ChatGPT解决这个技术问题 Extra ChatGPT

wget/curl large file from google drive

I'm trying to download a file from google drive in a script, and I'm having a little trouble doing so. The files I'm trying to download are here.

I've looked online extensively and I finally managed to get one of them to download. I got the UIDs of the files and the smaller one (1.6MB) downloads fine, however the larger file (3.7GB) always redirects to a page which asks me whether I want to proceed with the download without a virus scan. Could someone help me get past that screen?

Here's how I got the first file working -

curl -L "https://docs.google.com/uc?export=download&id=0Bz-w5tutuZIYeDU0VDRFWG9IVUE" > phlat-1.0.tar.gz

When I run the same on the other file,

curl -L "https://docs.google.com/uc?export=download&id=0Bz-w5tutuZIYY3h5YlMzTjhnbGM" > index4phlat.tar.gz

https://i.stack.imgur.com/Szcq2.jpg

I notice on the third-to-last line in the link, there a &confirm=JwkK which is a random 4 character string but suggests there's a way to add a confirmation to my URL. One of the links I visited suggested &confirm=no_antivirus but that's not working.

I hope someone here can help with this!

can you please provide the curl script you used to download the file from google drive as I am unable to download a working file ( image) from this script curl -u username:pass https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B0QQY4sFRhIDRk1LN3g2TjBIRU0 >image.jpg
Look at the accepted answer. I used the gdown.pl script gdown.pl https://drive.google.com/uc?export=download&confirm=yAjx&id=0Bz-w5tutuZIYY3h5YlMzTjhnbGM index4phlat.tar.gz
Don't be afraid to scroll! This answer provides a very nice python script to download in one go.
./gdrive download [FILEID] [--recursive if its a folder] it will ask for you to access a given url and copy paste a token code.
Works as of 04/17/2020, try this: github.com/gdrive-org/gdrive, and follow this github.com/gdrive-org/gdrive/issues/533#issuecomment-596336395 to create a service account, share the file/folder with the service account address and you can download, even for a publicly shared file/folder!

p
phi

June 2022

You can use gdown. Consider also visiting that page for full instructions; this is just a summary and the source repo may have more up-to-date instructions.

Instructions

Install it with the following command:

pip install gdown

After that, you can download any file from Google Drive by running one of these commands:

gdown https://drive.google.com/uc?id=<file_id>  # for files
gdown <file_id>                                 # alternative format
gdown --folder https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/<file_id>  # for folders
gdown --folder --id <file_id>                                   # this format works for folders too

Example: to download the readme file from this directory

gdown https://drive.google.com/uc?id=0B7EVK8r0v71pOXBhSUdJWU1MYUk

The file_id should look something like 0Bz8a_Dbh9QhbNU3SGlFaDg. You can find this ID by right-clicking on the file of interest, and selecting Get link. As of November 2021, this link will be of the form:

# Files
https://drive.google.com/file/d/<file_id>/view?usp=sharing
# Folders
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/<file_id>

Caveats

Only works on open access files. ("Anyone who has a link can View")

Cannot download more than 50 files into a single folder. If you have access to the source file, you can consider using tar/zip to make it a single file to work around this limitation.

If you have access to the source file, you can consider using tar/zip to make it a single file to work around this limitation.


Just remove export=download& from gdown https://drive.google.com/uc?export=download&id=your_file_id and it works like charm
This one worked in July 2018! Remember to share the file and if you have the link as drive.google.com/open?id=FILE_ID just replace "open" with "uc" and simply gdown drive.google.com/uc?id=FILE_ID
How can we download a folder from Gdrive using gdown?
Doesn't work as of August 2019. Error: "Permission denied: drive.google.com/uc?id=0B7EVK8r0v71pWEZsZE9oNnFzTm8 Maybe you need to change permission over 'Anyone with the link'?" And it's the publicly downloadable CelebA dataset so it should be ok. I acquired the download link by clicking 'get shareable linkg' then it said 'link sharing on' and 'anyone with the link can view it'. So it looks like the permission is already granted yet the error says permission denied. Here is the host site if you want to give it a try: mmlab.ie.cuhk.edu.hk/projects/CelebA.html
This is the only solution out of the half dozen I tried that works. It needs to be upvoted to the first. I only needed to change the 'shared link' from: drive.google.com/open?id=XXXX to drive.google.com/uc?id=XXXX
C
Community

I wrote a Python snippet that downloads a file from Google Drive, given a shareable link. It works, as of August 2017.

