pgweb
Inspect a PostgreSQL database right now, without installing pgAdmin or exposing Postgres to the internet - pgweb answers that recurring need. It's a Go application from Dan Sosedoff, a decade in development, shipped as a single statically-linked binary with zero dependencies - the Docker image is essentially just the executable - that puts a clean browser UI in front of any PostgreSQL 9.1+ server. Connect via URL string or host/port credentials, and browse tables, views, and sequences from the sidebar; selecting a table shows its rows immediately alongside tabs for structure, indexes, and constraints. The Query tab executes arbitrary SQL with query history, and the Explain Query button renders the query plan - estimated cost, row counts, execution strategy - which makes pgweb a quick performance-triage tool, not just a browser. Results and entire tables export to CSV, JSON, or XML in a click. Connectivity is more flexible than its size suggests: native SSH tunneling (password or key) reaches databases behind firewalls, server bookmarks make switching instances instant, and an optional multi-session mode handles several databases concurrently. For a RepoCloud stack full of Postgres-backed apps, one pgweb instance is the universal inspection hatch. MIT-licensed, actively maintained.
Tolgee
Hold Alt/Option, click any string in your running app, and edit the translation in place: Tolgee is an open-source localization platform built the way developers wish translation worked - changes save straight to the platform with no hunting through JSON or PO files. In-context editing works even in production via the Tolgee Tools browser extension, which injects credentials without touching source code, so a client or colleague with zero coding skills can translate the product inside the product. The SDKs (React, Angular, Vue, Svelte, plus iOS and Android) extract context from each UI element and capture one-click screenshots, giving both human translators and machines the surrounding meaning that raw string files lose. Autonomous translation uses that context: new keys are instantly filled from translation memory or machine translation (DeepL, Google Translate, AWS Translate), with optional human review afterward - shipping no longer waits on a translation agency. A CLI handles import/export, a REST API covers automation, a Figma plugin bridges design, and an MCP server lets AI coding assistants search keys, create translations, and trigger machine translation without leaving the editor. Self-hosting this Crowdin/Phrase/Lokalise alternative keeps every string, screenshot, and API key on your infrastructure.
Ties
A federated bookmark manager written in Rust: Ties (formerly linkblocks) is your own small corner of the web for saving, organizing, and sharing good pages, connected to the fediverse over ActivityPub. Instead of rigid folders, bookmarks live in arbitrarily nested lists that link together into a knowledge graph. Saved pages are fetched, converted to a readable archived version, and stored in the database, so full-text search covers titles, URLs, and the actual page text - and the content survives if the original disappears. The federation model is deliberately anti-viral: there is no global timeline and no algorithmic feed. You publish public lists for anyone, follow users whose taste you trust, and mark trusted users whose bookmarks become part of your search range - extendable to trusted-users-of-trusted-users for a wider net. Public bookmarks post to Mastodon timelines, and WebFinger lookup makes your handle discoverable across fediverse platforms. Operationally it is about as light as web software gets: a single binary with all assets baked in, integrated TLS so it can run without a reverse proxy, PostgreSQL as the only dependency, OIDC single sign-on, and a bookmarklet for one-click saves. Note the project is alpha: single-user instances only, and all data should be considered public. AGPL-3.0 licensed, built with Rust and htmx.
Freescout
Unlimited agents, unlimited tickets, unlimited mailboxes, forever, on a $4 VPS - FreeScout's pricing inversion is why it became the most popular self-hosted Help Scout alternative, a PHP/Laravel help desk and shared inbox developed from scratch over eight years. The inbox deliberately behaves like Gmail or Outlook, so new support agents need close to zero training. The email-support core is genuinely complete: seamless IMAP/SMTP integration including modern Microsoft Exchange authentication, collision detection that warns when two agents open the same conversation, canned responses, auto-replies, internal notes, open tracking, starring, forwarding, merging, and moving conversations between mailboxes, phone-call logging, push notifications, and an auto-refreshing conversation list - plus screenshot pasting straight from the clipboard into replies. It's 100% mobile-friendly, fully screen-reader accessible, and translated into 28 languages. Beyond the core, an ecosystem of 100+ modules (mostly one-time $12-20 purchases) adds knowledge base, workflows with Gmail-filter-style automation rules, satisfaction ratings, time tracking, tags, custom fields, LDAP, Slack, WhatsApp and Telegram channels, and an API with webhooks - pay only for what your team needs. Web installer and updater included. AGPL-licensed.
