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Wesley Chun: Authorized Google API access from Python (part 2 of 2)

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NOTE: You can also watch a video walkthrough of the common code covered in this blogpost here.

UPDATE (Aug 2016): The code has been modernized to use oauth2client.tools.run_flow() instead of the deprecated oauth2client.tools.run_flow(). You can read more about that change here.

UPDATE (Jun 2016): Updated to Python 2.7 & 3.3+ and Drive API v3.

Introduction

In this final installment of a (currently) two-part series introducing Python developers to building on Google APIs, we'll extend from the simple API example from the first post (part 1) just over a month ago. Those first snippets showed some skeleton code and a short real working sample that demonstrate accessing a public (Google) API with an API key (that queried public Google+ posts). An API key however, does not grant applications access to authorized data.

Authorized data, including user information such as personal files on Google Drive and YouTube playlists, require additional security steps before access is granted. Sharing of and hardcoding credentials such as usernames and passwords is not only insecure, it's also a thing of the past. A more modern approach leverages token exchange, authenticated API calls, and standards such as OAuth2.

In this post, we'll demonstrate how to use Python to access authorized Google APIs using OAuth2, specifically listing the files (and folders) in your Google Drive. In order to better understand the example, we strongly recommend you check out the OAuth2 guides (general OAuth2 info, OAuth2 as it relates to Python and its client library) in the documentation to get started.

The docs describe the OAuth2 flow: making a request for authorized access, having the user grant access to your app, and obtaining a(n access) token with which to sign and make authorized API calls with. The steps you need to take to get started begin nearly the same way as for simple API access. The process diverges when you arrive on the Credentials page when following the steps below.

Google API access

In order to Google API authorized access, follow these instructions (the first three of which are roughly the same for simple API access):
  • Go to the Google Developers Console and login.
    • Use your Gmail or Google credentials; create an account if needed
  • Click "Create a Project" from pulldown under your username (at top)
    • Enter a Project Name (mutable, human-friendly string only used in the console)
    • Enter a Project ID (immutable, must be unique and not already taken)
  • Once project has been created, enable APIs you wish to use
  • Select "Credentials" in left-nav
    • Click "Create credentials" and select OAuth client ID
    • In the new dialog, select your application type — we're building a command-line script which is an "Installed application"
    • In the bottom part of that same dialog, specify the type of installed application; choose "Other" (cmd-line scripts are not web nor mobile)
    • Click "Create Client ID" to generate your credentials
  • Finally, click "Download JSON" to save the new credentials to your computer... perhaps choose a shorter name like "client_secret.json" or "client_id.json"
    NOTEs: Instructions from the previous blogpost were to get an API key. This time, in the steps above, we're creating and downloading OAuth2 credentials. You can also watch a video walkthrough of this app setup process of getting simple or authorized access credentials in the "DevConsole"here.

      Accessing Google APIs from Python

      In order to access authorized Google APIs from Python, you still need the Google APIs Client Library for Python, so in this case, do follow those installation instructions from part 1.

      We will again use the apiclient.discovery.build() function, which is what we need to create a service endpoint for interacting with an API, authorized or otherwise. However, for authorized data access, we need additional resources, namely the httplib2 and oauth2client packages. Here are the first five lines of the new boilerplate code for authorized access:

      from __future__ import print_function
      from apiclient import discovery
      from httplib2 import Http
      from oauth2client import file, client, tools

      SCOPES = # one or more scopes (strings)
      SCOPES is a critical variable: it represents the set of scopes of authorization an app wants to obtain (then access) on behalf of user(s). What's does a scope look like?

      Each scope is a single character string, specifically a URL. Here are some examples:
      • 'https://www.googleapis.com/auth/plus.me'— access your personal Google+ settings
      • 'https://www.googleapis.com/auth/drive.metadata.readonly'— read-only access your Google Drive file or folder metadata
      • 'https://www.googleapis.com/auth/youtube'— access your YouTube playlists and other personal information
      You can request one or more scopes, given as a single space-delimited string of scopes or an iterable (list, generator expression, etc.) of strings.  If you were writing an app that accesses both your YouTube playlists as well as your Google+ profile information, your SCOPES variable could be either of the following:
      SCOPES = 'https://www.googleapis.com/auth/plus.me https://www.googleapis.com/auth/youtube'

      That is space-delimited and made tiny by me so it doesn't wrap in a regular-sized browser window; or it could be an easier-to-read, non-tiny, and non-wrapped tuple:

      SCOPES = (
          'https://www.googleapis.com/auth/plus.me',
          'https://www.googleapis.com/auth/youtube',
      )

      Our example command-line script will just list the files on your Google Drive, so we only need the read-only Drive metadata scope, meaning our SCOPES variable will be just this:
      SCOPES = 'https://www.googleapis.com/auth/drive.metadata.readonly'
      The next section of boilerplate represents the security code:
      store = file.Storage('storage.json')
      creds = store.get()
      if not creds or creds.invalid:
          flow = client.flow_from_clientsecrets('client_id.json', SCOPES)
          creds = tools.run_flow(flow, store)
      Once the user has authorized access to their personal data by your app, a special "access token" is given to your app. This precious resource must be stored somewhere local for the app to use. In our case, we'll store it in a file called "storage.json". The lines setting the store and creds variables are attempting to get a valid access token with which to make an authorized API call.

