This project is deprecated and no longer maintained. No further changes will be made.
In one of the PyDrive issues, we learned about the PyDrive2 fork of PyDrive. Forks are permitted under PyDrive's license, and we hope that such forks will be useful for the needs of PyDrive users. The PyDrive team makes no endorsement or support promises of any particular fork, but we're excited to see the open source license being a vehicle for new project development.
PyDrive is a wrapper library of google-api-python-client that simplifies many common Google Drive API tasks.
- Homepage: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/PyDrive
- Documentation: Official documentation on GitHub pages
- GitHub: https://github.com/googleworkspace/PyDrive
- Simplifies OAuth2.0 into just few lines with flexible settings.
- Wraps Google Drive API into classes of each resource to make your program more object-oriented.
- Helps common operations else than API calls, such as content fetching and pagination control.
You can install PyDrive with regular pip
command.
$ pip install PyDrive
To install the current development version from GitHub, use:
$ pip install git+https://github.com/googleworkspace/PyDrive.git#egg=PyDrive
Download client_secrets.json from Google API Console and OAuth2.0 is done in two lines. You can customize behavior of OAuth2 in one settings file settings.yaml.
from pydrive.auth import GoogleAuth
from pydrive.drive import GoogleDrive
gauth = GoogleAuth()
gauth.LocalWebserverAuth()
drive = GoogleDrive(gauth)
Upload/update the file with one method. PyDrive will do it in the most efficient way.
file1 = drive.CreateFile({'title': 'Hello.txt'})
file1.SetContentString('Hello')
file1.Upload() # Files.insert()
file1['title'] = 'HelloWorld.txt' # Change title of the file
file1.Upload() # Files.patch()
content = file1.GetContentString() # 'Hello'
file1.SetContentString(content+' World!') # 'Hello World!'
file1.Upload() # Files.update()
file2 = drive.CreateFile()
file2.SetContentFile('hello.png')
file2.Upload()
print('Created file %s with mimeType %s' % (file2['title'],
file2['mimeType']))
# Created file hello.png with mimeType image/png
file3 = drive.CreateFile({'id': file2['id']})
print('Downloading file %s from Google Drive' % file3['title']) # 'hello.png'
file3.GetContentFile('world.png') # Save Drive file as a local file
# or download Google Docs files in an export format provided.
# downloading a docs document as an html file:
docsfile.GetContentFile('test.html', mimetype='text/html')
PyDrive handles file listing pagination for you.
# Auto-iterate through all files that matches this query
file_list = drive.ListFile({'q': "'root' in parents"}).GetList()
for file1 in file_list:
print('title: {}, id: {}'.format(file1['title'], file1['id']))
# Paginate file lists by specifying number of max results
for file_list in drive.ListFile({'maxResults': 10}):
print('Received {} files from Files.list()'.format(len(file_list))) # <= 10
for file1 in file_list:
print('title: {}, id: {}'.format(file1['title'], file1['id']))
All calls made are thread-safe. The underlying implementation in the google-api-client library is not thread-safe, which means that every request has to re-authenticate an http object. You can avoid this overhead by creating your own http object for each thread and re-use it for every call.
This can be done as follows:
# Create httplib.Http() object.
http = drive.auth.Get_Http_Object()
# Create file object to upload.
file_obj = drive.CreateFile()
file_obj['title'] = "file name"
# Upload the file and pass the http object into the call to Upload.
file_obj.Upload(param={"http": http})
You can specify the http-object in every access method which takes a param parameter.
Note: This is not an official Google product.