ClassicPress
WordPress without Gutenberg: ClassicPress, the community-led fork, keeps the TinyMCE classic editor as the default and strips the block editor and Full Site Editing out of core entirely. The result is roughly half WordPress's size - obsolete libraries like jQueryUI, Thickbox, and Flash support are gone, replaced by native HTML5 elements and modern alternatives like SortableJS - which translates to a measurably faster admin and a leaner attack surface. Forked from WordPress 6.2, it remains compatible with the vast plugin and theme ecosystem targeting that lineage (anything not requiring blocks generally works, helped by a blocks-compatibility mode), and the PHP-first WordPress API developers have used for over a decade works unchanged - no React required to extend your CMS. The fork adds its own improvements: built-in media categories and tags with bulk editing, revision management that lets you prune database bloat, native HTML5 dialogs for accessible touch-friendly menus, and recent releases bring APCu object-cache support, vanilla-JS core widgets, and performant translations. Governance is democratic and community-driven rather than corporate. For content sites, business sites, and blogs where the classic editing workflow is the feature, ClassicPress is stability as a philosophy.
KeeWeb
Your KeePass vaults, opened from any browser: KeeWeb reads, edits, and creates standard KDBX files, so it works with the same databases as KeePass and KeePassXC without conversion or lock-in. Self-hosting the web app gives you a password manager reachable from any modern browser, including mobile, with no client installation and no third-party cloud in the loop. All KDBX cryptography runs client-side; the server just serves the static app. Open multiple vault files simultaneously and search them all from one box, with advanced options covering specific fields, password history, and regular expressions. Vaults load from local files, your own server (WebDAV), or Dropbox, Google Drive, and OneDrive, with automatic sync - and files are cached for offline use, so a dropped connection never locks you out; changes resync once you're back online. Day-to-day niceties include a configurable password generator, protected fields that stay masked and are held in memory more defensively, entry history, tags with easy input, drag-and-drop attachments, and per-entry icons with favicon fetching. The optional KeeWeb Connect extension (Chrome, Firefox, Edge, Safari) autofills credentials using the keepassxc-protocol. MIT-licensed with matching desktop apps for macOS, Windows, and Linux.
Fireshare
The moment after ShadowPlay saves a great clip is what Fireshare was built for: your friends see it now, not after a YouTube upload, processing queue, and platform terms review. Drop videos into a watched folder and this Flask/React application generates a unique shareable URL for each one, complete with Open Graph metadata - so pasting the link into Discord, Twitter, or Slack produces a proper embed with title, description, and video thumbnail instead of a raw URL. Viewers need no account and no app. Visibility is per-file: public (browseable on your feed), private (unlisted, reachable only by direct link), or password protected. For game clips specifically, Fireshare organizes automatically - clips sort by game with cover art pulled from SteamGridDB, no manual tagging - while tags and full-library search cover everything else. Optional transcoding (CPU or GPU) creates lower-quality renditions so viewers on weak connections get automatic quality adaptation, and video cropping trims clips in place. The extras round out a genuinely finished tool: view counters, timestamped share links, a shuffle button, restrictable uploads, Discord notifications for new videos, an RSS feed of the public feed, mobile support, and LDAP for multi-user setups. No storage limits, no watermarks, no platform deciding what stays up. GPL-licensed.
