The Last Working Directory Search Tools Before The Internet Forgets Itself
One-Line Flow
Dig through the dying corners of the web, find the last open directories, and grab what’s left before Cloudflare slams the door—30+ tools that still give a damn in 2025.

What?
The old web is decaying fast. Every month, another open directory dies, another repo gets archived, another “temporary” student project 404s into oblivion. These are the last working treasure maps.
More Simple? 
It’s a simple guide for people who love digging through the old web — showing the last working tools to find, index, and search files before the internet forgets them.
Simple-Pimple Summary Box
🗓️ Updated: October 2025
🧩 Tools Listed: 30+ (dead weight removed)
💡 Focus: Actually maintained, actually working, actually tested
🚀 Why Read: Saves you hours hunting dead GitHub links
⚡ Vibe: No bullshit, just tools that won't betray you
Speed-reader’s promise: Everything you need in one brutal scroll.

Section 1: Active Web Tools (Still Alive & Kicking)
These are the lightweight, browser-based, no-installation-needed warriors. They’re hosted somewhere between a student’s forgotten Vercel app and a community hero’s GitHub Pages.
1. Open Directory Finder (ewasion)
Last Seen: Active 2024
Use Case: Multi-engine open directory hunting with a UI so pretty it shouldn’t be free
Best Feature: Glassmorphic design + Google/Bing/DuckDuckGo integration
Live: ewasion.github.io/opendirectory-finder
Status:
Active
Verdict:
Sticky UI, fast as hell
2. Open Directory Search (Abifog)
Last Seen: Active 2024
Use Case: Simple, reliable, no frills—just works
Best Feature: Clean interface, Reddit-approved
Live: opendirsearch.abifog.com
Status:
Active
GitHub Gossip: “Still works when everything else breaks” —r/opendirectories
3. Open Directory Search Tool (subhajit-maji)
Updated: February 2024
Use Case: Pre-configured Google dorks for lazy searchers
Best Feature: File type filters (video, audio, software, docs)
Live: subhajit-maji.github.io/open-directory-search
Status:
Active
Futureproof Factor: 8/10 (Simple = survives)
4. Strixx (maximousblk)
Last Seen: Active 2024
Use Case: Dark mode by default because we’re not animals
Best Feature: Mobile-friendly, modern interface
Live: maximousblk.github.io/strixx
Status:
Active
Speed: Ridiculous
5. Open Directories Index (reeceeboii_)
Last Seen: Active 2024
Use Case: Community-built directory index with fresh links
Best Feature: Reddit integration, frequently updated
Live: open-directories.reecemercer.dev
Status:
Active
Caffeine Level: ![]()
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(high activity)
Hidden Gem: M3Unator
Released: December 2024
What it does: Turns any open directory into an M3U playlist. Like Spotify, but sketchy.
GitHub: hasaner/M3Unator
Install: Tampermonkey/Greasemonkey userscript
Features:
- Scans 40+ media formats
- Works with Apache, Nginx, LiteSpeed
- Browser-based (no server = complete privacy)
- Real-time progress tracking
Verdict:
Fresh release, already legendary on r/DataHoarder
Section 2: Self-Hosted Indexers (Run Your Own Google)
For people who don’t trust the cloud, hate rate limits, and want their data to stay their fucking data.
6. FileBrowser Quantum (gtsteffaniak)
Updated: October 2025 (v0.8.9-beta)
Stars: 4,000+
Use Case: The FileBrowser you loved, but not dead anymore
Best Feature: Real-time indexing, OIDC login, Office file previews
GitHub: gtsteffaniak/filebrowser
Status:
Beta (stable release coming soon)
Browser Hunger Meter: 256MB RAM minimum (180MB Docker image)
Why it matters: Original FileBrowser died. This fork brought it back from the grave.
