or "digest" (default is basic)--w-threads
: enables clustering, number of threads to use for the server (default is no clustering; explicitly set to 0 to set by CPU core count). If you experience rate-limiting using this, using an auth config might help.
$ filen webdav-proxy [options...]
Invoke the filen webdav-proxy
to start a WebDAV server that allows any user to connect using their Filen account credentials and access their own Filen Drive.
This might be useful when hosting a proxy server for multiple users.
Digest auth is not available for proxy mode.
Important: In proxy mode, the password has to be formatted as password=yoursecretpassword&twoFactorAuthentication=<RECOVERY_CODE_OR_6_DIGIT_OTP_CODE>
(you can also leave out the &twoFactorAuthentication=...
part if 2FA is disabled for your account).
Options: --w-https
, --w-hostname
, --w-port
, --w-threads
as above
$ filen s3 --s3-access-key-id <...> --s3-secret-access-key <...> [options...]
Invoke filen s3
to start an S3 server that acts as a mirror server of your Filen Drive.
You must specify credentials (Access Key ID and Secret Access Key) for connecting to the server using the --s3-access-key-id
and --s3-secret-access-key
options (these credentials should be different from your Filen account credentials).
Important: When connecting to the S3 server, you need to enable s3ForcePathStyle
and set the region to filen
.
For more information, including on S3 compatibility, see also FilenCloudDienste/filen-s3.
Options:
--s3-https
: run the server on HTTPS instead of HTTP (using a self-signed certificate)--s3-hostname
: which hostname the server should be started on (default is 0.0.0.0)--s3-port
: which port the server should be started on (default is 80 or 443)--s3-threads
: enables clustering, number of threads to use for the server (default is no clustering; explicitly set to 0 to set by CPU core count). If you experience rate-limiting using this, using an auth config might help.
Use one of the template docker-compose-*.yml
files to run filen-cli. The template files automatically sets up WebDAV or S3 service as a docker container.
Note: The instructions assumes you already have Docker Compose installed and set up.
- Download a
docker-compose-*.yml
file. - Rename the chosen file to
docker-compose.yml
. - Move the file to your desired location (e.g.,
~/docker/filen-cli/
). - Run
docker compose up
in a terminal from the file's location.