Chief-Onboarding
New hires fail from information overload and IT bottlenecks, not lack of goodwill - the observation behind ChiefOnboarding, a free, open-source employee onboarding platform (Django, Celery, PostgreSQL, Redis). Its answer is sequences - drag-and-drop timelines that drip-feed to-do items, resources, courses, forms, and badges to each new hire, triggered by dates or by completing a previous item, so nobody faces everything at once. Onboarding starts before day one: preboarding pages welcome hires early, and colleagues can leave personal messages that appear there. The account provisioning module creates the new hire's Slack, Google, Asana, and other accounts automatically on the scheduled day via a library of integrations plus custom webhooks - the IT ticket queue never gets involved. Everything works through two equivalent interfaces: a full web dashboard and a Slack bot, either usable standalone. Slack can even auto-create new hire accounts when someone joins the workspace and assign default sequences with zero manual action. Colleague tasks with comments and collaboration, a searchable people directory, scheduled introductions, and per-hire timezone awareness (no 3 a.m. notifications) round it out. No trackers, no phoning home - third-party credentials sit in encrypted fields on your server.
HumHub
Workplace and Yammer's pattern on your own server, with GDPR compliance by construction rather than contract: HumHub is an open-source enterprise social network from Germany. Built in PHP on Yii2, it organizes everything around four concepts. Users get rich profiles with follows and interactions. Spaces are the structural unit - rooms for departments, projects, events, or clubs, with per-Space permissions, notification settings, and email summaries, and operators can auto-map users into the right Spaces. Content covers posts, wiki pages, photos and video, events, and tasks, with multi-level comments, versioning, archiving, moderation reporting, and filterable full-text search across everything. Modules make it a platform: roughly 80 install-and-activate extensions including Calendar, Wiki, Polls, Tasks, Gallery, News, direct-message Mail, OnlyOffice document editing, Advanced LDAP, SAML and JWT SSO, a RESTful API, mass user import, Translation Manager, and a Theme Builder with custom pages - every one optional and toggleable at runtime. That module economy is why HumHub serves such varied deployments: corporate intranets, city governments, universities, political parties, and nonprofits all configure the same core differently. Requirements are a plain LAMP stack - PHP 8.1+ and MySQL/MariaDB - making it one of the easiest community platforms to operate long-term.
Mstream
"The easiest music streaming server available" is mStream's own billing, and the claim holds up: a lightweight Node.js app that turns a folder of audio files into a private streaming service in minutes, no external database required. Its filesystem-based design is the clever part - the API mirrors your folder structure, so you can browse and play music immediately, before any library scan finishes, and your organization on disk is your organization in the app. It streams flac, mp3, wav, ogg, opus, aac, and m4a, which matters to the audiophile crowd: FLAC plays uncompressed, bit-perfect, with gapless playback for live albums and continuous mixes. The web player runs anywhere a browser does and packs personality - a Milkdrop-style visualizer (Butterchurn), playlist sharing via links, and drag-and-drop uploads straight through the file explorer. Native iOS and Android apps add the feature streaming subscriptions can't match: sync your collection to your phone for true offline playback of music you own. Multi-user support assigns separate directories and permissions per account. Resource usage is famously light - mStream is tested on multi-terabyte libraries and runs happily on a Raspberry Pi, so a small RepoCloud instance serves a lifetime's collection. GPL-licensed, with zero listening-habit telemetry.
Countly
Mixpanel, OneSignal, and Crashlytics in one self-hosted stack - Countly is an all-in-one product analytics and engagement platform where every byte of first-party data stays on your server. A Node.js application over MongoDB, it collects through ten battle-tested SDKs spanning iOS, Android, web JavaScript, React Native, Flutter, Unity, and desktop (plus a data write API for anything else), and has powered tens of thousands of mobile, web, and desktop apps since 2012. The analytics core covers sessions, custom events, views, user profiles, and real-time dashboards, with exploration tools built for product managers as much as analysts. What separates Countly from pure analytics tools is acting on the data without third parties: built-in push notifications send automated, transactional, and personalized messages to iOS (APNs), Android (Firebase), and Huawei devices, with the SDK handling token retrieval and permission flows automatically; crash reporting captures symbolicated native crashes on iOS and Android plus JavaScript errors, correlated with the same user and session data. Email reports keep stakeholders updated, and the plugin-based architecture means features load as modules. For GDPR-sensitive products, engagement without piping user data to advertising companies is the entire point. AGPL-licensed server, installable in minutes.