The snipped does not use gdrive, nor the Google Drive API. It uses the requests module.

When downloading large files from Google Drive, a single GET request is not sufficient. A second one is needed, and this one has an extra URL parameter called confirm, whose value should equal the value of a certain cookie.

import requests

def download_file_from_google_drive(id, destination):
    def get_confirm_token(response):
        for key, value in response.cookies.items():
            if key.startswith('download_warning'):
                return value

        return None

    def save_response_content(response, destination):
        CHUNK_SIZE = 32768

        with open(destination, "wb") as f:
            for chunk in response.iter_content(CHUNK_SIZE):
                if chunk: # filter out keep-alive new chunks
                    f.write(chunk)

    URL = "https://docs.google.com/uc?export=download"

    session = requests.Session()

    response = session.get(URL, params = { 'id' : id }, stream = True)
    token = get_confirm_token(response)

    if token:
        params = { 'id' : id, 'confirm' : token }
        response = session.get(URL, params = params, stream = True)

    save_response_content(response, destination)    


if __name__ == "__main__":
    import sys
    if len(sys.argv) is not 3:
        print("Usage: python google_drive.py drive_file_id destination_file_path")
    else:
        # TAKE ID FROM SHAREABLE LINK
        file_id = sys.argv[1]
        # DESTINATION FILE ON YOUR DISK
        destination = sys.argv[2]
        download_file_from_google_drive(file_id, destination)

I am running the snippet python snippet.py file_id destination. Is this the correct way of running it? Cause if destination is a folder I'm thrown an error. If I tough a file and I use that as a destination the snippet seems to work fine but then does nothing.
@Manfredo you need the file name you would like to save the file as, for example, $ python snippet.py your_google_file_id /your/full/path/and/filename.xlsx worked for me. in case that does not work, do you have any out put provided? does any file get created?
@CiprianTomoiaga I have 90% of a progress bar working, using the tqdm Python module. I made a gist: gist.github.com/joshtch/8e51c6d40b1e3205d1bb2eea18fb57ae . Unfortunately I haven't found a reliable way of getting the total file size, which you'll need in order to compute the % progress and estimated completion time.
Also, what kind of authentication does the requests module use to access google drives ? OAuth ? For example, where in your above code is this handled - requests-oauthlib.readthedocs.io/en/latest/… ?
This is awesome! Here is a tip for drive_File_ID: https//drive.google.com/file/d/"drive_File_ID"/view - between https~~file/d/ and /view of the download link.
B
Benyamin Jafari

April 2022

First, extract the ID of your desire file from google drive: In your browser, navigate to drive.google.com. Right-click on the file, and click "Get a shareable link" Then extract the ID of the file from URL:

In your browser, navigate to drive.google.com.

Right-click on the file, and click "Get a shareable link"

Then extract the ID of the file from URL:

Next, install gdown PyPI module using pip: pip install gdown

Finally, download the file using gdown and the intended ID: gdown --id

[NOTE]:

In google-colab you have to use ! before bash commands. (i.e. !gdown --id 1-1wAx7b-USG0eQwIBVwVDUl3K1_1ReCt)

You should change the permission of the intended file from "Restricted" to "Anyone with the link".


Work like a charm
Aug 2021, getting requests.exceptions.MissingSchema: Invalid URL '': No schema supplied. Perhaps you meant http://? error.
@Joker00 I checked it again. Still works for me. Did you copy the ID of your file after https://drive.google.com/file/d/ and before /view? Did you add the right permission into your file?
Don't forget quotes around ID gdown --id '1-1wAx7b-USG0eQwIBVwVDUl3K1_1ReCt'
Hey Ben. Also suggest this one: wget "drive.google.com/u/3/…"
a
alper

As of March 2022, you can use the open source cross-platform command line tool gdrive. In contrast to other solutions, it can also download folders, and can also work with non-public files.

