A community-curated list of awesome projects, apps, tools, pinning services, and resources related to the InterPlanetary File System (IPFS).
Awesome IPFS is a community-curated list of resources related to the InterPlanetary File System (IPFS). It aggregates projects, applications, tools, pinning services, and learning materials to help developers explore and build on the decentralized web. The directory is maintained through open contributions and organized into categories for easy discovery.
Developers, researchers, and enthusiasts interested in decentralized technologies, peer-to-peer networking, and content-addressed storage who want to discover tools and projects within the IPFS ecosystem.
It provides a centralized, vetted directory of IPFS-related resources, saving time and effort in discovering relevant tools and projects. Being community-driven ensures it stays up-to-date with the rapidly evolving decentralized web landscape.
Community list of awesome projects, apps, tools, pinning services and more related to IPFS.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
The directory is open for contributions via pull requests, ensuring it stays current with the evolving IPFS ecosystem, as highlighted in the README's contribution guidelines.
Resources are organized into clear sections like Apps, Browsers, Tools, and Services, making it easy to discover specific types of projects without sifting through unrelated entries.
It maintains a separate list of inactive projects, providing valuable transparency about project maintenance and historical reference for deprecated tools.
Includes debugging tools and educational materials, such as CID Inspector and IPLD Explorer, helping users understand and troubleshoot IPFS effectively.
As a community-curated list, entries are not rigorously vetted, which can lead to inconsistent quality, outdated links, or unmaintained projects slipping into the main directory.
Each resource is listed with minimal description—often just a link—lacking detailed reviews, usage examples, or performance benchmarks to guide selection.
The directory is a static markdown file with no built-in search or filtering features, making it cumbersome to find specific tools without scrolling through entire sections.