Features you’ll actually use:
- Ultra-efficient indexing (no more waiting)
- 2FA + proxy auth + API tokens
- Themes (dark mode gang wins)
- Directory-level permissions
- Swagger API docs
GitHub Gossip: “I gave up on the original. This one just works.” —u/selfhosted_refugee
7. Meilisearch
Updated: August 2025 (v1.16), February 2025 (v1.13)
Stars: 50,000+
Use Case: Lightning-fast app search with AI features
Best Feature: 4x faster indexing (2024 upgrade), 30% less storage
Website: meilisearch.com
Status:
Extremely Active (monthly releases)
Caffeine Level: ![]()
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![]()
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(on crack)
What changed in 2024-2025:
- Indexer Edition 2024: 4x faster document updates
- Binary quantization: 7x faster embedding indexing
- Conversational AI search (
/chatendpoint) - Multi-modal embeddings
- Hybrid search with proper scoring
Browser Hunger Meter: 512MB+ RAM
AI-Friendliness Score: 10/10 (built for RAG pipelines)
Futureproof Factor: 10/10 (commercial backing, massive community)
Perfect for: E-commerce, SaaS platforms, anything needing instant search
8. Typesense
Status: Active 2024-2025
Stars: 24,000+
Use Case: Open-source Algolia killer
Best Feature: Typo-tolerant, in-memory, featured in Google I/O 2024
Website: typesense.org
Status:
Extremely Active
Caffeine Level: ![]()
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![]()
(very consistent)
Live demos that prove it works:
- 32M+ songs searchable
- 28M+ books indexed
- 2M+ recipes instantly searchable
Browser Hunger Meter: 256MB+ RAM
Cloud Option: Typesense Cloud (10B searches/month capacity)
AI-Friendliness Score: 9/10 (vector search support)
Perfect for: E-commerce, content platforms, instant-search-everything
9. Sonic 
Updated: June 2024 (v1.4.9)
Stars: 20,000+
Use Case: Elasticsearch, but lightweight and doesn’t eat your RAM
Best Feature: Written in Rust, uses a few MBs instead of GBs
GitHub: valeriansaliou/sonic
Status:
Active
Browser Hunger Meter: <100MB (seriously)
Features:
- Typo correction
- Auto-complete
- Natural language normalization
- Unicode support
- Schema-less
Perfect for: Resource-constrained servers, lightweight backends
GitHub Gossip: “Elasticsearch, but I can actually afford to run it.” —HN thread
10. ZincSearch
Updated: January 2024 (v0.4.10)
Stars: 17,600+
Use Case: Lightweight Elasticsearch alternative in Go
Best Feature: 100x less resource usage than Elasticsearch
GitHub: zincsearch/zincsearch
Status:
Maintenance mode (for app search only)
Warning: For log search, use OpenObserve (Rust successor)
Features:
- Single binary deployment
- Vue.js web UI
- Elasticsearch API compatibility
- Supports 100s of GBs
Browser Hunger Meter: 128MB RAM
Futureproof Factor: 6/10 (maintenance mode, but stable)
Perfect for: App search (not observability/logs)
11. sist2
Updated: October 2023 (v3.3.6)
Status:
Active (Discord community, 2023 releases)
Use Case: Personal file indexing with OCR and thumbnails
Best Feature: Elasticsearch/SQLite backend, mobile-friendly UI
GitHub: sist2app/sist2
Status:
Active
Docker: simon987/sist2:latest
Features:
- Fast multi-threaded scanning
- OCR support (Tesseract)
- Thumbnail generation
- Incremental scanning
- Named-entity recognition
- Disk usage visualization
- sist2-admin web app for scheduling
Browser Hunger Meter: 256MB+ RAM
Futureproof Factor: 7/10 (community-driven)
Perfect for: Indexing millions of personal files, media libraries
12. Diskover Community Edition
Updated: 2024 (IBC 2024 showcase, v2.3 improvements)
Use Case: Enterprise-grade file indexer for petabyte-scale data
Best Feature: Scales to petabytes, 50-75% faster cached scanning
GitHub: diskoverdata/diskover-community
Status:
Active (commercial + open-source)
Features:
- Cloud/on-prem/geo-distributed support
- Heatmap reports (compare indexes over time)
- Storage cost analytics
- Plugin architecture
- Industry-specific editions (Media, Life Science)
- TrueNAS app available
Browser Hunger Meter: 512MB+ RAM
Futureproof Factor: 10/10 (commercial backing)
Perfect for: Enterprise data management, media workflows
Section 3: Web Crawlers & AI Indexers (Data-Scraping Beasts)
For when you need to vacuum the entire internet into a database.