About its current state

As discussed in the comments, there have been issues before with this tool not being verified by Google and it being unmaintained. Both issues are resolved since a commit from 2021-05-28. This also means, the workaround with a service account mentioned in the comments is no longer needed. In some cases you may still run into problems; in that case, you can try the ntechp-fork.

To install it:

Download the 2.1.1 binary. Choose a package that fits your OS and, for example gdrive_2.1.1_linux_amd64.tar.gz. Copy it to your path.

sudo cp gdrive-linux-x64 /usr/local/bin/gdrive;
sudo chmod a+x /usr/local/bin/gdrive;

To use it:

Determine the Google Drive file ID. For that, right-click the desired file in the Google Drive website and choose "Get Link …". It will return something like https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B7_OwkDsUIgFWXA1B2FPQfV5S8H. Obtain the string behind the ?id= and copy it to your clipboard. That's the file's ID. Download the file. Of course, use your file's ID instead in the following command.

gdrive download 0B7_OwkDsUIgFWXA1B2FPQfV5S8H

At first usage, the tool will need to obtain access permissions to the Google Drive API. For that, it will show you a link which you have to visit in a browser, and then you will get a verification code to copy&paste back to the tool. The download then starts automatically. There is no progress indicator, but you can observe the progress in a file manager or second terminal.

Source: A comment by Tobi on another answer here.

Additional trick: rate limiting. To download with gdrive at a limited maximum rate (to not swamp the network …), you can use a command like this (pv is PipeViewer):

gdrive download --stdout 0B7_OwkDsUIgFWXA1B2FPQfV5S8H | \
    pv -br -L 90k | cat > file.ext

This will show the amount of data downloaded (-b) and the rate of download (-r) and limit that rate to 90 kiB/s (-L 90k).


error message: "Daily Limit for Unauthenticated Use Exceeded. Continued use requires signup.", code: 403
Can't get verification code. Get the error "Sign in with Google temporarily disabled for this app This app has not yet been verified by Google in order to use Google Sign In."
Same error message here: "This app has not been verified yet by Google in order to use Google Sign In."
@useranon: Try this solution: github.com/gdrive-org/gdrive/issues/533#issuecomment-596336395, you need to create a google service account and share the file/folder with this service account address. I did it. Works as of 04/17/2020!
@tanius WARNING: github.com/prasmussen/gdrive is no longer maintained, developers also deleted the binary files
K
Kos

WARNING: This functionality is deprecated. See warning below in comments.

Have a look at this question: Direct download from Google Drive using Google Drive API

Basically you have to create a public directory and access your files by relative reference with something like

wget https://googledrive.com/host/LARGEPUBLICFOLDERID/index4phlat.tar.gz

Alternatively, you can use this script: https://github.com/circulosmeos/gdown.pl


another good way is to use the linux command line tool "gdrive" github.com/prasmussen/gdrive
I was able to use Nanolx's perl script in combination with the google drive permalink created at gdurl.com --Thanks!
WARNING: Web hosting support in Google Drive is deprecated. "Beginning August 31, 2015, web hosting in Google Drive for users and developers will be deprecated. Google Apps customers can continue to use this feature for a period of one year until August 31, 2016, when serving content via googledrive.com/host/doc id will be discontinued." googleappsupdates.blogspot.com/2015/08/…
Unfortunately that doesn't work any longer as of 2018.
gdown.pl worked great for me too. A quick look at the script shows it's not using that API, it creates a new URL with a parameter export=download so it should be good for the foreseeable future unless google changes that URL scheme
q
qwertzguy

Here's a quick way to do this.