Papercups
Companies with privacy and security concerns about piping customer conversations through Intercom or Zendesk run Papercups - open-source live customer chat. The stack is a deliberate strength: an Elixir/Phoenix API over PostgreSQL, with real-time messaging powered by Phoenix Channels and Presence - the same BEAM foundation trusted by Discord and PagerDuty for fault-tolerant, low-latency messaging. Customers see a customizable chat widget that embeds in any site as an HTML snippet, a React component, or even inside React Native apps, with configurable colors, greetings, and away messages. Your team sees a dashboard for managing conversations - close, assign, and prioritize - with Markdown and emoji in replies. The killer workflow is the reply-channel integration: connect Slack or Mattermost and every customer conversation becomes a synced thread your team answers without leaving the tool they already live in, with two-way message syncing handled by webhooks. Email and SMS channels extend intake beyond the widget, an analytics dashboard tracks communication patterns, and the Storytime feature adds real-time screen sharing to watch users navigate while you help them. A documented API supports fully custom chat UIs in Svelte, Flutter, or Vue. MIT-licensed and GDPR-conscious - customer data stays in your PostgreSQL.
Upvote RSS
The antidote to doomscrolling: Upvote RSS turns Reddit, Hacker News, Lemmy, Lobsters, PieFed, Mbin, and trending GitHub repositories into calm, filtered RSS feeds. The MIT-licensed PHP app's killer feature is intelligent filtering: beyond simple score thresholds, the "posts per day" filter analyzes a community's recent history and computes the score cutoff that yields your target volume - say, exactly three r/technology posts daily - while a percentage-based threshold mode stays consistent as communities grow. Feeds are rich, not bare links: parsed full-article content via Readability (with optional Readability.js, Mercury, or Browserless for JavaScript-heavy pages), embedded videos and image galleries, top-voted comments with pinned-moderator filtering, scores, reading-time estimates, and optional AI summaries through Ollama, OpenAI, Gemini, Anthropic, Mistral, DeepSeek, or any OpenAI-compatible endpoint - with automatic provider fallback. A web UI builds the feed URL interactively with live preview; paste the result into any RSS reader. Reddit support includes custom domains like old.reddit.com plus NSFW filtering and blurring. Caching via filesystem, Redis, or APCu keeps repeated fetches cheap and avoids re-running paid summarizations.
phpMyAdmin
Since 1998, phpMyAdmin has been the standard web interface for MySQL and MariaDB - the tool millions of developers, DBAs, and hosting companies reach for when a database needs inspecting, fixing, or migrating. Written in PHP, it covers effectively the entire administration surface: create, browse, alter, and drop databases, tables, views, columns, and indexes; insert and edit rows through a tabular editor; manage user accounts and granular privileges; and maintain stored procedures, triggers, and events - all without touching a command line. The SQL editor executes arbitrary queries with syntax highlighting, autocompletion, history, and bookmarkable statements, including batch queries. Import/export is a migration workhorse: read SQL, CSV, XML, and OpenDocument spreadsheets in; write out to SQL dumps, CSV, JSON, XML, PDF, Word, LaTeX, and more - the fastest path for moving a WordPress database or handing a schema to a colleague. The Designer view renders your schema as an interactive ER diagram with drag-and-drop relationship editing, and data transformations display BLOBs as images or download links inline. Server maintenance views surface configuration suggestions. Multi-server support, dark mode, and translations into 72 languages round out a tool that earns its ubiquity. GPL-licensed.
