You might see that the Dropbox Community team have been busy working on some major updates to the Community itself! So, here is some info on what’s changed, what’s staying the same and what you can expect from the Dropbox Community overall.
Forum Discussion
TC888
3 years agoExplorer | Level 3
Downloading files in a shared folder
I have an URL for a folder with files that I need to download using the API. Although the folder is public, and I'm able to download files from it on the website without any kind of authorizaiton or ...
- 3 years ago
To interact with files in a folder via a shared link to that folder, you shouldn't modify the shared link. You should instead use the API options to specify the relative path of the file inside the folder. Here's some example code showing the different things you can do:
// this shared link is for a folder String sharedLinkUrl = "https://www.dropbox.com/sh/sm8nzbmxo1khsb7/AAAYre26ySxEvrnLzvKMYOvma?dl=0"; // to get the metadata for a shared link: System.out.println(client.sharing().getSharedLinkMetadata(sharedLinkUrl)); // in this case, there's a file named "test.txt" in the linked folder: String relativeFilePath = "/test.txt"; // to get the metadata for a file in a folder from a shared link for the folder: System.out.println(client.sharing().getSharedLinkMetadataBuilder(sharedLinkUrl).withPath(relativeFilePath).start()); // or to programmatically list the contents of a folder from a shared link for the folder: System.out.println(client.files().listFolderBuilder("").withSharedLink(new SharedLink(sharedLinkUrl)).start()); // be sure to implement listFolderContinue too // to download a file in a folder from a shared link for the folder: System.out.println(client.sharing().getSharedLinkFileBuilder(sharedLinkUrl).withPath(relativeFilePath).start());
Greg-DB
Dropbox Staff
As for the access tokens, note that Dropbox is in the process of switching to only issuing short-lived access tokens (and optional refresh tokens) instead of long-lived access tokens. You can find more information on this migration here.
Apps can still get long-term access by requesting "offline" access though, in which case the app receives a "refresh token" that can be used to retrieve new short-lived access tokens as needed, without further manual user intervention. You can find more information in the OAuth Guide and authorization documentation.
You can find examples of handling the authorization flow with the Dropbox Java SDK in particular here.
For reference, while the creation of new long-lived access tokens is now deprecated, we don't currently have a plan to disable existing long-lived access tokens. (If that changes, we will of course announce that ahead of time.) That being the case, you can continue using existing long-lived access token(s) without interruption, if you have any. Also, note though that after the change you won't be able to create new long-lived access tokens.
While the change began on September 30th 2021, we released it gradually, so you may not have seen your app(s) affected until more recently. Once it applies to your app, it would apply regardless of the "Access token expiration" setting for your app, and that setting may no longer be available for your app.
TC888
3 years agoExplorer | Level 3
Thanks for the help. That was exactly the missing piece I needed.
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