Make sure the link is shared, and it will look something like this:

https://drive.google.com/open?id=FILEID&authuser=0

Then, copy that FILEID and use it like this

wget --no-check-certificate 'https://docs.google.com/uc?export=download&id=FILEID' -O FILENAME

If the file is large and triggers the virus check page, you can use do this (but it will download two files, one html file and the actual file):

wget --no-check-certificate 'https://docs.google.com/uc?export=download&id=FILEID' -r -A 'uc*' -e robots=off -nd

Hi, Thanks for the reply. If you look at the files on the link i shared, you will see that while the files are shared, they lack the 'authuser=0' tag in the link. Your method didn't work on the files provided! Arjun
Did not even try with public access, this one worked well for link-only shared files atow. Used it like this: wget 'https://docs.google.com/uc?export=download&id=SECRET_ID' -O 'filename.pdf'
It bypasses antivirus scanner for me in 2018 when used with -r flag of wget. So it is wget --no-check-certificate -r 'https://docs.google.com/uc?export=download&id=FILE_ID' -O 'filename'
Thanks, works for me on 09/2020, The FILEID also can be retrieve from such URL pattern: https://drive.google.com/file/d/FILEID/view?usp=sharing.
Also Worked for me in 2021 :) Thanks @ArtemPelenitsyn
J
Jeff Atwood

Update as of March 2018.

I tried various techniques given in other answers to download my file (6 GB) directly from Google drive to my AWS ec2 instance but none of them work (might be because they are old).

So, for the information of others, here is how I did it successfully:

Right-click on the file you want to download, click share, under link sharing section, select "anyone with this link can edit". Copy the link. It should be in this format: https://drive.google.com/file/d/FILEIDENTIFIER/view?usp=sharing Copy the FILEIDENTIFIER portion from the link. Copy the below script to a file. It uses curl and processes the cookie to automate the downloading of the file. #!/bin/bash fileid="FILEIDENTIFIER" filename="FILENAME" curl -c ./cookie -s -L "https://drive.google.com/uc?export=download&id=${fileid}" > /dev/null curl -Lb ./cookie "https://drive.google.com/uc?export=download&confirm=`awk '/download/ {print $NF}' ./cookie`&id=${fileid}" -o ${filename} As shown above, paste the FILEIDENTIFIER in the script. Remember to keep the double quotes! Provide a name for the file in place of FILENAME. Remember to keep the double quotes and also include the extension in FILENAME (for example, myfile.zip). Now, save the file and make the file executable by running this command in terminal sudo chmod +x download-gdrive.sh. Run the script using `./download-gdrive.sh".

PS: Here is the Github gist for the above given script: https://gist.github.com/amit-chahar/db49ce64f46367325293e4cce13d2424


for wget replace -c with --save-cookies and -b with --load-cookies
confirmed this worked for me 👍, edited a bit for clarity
Works in Jan 2019. I needed to add " quotes around ${filename} on the last line.
> Run the script using ./download-gdrive.sh" Do not be like me and try to run the script by typing download-gdrive.sh, the ./` seems to be mandatory.
Working in May 2019
l
lapinpt
ggID='put_googleID_here'  
ggURL='https://drive.google.com/uc?export=download'  
filename="$(curl -sc /tmp/gcokie "${ggURL}&id=${ggID}" | grep -o '="uc-name.*</span>' | sed 's/.*">//;s/<.a> .*//')"  
getcode="$(awk '/_warning_/ {print $NF}' /tmp/gcokie)"  
curl -Lb /tmp/gcokie "${ggURL}&confirm=${getcode}&id=${ggID}" -o "${filename}"  

How does it work? Get cookie file and html code with curl. Pipe html to grep and sed and search for file name. Get confirm code from cookie file with awk. Finally download file with cookie enabled, confirm code and filename.

curl -Lb /tmp/gcokie "https://drive.google.com/uc?export=download&confirm=Uq6r&id=0B5IRsLTwEO6CVXFURmpQZ1Jxc0U" -o "SomeBigFile.zip"

If you dont need filename variable curl can guess it -L Follow redirects -O Remote-name -J Remote-header-name

curl -sc /tmp/gcokie "${ggURL}&id=${ggID}" >/dev/null  
getcode="$(awk '/_warning_/ {print $NF}' /tmp/gcokie)"  
curl -LOJb /tmp/gcokie "${ggURL}&confirm=${getcode}&id=${ggID}" 