Kanboard
"Less is more" is Kanboard's stated philosophy, and the free, MIT-licensed PHP application lives it: drag tasks between customizable columns, enforce work-in-progress limits per column, and slice boards horizontally with swimlanes for releases, teams, or priorities. Tasks carry what matters - colors, categories, subtasks with time estimates, Markdown descriptions, comments, attachments, internal links, and due dates - and move or duplicate across projects in one click. A concise query language filters any board dynamically (assignee, category, due date, description), and saved filters become custom views. The automatic-actions engine kills repetitive triage: on events like column moves or task creation, Kanboard reassigns, recolors, recategorizes, or closes tasks by rule. Around the board sit a calendar, per-project analytics (cumulative flow, lead and cycle time), Gantt view, and time tracking. Authentication spans LDAP/Active Directory, Google, GitHub, GitLab, and reverse-proxy headers; a JSON-RPC API, webhooks for creating tasks from external systems, and a CLI cover integration. A large community plugin catalog adds what core deliberately omits. With no external dependencies, it runs happily on anything from a Raspberry Pi up - translated into 30+ languages.
Apprise-API
One REST call, 130+ notification services: Apprise API wraps the well-known Apprise library in a lightweight Django/Gunicorn microservice, so "send an alert" works the same whether it goes to Slack, Discord, Telegram, Teams, email, SMS, Pushover, or PagerDuty - each addressed by a simple URL scheme. It solves the credential-sprawl problem cleanly: instead of embedding provider tokens in every app, cron job, and CI pipeline, you centralize them here and everything else just POSTs a body and title. Two modes cover every workflow. Stateless calls to /notify carry target URLs in the payload (or fall back to a default set via APPRISE_STATELESS_URLS); stateful mode stores named configurations server-side under keys, so /notify/{KEY} fans out to everything registered - with tag-based routing (comma for OR, space for AND) selecting which endpoints fire per message. Messages take info, success, warning, or failure types in text, Markdown, or HTML, with attachments up to a configurable size. A built-in web UI manages and tests configurations, APPRISE_CONFIG_LOCK makes the store read-only, service allow/deny lists restrict which schemes work, webhook remapping adapts third-party payloads, and a Prometheus /metrics endpoint watches the gateway itself.
The Lounge
"Forget about bouncers" became a real sentence because of The Lounge: a Node.js web IRC client that holds persistent connections to your networks 24/7, logging everything while you sleep, so closing the browser tab never means missing a message or losing your place in a channel. Open it again from any device - desktop, phone, tablet - and you resume exactly where you left off, with full history synchronized. Because it combines bouncer and client in one process, the experience feels like a modern chat app rather than 1990s infrastructure: push notifications for highlights and private messages (with self-generated VAPID keys, so even Web Push needs no third-party service), automatic link previews, inline file and image uploads, and full IRCv3 protocol support. It installs as a progressive web app from any modern browser, so phones get a native-feel client without an app store. Multi-user support means one instance serves your whole team or community, each user with their own networks and history, and LDAP integration ties into existing authentication. A public mode alternatively serves as an open, registration-free web chat for events or support channels. MIT-licensed, born as a fork of Shout, and a fixture of self-hosting stacks since.
Motor Admin
Stop building internal tools and ship your actual product - Motor Admin exists for exactly that. Point this Ruby/Vue application at a PostgreSQL, MySQL, MariaDB, or SQL Server database and it generates a complete CRUD admin panel from your schema in under a minute - search, filters, create, update, delete, all through a polished UI, with every customization done through in-app settings rather than a DSL or boilerplate code. What elevates it beyond CRUD generators is the business-intelligence half: write SQL queries (with variables) and render results as tables, numbers, line/bar/ pie charts, funnels, or markdown; organize reports into shared dashboards; and attach queries and dashboards directly to resource pages as tabs, so an order record shows its revenue history in place. Operations beyond CRUD are covered by custom actions and a WYSIWYG forms builder that posts to your existing REST or GraphQL APIs - send a refund, trigger an email, whatever your backend exposes. Email alerts deliver scheduled reports, Slack sends personalized report alerts, and intelligence search spans all resources. Governance is included: role-based permissions with row- and column-level control (CanCanCan), an audit log of admin activity, multiple database connections, and configuration sync between staging and production. Mobile-optimized, AGPL-licensed, also available as a Rails engine.