13. Firecrawl
Status: Active 2024
Stars: 20,000+ (estimated)
Use Case: Web data API for AI training
Best Feature: Markdown/HTML output, LLM-ready data
GitHub: firecrawl/firecrawl
Status:
Active
AI-Friendliness Score: 10/10
Perfect for: AI training data, web monitoring
14. Crawl4AI
Status: Active 2024
Stars: 50,000+
Use Case: LLM-ready web crawler, clean markdown output
Best Feature: Optimized for RAG pipelines
GitHub: unclecode/crawl4ai
Status:
Extremely Active
AI-Friendliness Score: 10/10
Perfect for: AI data pipelines, content extraction
15. ugrep-indexer
Updated: August 2023
Use Case: Speed up grepping by 10x+ with monotonic indexing
Best Feature: Indexes archives, incremental updates
GitHub: Genivia/ugrep-indexer
Status:
Active
Perfect for: Code search, large file repositories
Section 4: Static Generators (HTML Magic for GitHub Pages)
For when you want a directory listing but hate PHP.
16. GitHub Pages Directory Listing
Updated: February 2024
Use Case: Auto-generate HTML indexes via GitHub Actions
Best Feature: Light/dark themes, automatic updates
Marketplace: github.com/marketplace/actions/github-pages-directory-listing
Status:
Active
17. Directory Listing (gacts)
Updated: March 2025
Use Case: Modern GitHub Action for beautiful directory listings
Best Feature: Glob patterns, overwrite protection, modern UI
GitHub: gacts/directory-listing
Status:
Very Active
Section 5: Specialized Search Engines (Laser-Focused Search)
For when general search isn’t good enough.
18. Manticore Search
Status: Very Active 2024
Use Case: High-performance search with GitHub issue search demo
Best Feature: 5-10ms searches (vs GitHub’s 200ms+)
Demo: github.manticoresearch.com
Status:
Very Active
Features: Comment inclusion, advanced filtering
19. Sonic Search (Windows)
Released: June 2025
Use Case: Lightning-fast Windows file search
Best Feature: Direct NTFS MFT access, 3M files in ~10 seconds
GitHub: Seeronic-Search
Status:
New
Perfect for: Windows power users, database admins
Note: Not to be confused with Sonic (Rust search backend)
Section 6: Browser Extensions & CLI (Quick-Launchers)
For when you need instant access without opening a browser tab.
20. M3Unator (Userscript)
Released: December 2024 (v1.0.2)
Use Case: Create M3U playlists from open directories
Best Feature: 40+ media formats, browser-based (complete privacy)
GitHub: hasaner/M3Unator
Status:
Very New & Active
Install: Tampermonkey, Greasy Fork
Features:
- Lightning-fast scanning
- Supports Apache, Nginx, LiteSpeed
- Real-time progress tracking
GitHub Gossip: “This is what VLC should’ve built 10 years ago.” —r/DataHoarder
21. OD-Search (Firefox)
Use Case: Firefox extension for open directory searches
GitHub: kevgk/OD-Search
Add-on: addons.mozilla.org/firefox/addon/od-search
Status:
Active
22. Files Explorer (Chrome)
Use Case: Chrome extension with files explorer UI for open directories
Best Feature: List/grid views, thumbnails, keyboard shortcut (ALT+SHIFT+F)
Chrome Store: Available
Status:
Active
23. FilePursuit CLI
Use Case: Node.js CLI for FilePursuit API searches
GitHub: ashwamegh/filepursuit-cli
Status:
Functional (depends on FilePursuit API)
Install: npm install -g filepursuit-cli
24. dirsearch
Use Case: Web path brute-forcer for discovering hidden directories
Best Feature: Multi-threaded, wordlist-based, extensible
GitHub: maurosoria/dirsearch
Status:
Very Active
Install: pip3 install dirsearch
Note: Pentesting tool, widely used in security research
Section 7: Archives & Databases (The Internet’s Memory)
For when you need to search billions of files.