      If the credentials are missing or invalid, such as being expired, the authorization flow (using the client secret you downloaded along with a set of requested scopes) must be created (by client.flow_from_clientsecrets()) and executed (by tools.run_flow()) to ensure possession of valid credentials. The client_id.json or client_secret.json file is the credentials file you saved when you clicked "Download JSON" from the DevConsole after you've created your OAuth2 client ID.

      If you don't have credentials at all, the user much explicitly grant permission — I'm sure you've all seen the OAuth2 dialog describing the type of access an app is requesting (remember those scopes?). Once the user clicks "Accept" to grant permission, a valid access token is returned and saved into the storage file (because you passed a handle to it when you called tools.run_flow()).

      Note: tools.run() deprecated by tools.run_flow()
      You may have seen usage of the older tools.run() function, but it has been deprecated by tools.run_flow(). We explain this in more detail in another blogpost specifically geared towards migration.

      Once the user grants access and valid credentials are saved, you can create one or more endpoints to the secure service(s) desired with apiclient.discovery.build(), just like with simple API access. Its call will look slightly different, mainly that you need to sign your HTTP requests with your credentials rather than passing an API key:

      DRIVE = discovery.build(API, VERSION, http=creds.authorize(Http()))

      In our example, we're going to list your files and folders in your Google Drive, so for API, use the string 'drive'. The API is currently on version 3 so use 'v3' for VERSION:

      DRIVE = discovery.build('drive', 'v3', http=creds.authorize(Http()))

      If you want to get comfortable with OAuth2, what it's flow is and how it works, we recommend that you experiment at the OAuth Playground. There you can choose from any number of APIs to access and experience first-hand how your app must be authorized to access personal data.

      Going back to our working example, once you have an established service endpoint, you can use the list() method of the files service to request the file data:

      files = DRIVE.files().list().execute().get('files', [])

      If there's any data to read, the response dict will contain an iterable of files that we can loop over (or default to an empty list so the loop doesn't fail), displaying file names and types:

      for f in files:
          print(f['name'], f['mimeType'])

      Conclusion

      To find out more about the input parameters as well as all the fields that are in the response, take a look at the docs for files().list(). For more information on what other operations you can execute with the Google Drive API, take a look at the reference docs and check out the companion video for this code sample. That's it!

      Below is the entire script for your convenience:
      '''
      drive_list.py -- Google Drive API authorized demo
      updated Aug 2016 by +WesleyChun/@wescpy
      '''
      from __future__ import print_function

      from apiclient import discovery
      from httplib2 import Http
      from oauth2client import file, client, tools

      SCOPES = 'https://www.googleapis.com/auth/drive.readonly.metadata'
      store = file.Storage('storage.json')
      creds = store.get()
      if not creds or creds.invalid:
          flow = client.flow_from_clientsecrets('client_id.json', SCOPES)
          creds = tools.run_flow(flow, store)

      DRIVE = discovery.build('drive', 'v3', http=creds.authorize(Http()))
      files = DRIVE.files().list().execute().get('files', [])
      for f in files:
          print(f['name'], f['mimeType'])
      When you run it, you should see pretty much what you'd expect, a list of file or folder names followed by their MIMEtypes — I named my script drive_list.py:
      $ python3 drive_list.py
      Google Maps demo application/vnd.google-apps.spreadsheet
      Overview of Google APIs - Sep 2014 application/vnd.google-apps.presentation
      tiresResearch.xls application/vnd.google-apps.spreadsheet
      6451_Core_Python_Schedule.doc application/vnd.google-apps.document
      out1.txt application/vnd.google-apps.document
      tiresResearch.xls application/vnd.ms-excel
      6451_Core_Python_Schedule.doc application/msword
      out1.txt text/plain
      Maps and Sheets demo application/vnd.google-apps.spreadsheet
      ProtoRPC Getting Started Guide application/vnd.google-apps.document
      gtaskqueue-1.0.2_public.tar.gz application/x-gzip
      Pull Queues application/vnd.google-apps.folder
      gtaskqueue-1.0.1_public.tar.gz application/x-gzip
      appengine-java-sdk.zip application/zip
      taskqueue.py text/x-python-script
      Google Apps Security Whitepaper 06/10/2010.pdf application/pdf
      Obviously your output will be different, depending on what files are in your Google Drive. But that's it... hope this is useful. You can now customize this code for your own needs and/or to access other Google APIs. Thanks for reading!

      EXTRA CREDIT: To test your skills, add functionality to this code that also displays the last modified timestamp, the file (byte)size, and perhaps shave the MIMEtype a bit as it's slightly harder to read in its entirety... perhaps take just the final path element? One last challenge: in the output above, we have both Microsoft Office documents as well as their auto-converted versions for Google Apps... perhaps only show the filename once and have a double-entry for the filetypes!

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