To extract google file ID from URL you can use:

echo "gURL" | egrep -o '(\w|-){26,}'  
# match more than 26 word characters  

OR

echo "gURL" | sed 's/[^A-Za-z0-9_-]/\n/g' | sed -rn '/.{26}/p'  
# replace non-word characters with new line,   
# print only line with more than 26 word characters 

Very nicely done. Got rid of the virus warning on a 5GB+ file when all other answers failed.
This is terrific. I did have to add the --insecure option to both curl requests to make it work.
@lapinpt how do i add RESUME functionality ?
Can we somehow get rid of the google id if we have a public link to the file?
G
Grant G

The easy way:

(if you just need it for a one-off download)

Go to the Google Drive webpage that has the download link Open your browser console and go to the "network" tab Click the download link Wait for it the file to start downloading, and find the corresponding request (should be the last one in the list), then you can cancel the download Right click on the request and click "Copy as cURL" (or similar)

You should end up with something like:

curl 'https://doc-0s-80-docs.googleusercontent.com/docs/securesc/aa51s66fhf9273i....................blah blah blah...............gEIqZ3KAQ==' --compressed

Past it in your console, add > my-file-name.extension to the end (otherwise it will write the file into your console), then press enter :)

The link does have some kind of expiration in it, so it won't work to start a download after a few minutes of generating that first request.


In Chrome on a Mac it's: View/Developer/Developer Tools/Network tab
Works Dec 2020, including when I right-click on a 3GB folder in Google Drive and Download, wait for it to zip, zip starts to download split into two parts, I grab the curl commands for each, append the > file.ext and both run fine (and download in 10 seconds to an AWS instance).
Does this link work indefinitely? Or does it expire?
Link isn't shown anymore as for Aug 2021!
Still works. @AbdelKh make sure you open F12 tool large enough so that the network tab can show the requests. Copy as cURL from the last one on the list.
A
Alex

The default behavior of google drive is to scan files for viruses if the file is to big it will prompte the user and notifies him that the file could not be scanned.

At the moment the only workaround I found is to share the file with the web and create a web resource.

Quote from the google drive help page:

With Drive, you can make web resources — like HTML, CSS, and Javascript files — viewable as a website.

To host a webpage with Drive:

Open Drive at drive.google.com and select a file. Click the Share button at the top of the page. Click Advanced in the bottom right corner of the sharing box. Click Change.... Choose On - Public on the web and click Save. Before closing the sharing box, copy the document ID from the URL in the field below "Link to share". The document ID is a string of uppercase and lowercase letters and numbers between slashes in the URL. Share the URL that looks like "www.googledrive.com/host/[doc id] where [doc id] is replaced by the document ID you copied in step 6. Anyone can now view your webpage.

Found here: https://support.google.com/drive/answer/2881970?hl=en

So for example when you share a file on google drive publicly the sharelink looks like this:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B5IRsLTwEO6CVXFURmpQZ1Jxc0U/view?usp=sharing

Then you copy the file id and create a googledrive.com linke that look like this:

https://www.googledrive.com/host/0B5IRsLTwEO6CVXFURmpQZ1Jxc0U

@FıratKÜÇÜK are you sure you had the right url format? (note the www.googledrive.com and not drive.google.com) I just tried and it worked.
My file is over 50 MB. it asks a virus scan confirmation. So the solution is not suitable for my case. Instead I used "gdrive" console application solution.
@FıratKÜÇÜK I've just managed to download a 200+ Mb file with this method that would normally trigger virus checks. I got the ID from right click > "get shareable link".
This feature is deprecated and no longer supported
A
Aatif Khan

Based on the answer from Roshan Sethia

May 2018

Using WGET:

Create a shell script called wgetgdrive.sh as below: #!/bin/bash # Get files from Google Drive # $1 = file ID # $2 = file name URL="https://docs.google.com/uc?export=download&id=$1" wget --load-cookies /tmp/cookies.txt "https://docs.google.com/uc?export=download&confirm=$(wget --quiet --save-cookies /tmp/cookies.txt --keep-session-cookies --no-check-certificate $URL -O- | sed -rn 's/.*confirm=([0-9A-Za-z_]+).*/\1\n/p')&id=$1" -O $2 && rm -rf /tmp/cookies.txt Give the right permissions to execute the script In terminal, run: ./wgetgdrive.sh for example: ./wgetgdrive.sh 1lsDPURlTNzS62xEOAIG98gsaW6x2PYd2 images.zip