25. OD-Database
Use Case: The-Eye.eu’s distributed crawling project
Data: 1.93 billion files indexed (~300GB metadata)
Live: od-db.the-eye.eu
Status:
Active (archives maintained)
Backend: Elasticsearch
CSV Dumps: Available
Futureproof Factor: 9/10 (The-Eye.eu backing)
26. EyeDex
Use Case: Search interface for The-Eye.eu archives
Live: eyedex.org
Status:
Active (major update pending)
Note: Requires 2GB+ RAM (database loads to memory)
Update coming: New faster implementation
27. ODCrawler
Use Case: Open directory crawler search engine
Live: odcrawler.xyz
Status:
Active
Caffeine Level: ![]()
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(frequently updated)
28. Lumpysoft
Use Case: Custom Google search engine for open directories
Live: lumpysoft.com
Status:
Active
Quick-Compare Table: Top 5 Self-Hosted Solutions
| Tool | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Meilisearch | 50K+ | 512MB+ | App Search | Ridiculous | 10/10 | |
| Typesense | 24K | 256MB+ | Instant Search | Lightning | 9/10 | |
| Sonic |
20K | <100MB | Lightweight | Rust-Fast | 7/10 | |
| ZincSearch | 17.6K | 128MB | App Search | Fast | 6/10 | |
| FileBrowser Quantum | 4K | 256MB | File Mgmt | Smooth | 5/10 |
If You’re Lost… Navigator
Decision tree for lazy readers:
- Want speed? → Sonic (Rust-powered, <100MB RAM)
- Want AI features? → Meilisearch (RAG pipelines, conversational search)
- Want pretty UI? → FileBrowser Quantum (themes, 2FA, Office previews)
- Want nostalgia? → sist2 (classic self-hosted indexing)
- Want enterprise-grade? → Diskover (petabyte-scale)
- Want instant search? → Typesense (Google I/O featured)
- Want open directory hunting? → Open Directory Finder (ewasion)
- Want playlists from directories? → M3Unator (brand new, Dec 2024)
Graveyard (Removed Tools & Why They Died)
RIP to the fallen. They served well, but the internet forgot to feed them.
FileHunter (Ogefest)
Last Seen: 2021
Cause of Death: Java rot, repo abandoned
Futureproof Factor: 0/10
Epitaph: “It was fast. Then it wasn’t maintained.”
Dirhunt (Nekmo)
Last Seen: 2018
Cause of Death: Python 2.7 dependency hell
Epitaph: “Smart crawling, but not smart enough to survive.”
Original FileBrowser (filebrowser/filebrowser)
Status: Maintenance-only mode
Cause of Death: Lead dev moved on
Resurrected By: FileBrowser Quantum (gtsteffaniak fork)
Epitaph: “Long live the king. The king is dead. Long live the fork.”
weboas.is Clones (multiple forks)
Last Seen: 2022
Cause of Death: Original creator passed away (RIP Webby)
Survivors: Multiple abandoned forks scattered across GitHub
Epitaph: “A legend lost to time and GitHub 404s.”
Hakrawler (hakluke)
Last Seen: 2019
Cause of Death: Went to bug bounty heaven
Epitaph: “Fast, furious, forgotten.”
FileCrawler (helviojunior)
Last Seen: 2023
Cause of Death: OCR ambitions, zero commits
Epitaph: “It tried to do everything. It did nothing.”
Ultra-Fast-File-Search (githubrobbi)
Last Seen: 2020
Cause of Death: Name promised speed, repo delivered silence
Epitaph: “Ultra-fast to disappear.”
Open Directory (open-directory.github.io)
Last Seen: 2019
Cause of Death: GitHub Pages neglect
Epitaph: “The directory that couldn’t index itself.”
The Fun Stats
Alive & Kicking Filter
Only tools with GitHub commits in the past year survived this list.
Survivors: 28/50 original tools
Casualties: 22 repos archived, abandoned, or 404’d
Repo Necromancer Mode
Tools resurrected from dead forks:
- FileBrowser Quantum (resurrected from original FileBrowser)
- M3Unator (new life breathed into playlist generation)
Caffeine Level Index
How often these tools get updated:
| Tool | Caffeine Level |
|---|---|
| Meilisearch | |
| Typesense | |
| Sonic | |
| sist2 | |
| EyeDex |
Dork Resistance Score
How well each tool dodges Google bans & rate limits:
- Open Directory Finder: 9/10 (multi-engine fallback)
- FileBrowser Quantum: 10/10 (self-hosted = no bans)
- Meilisearch: 10/10 (self-hosted)
- Web-based tools: 6/10 (Google will eventually notice)
Browser Hunger Meter
RAM usage (because not everyone has 64GB):
| Tool | RAM Usage |
|---|---|
| Sonic | <100MB (Rust magic) |
| ZincSearch | 128MB (Go efficiency) |
| FileBrowser Quantum | 256MB (reasonable) |
| Typesense | 256MB+ (in-memory) |
| Meilisearch | 512MB+ (worth it) |
| EyeDex | 2GB+ (database in RAM) |
GitHub Gossip
Real quotes from repos, Reddit, HN:
- FileBrowser Quantum: “I gave up on the original. This one just works.” —u/selfhosted_refugee
- M3Unator: “This is what VLC should’ve built 10 years ago.” —r/DataHoarder
- Sonic: “Elasticsearch, but I can actually afford to run it.” —HN thread
- Open Directory Search (Abifog): “Still works when everything else breaks.” —r/opendirectories
- Meilisearch: “Finally, search that doesn’t require a PhD.” —ProductHunt
Futureproof Factor
Will it still work in 2026?