This works like CHARM thanks, and to ease things: chmod 770 wgetgdrive.sh
Not works for me, it downloaded a 3KB file instead of 13GB
works well, thanks
j
jturi

--UPDATED--

To download the file first get youtube-dl for python from here:

youtube-dl: https://rg3.github.io/youtube-dl/download.html

or install it with pip:

sudo python2.7 -m pip install --upgrade youtube_dl 
# or 
# sudo python3.6 -m pip install --upgrade youtube_dl

UPDATE:

I just found out this:

Right click on the file you want to download from drive.google.com Click Get Sharable link Toggle On Link sharing on Click on Sharing settings Click on the top dropdown for options Click on More Select [x] On - Anyone with a link Copy Link

https://drive.google.com/file/d/3PIY9dCoWRs-930HHvY-3-FOOPrIVoBAR/view?usp=sharing       
(This is not a real file address)

Copy the id after https://drive.google.com/file/d/:

3PIY9dCoWRs-930HHvY-3-FOOPrIVoBAR

Paste this into command line:

youtube-dl https://drive.google.com/open?id=

Paste the id behind open?id=

youtube-dl https://drive.google.com/open?id=3PIY9dCoWRs-930HHvY-3-FOOPrIVoBAR
[GoogleDrive] 3PIY9dCoWRs-930HHvY-3-FOOPrIVoBAR: Downloading webpage
[GoogleDrive] 3PIY9dCoWRs-930HHvY-3-FOOPrIVoBAR: Requesting source file
[download] Destination: your_requested_filename_here-3PIY9dCoWRs-930HHvY-3-FOOPrIVoBAR
[download] 240.37MiB at  2321.53MiB/s (00:01)

Hope it helps


hi thanks I tried this and it's downloading when I run from the command prompt, but is there a way to get the actual "direct link" like for access on a server? I'm trynig to run it woith node {spawn}, but then it has to download to the node server, and from there download it again, is there a way to simply get a direct download link from google drive? What link do they use?
I have to use this method a lot now so I'll try to fully automate it. Just get the google link and a Python script will do the rest. I think I'll use selenium to do this. Will update my solution when it is working.
Updated my answer. This is now as simple as 2 clicks to download any files with youtube-dl.
m
mher

I have been using the curl snippet of @Amit Chahar who posted a good answer in this thread. I found it useful to put it in a bash function rather than a separate .sh file

function curl_gdrive {

    GDRIVE_FILE_ID=$1
    DEST_PATH=$2

    curl -c ./cookie -s -L "https://drive.google.com/uc?export=download&id=${GDRIVE_FILE_ID}" > /dev/null
    curl -Lb ./cookie "https://drive.google.com/uc?export=download&confirm=`awk '/download/ {print $NF}' ./cookie`&id=${GDRIVE_FILE_ID}" -o ${DEST_PATH}
    rm -f cookie
}

that can be included in e.g a ~/.bashrc (after sourcing it ofcourse if not sourced automatically) and used in the following way

   $ curl_gdrive 153bpzybhfqDspyO_gdbcG5CMlI19ASba imagenet.tar

UPDATE 2022-03-01 - wget version that works also when virus scan is triggered

function wget_gdrive {

    GDRIVE_FILE_ID=$1
    DEST_PATH=$2

    wget --save-cookies cookies.txt 'https://docs.google.com/uc?export=download&id='$GDRIVE_FILE_ID -O- | sed -rn 's/.*confirm=([0-9A-Za-z_]+).*/\1/p' > confirm.txt
    wget --load-cookies cookies.txt -O $DEST_PATH 'https://docs.google.com/uc?export=download&id='$GDRIVE_FILE_ID'&confirm='$(<confirm.txt)
    rm -fr cookies.txt confirm.txt
}

sample usage:

    $ wget_gdrive 1gzp8zIDo888AwMXRTZ4uzKCMiwKynHYP foo.out

This is probably the best answer... the python gdown is so heavy in comparison. I must say I'm pretty dis-satisfied with gdrive though...
You neither need the -f nor the -r in your rm command. If you teach people to just always "rm -rf" they might end up removing things they want to keep...
yea, i agree that the use of -fr is quite dangerous
m
maniac

The easiest way is:

Create download link and copy fileID Download with WGET: wget --load-cookies /tmp/cookies.txt "https://docs.google.com/uc?export=download&confirm=$(wget --quiet --save-cookies /tmp/cookies.txt --keep-session-cookies --no-check-certificate 'https://docs.google.com/uc?export=download&id=FILEID' -O- | sed -rn 's/.*confirm=([0-9A-Za-z_]+).*/\1\n/p')&id=FILEID" -O FILENAME && rm -rf /tmp/cookies.txt


Thank you so much! Unbelievably useful
Ran it on Kaggle kernel. worked like a charm. Just replace FILEID with the id that comes in the sharable link. It looks like 1K4R-hrYBPFoDTcM3T677Jx0LchTN15OM.
d
danieltan95

The above answers are outdated for April 2020, since google drive now uses a redirect to the actual location of the file.

Working as of April 2020 on macOS 10.15.4 for public documents:

# this is used for drive directly downloads
function download-google(){
  echo "https://drive.google.com/uc?export=download&id=$1"
  mkdir -p .tmp
  curl -c .tmp/$1cookies "https://drive.google.com/uc?export=download&id=$1" > .tmp/$1intermezzo.html;
  curl -L -b .tmp/$1cookies "$(egrep -o "https.+download" .tmp/$1intermezzo.html)" > $2;
}

# some files are shared using an indirect download
function download-google-2(){
  echo "https://drive.google.com/uc?export=download&id=$1"
  mkdir -p .tmp
  curl -c .tmp/$1cookies "https://drive.google.com/uc?export=download&id=$1" > .tmp/$1intermezzo.html;
  code=$(egrep -o "confirm=(.+)&amp;id=" .tmp/$1intermezzo.html | cut -d"=" -f2 | cut -d"&" -f1)
  curl -L -b .tmp/$1cookies "https://drive.google.com/uc?export=download&confirm=$code&id=$1" > $2;
}

# used like this
download-google <id> <name of item.extension>

download-google-2 works for me. My file is 3G in size. Thanks @danieltan95
I updated download-google-2 's last curl to this curl -L -b .tmp/$1cookies -C - "https://drive.google.com/uc?export=download&confirm=$code&id=$1" -o $2; and it now can resume the download.
Seems like something went wrong with the download on low speed. another approach I found. qr.ae/pNrPaJ
download-google worked fine. can you explain the difference between method 1 and 2?
m
mmj

No answer proposes what works for me as of december 2016 (source):

curl -L https://drive.google.com/uc?id={FileID}

provided the Google Drive file has been shared with those having the link and {FileID} is the string behind ?id= in the shared URL.

Although I did not check with huge files, I believe it might be useful to know.


Hmmm... didn't work for me :( Just downloads web content - not the file
curl -L -o {filename} https://drive.google.com/uc?id={FileID} worked for me, thanks!
This doesn't work for me. My link is below (anyone with the link can view): drive.google.com/file/d/0B7Jh6M91b83bdFlWX2RIU2hYSWM/… . I tried: <code>curl -O -J -L drive.google.com/uc?id=0B7Jh6M91b83bdFlWX2RIU2hYSWM</code> and I get this result: curl: (56) Received HTTP code 403 from proxy after CONNECT
Only works for files up to 25MB, larger files give virus scan warning page
C
CoderBlue

All of the above responses seem to obscure the simplicity of the answer or have some nuances that are not explained.

If the file is shared publicly, you can generate a direct download link by just knowing the file ID. The URL must be in the form " https://drive.google.com/uc?id=[FILEID]&export=download" This works as of 11-22-2019. This does not require the receiver to log in to google but does require the file to be shared publicly.