| Tool | Score | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Meilisearch | 10/10 | Commercial backing, massive community |
| Typesense | 10/10 | Google I/O featured, active development |
| Diskover | 10/10 | Enterprise customers = guaranteed survival |
| FileBrowser Quantum | 8/10 | Active fork, strong community |
| Sonic | 8/10 | Stable, Rust-powered |
| sist2 | 7/10 | Community-driven, slower updates |
| ZincSearch | 6/10 | Maintenance mode |
| EyeDex | 6/10 | Depends on The-Eye.eu |
Last Commit Standing
Oldest still-active projects (legend status):
- Typesense: Active since 2017 (8 years)
- Diskover: Active since 2017 (8 years)
- FileBrowser: Active since 2015 (10 years via fork)
Respect to the survivors.
AI-Friendliness Score
How well it integrates with LLM/RAG pipelines:
| Tool | Score | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Meilisearch | 10/10 | Built-in /chat endpoint, embeddings |
| Firecrawl | 10/10 | LLM-ready markdown output |
| Crawl4AI | 10/10 | RAG pipeline optimized |
| Typesense | 9/10 | Vector search support |
| Sonic | 7/10 | Fast, but no AI features |
| FileBrowser Quantum | 5/10 | File management, not AI-focused |
Dead But Iconic Corner
Nostalgia boost for legendary tools that shaped the scene:
weboas.is
Status: Dead (2022)
Why it mattered: Beautiful meta-search homepage, customizable, loved by r/startpages
What killed it: Creator (Webby) passed away. RIP.
Legacy: Dozens of forks trying to keep it alive (most failed)
The-Eye.eu
Status: Alive but diminished
Why it mattered: Largest open repo of piracy metadata (1TB+), hosted OD-Database
What happened: DMCA pressure, hosting costs, community fragmentation
Legacy: EyeDex, OD-Database still reference it
FileHunter
Status: Dead (2021)
Why it mattered: Java-based search with WebDAV, S3, FTP, NFS support
What killed it: Java maintenance burden, dev moved on
Legacy: Inspired modern tools to support multiple protocols
Hidden Gems You Missed
29. Grep.app (Vercel)
Use Case: Search code across 500K+ GitHub repos
Live: grep.app
Status:
Active (Vercel-backed)
Best Feature: Regex support, instant results
AI-Friendliness Score: 8/10
30. SOSSE (Self-Hosted Search Engine)
Status: Active January 2025
Use Case: Open-source, self-hosted digital archiving & search engine
Website: noted.lol/sosse
Status:
Active
Features: Web crawler, full-text search, archiving
Deployment Recommendations
For Production Search:
- Meilisearch Cloud (managed, resource-based pricing)
- Typesense Cloud (10B searches/month capacity)
For Self-Hosting:
- Docker Compose: Meilisearch, Typesense, FileBrowser Quantum
- Single Binary: ZincSearch, Sonic (minimal dependencies)
- Windows: Sonic Search (native NTFS access)
For Open Directory Hunting:
- ewasion.github.io/opendirectory-finder
- opendirsearch.abifog.com
- M3Unator (for playlists)
The Future: What’s Coming
FileBrowser Quantum v0.9+ (Q4 2025)
- Stable release imminent
- GPU acceleration planned
- Enhanced indexing features
Meilisearch Roadmap
- Continued indexer optimizations
- More AI features (personalization, recommendations)
- Enhanced multi-modal search
Typesense
- Vector search improvements
- Performance optimizations
- Enterprise features
The Brutal Truth
In 2025, searching the web isn’t discovery — it’s damage control.
The internet’s got dementia.
Open directories? Vanishing.
GitHub repos? Archived like museum pieces.
Student projects? Dead, deleted, or “temporarily down since 2021.”
These tools are the last ones still breathing — the digital cockroaches surviving the cleanup.
Use them. Clone them. Hoard them. Before Cloudflare, AI, or some bored intern wipes the last trace of the free web.
Go dig. Before the internet forgets you too.
!