In your browser, navigate to drive.google.com. Right click on the file, and click "Get a shareable link"

https://i.stack.imgur.com/Z03bc.png

Open a new tab, select the address bar, and paste in the contents of your clipboard which will be the shareable link. You'll see the file displayed by Google's viewer. The ID is the number right before the "View" component of the URL:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/CY7wh.png

Edit the URL so it is in the following format, replacing "[FILEID]" with the ID of your shared file: https://drive.google.com/uc?id=[FILEID]&export=download That's your direct download link. If you click on it in your browser the file will now be "pushed" to your browser, opening the download dialog, allowing you to save or open the file. You can also use this link in your download scripts. So the equivalent curl command would be:

curl -L "https://drive.google.com/uc?id=AgOATNfjpovfFrft9QYa-P1IeF9e7GWcH&export=download" > phlat-1.0.tar.gz

This doesn't work for large files: get the error Google Drive can't scan this file for viruses. <filename> is too large for Google to scan for viruses. Would you still like to download this file?
This worked. Thank you! After converting the link to that format, you can also use gdown as shown in other answers
This worked for me on Linux with a 160MB file: wget -r 'https://drive.google.com/uc?id=FILEID&export=download' -O LOCAL_NAME
m
mattbell87

I had the same problem with Google Drive.

Here's how I solved the problem using Links 2.

Open a browser on your PC, navigate to your file in Google Drive. Give your file a public link. Copy the public link to your clipboard (eg right click, Copy link address) Open a Terminal. If you're downloading to another PC/server/machine you should SSH to it as this point Install Links 2 (debian/ubuntu method, use your distro or OS equivalent) sudo apt-get install links2 Paste the link in to your terminal and open it with Links like so: links2 "paste url here" Navigate to the download link within Links using your Arrow Keys and press Enter Choose a filename and it'll download your file


Links totally did the trick! And it's much much better than w3m
This is the only thing that worked for me! February 2019. The gdown app in the earlier comments is hosted by none other than google docs, so it's impossible to download as well.
a
aularon

Use youtube-dl!

youtube-dl https://drive.google.com/open?id=ABCDEFG1234567890

You can also pass --get-url to get a direct download URL.


@Ender it still works for me youtube-dl https://drive.google.com/open?id=ABCDEFG1234567890aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa [GoogleDrive] ABCDEFG1234567890aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa: Downloading webpage. maybe you have an outdated version of youtube-dl or the link format is not recognized by it for some reason... Try using the format above replacing the id with the file id from your original URL
youtube-dl has problems with rate limiting, occasionally failing with HTTP Error 429: Too Many Requests message, especially when you are using the IPs of your hosting provider.
U
Utgarda

There's an open-source multi-platform client, written in Go: drive. It's quite nice and full-featured, and also is in active development.

$ drive help pull
Name
        pull - pulls remote changes from Google Drive
Description
        Downloads content from the remote drive or modifies
         local content to match that on your Google Drive

Note: You can skip checksum verification by passing in flag `-ignore-checksum`

* For usage flags: `drive pull -h`

s
slm

I was unable to get Nanoix's perl script to work, or other curl examples I had seen, so I started looking into the api myself in python. This worked fine for small files, but large files choked past available ram so I found some other nice chunking code that uses the api's ability to partial download. Gist here: https://gist.github.com/csik/c4c90987224150e4a0b2

Note the bit about downloading client_secret json file from the API interface to your local directory.

Source

$ cat gdrive_dl.py
from pydrive.auth import GoogleAuth  
from pydrive.drive import GoogleDrive    

"""API calls to download a very large google drive file.  The drive API only allows downloading to ram 
   (unlike, say, the Requests library's streaming option) so the files has to be partially downloaded
   and chunked.  Authentication requires a google api key, and a local download of client_secrets.json
   Thanks to Radek for the key functions: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/27617258/memoryerror-how-to-download-large-file-via-google-drive-sdk-using-python
"""

def partial(total_byte_len, part_size_limit):
    s = []
    for p in range(0, total_byte_len, part_size_limit):
        last = min(total_byte_len - 1, p + part_size_limit - 1)
        s.append([p, last])
    return s

def GD_download_file(service, file_id):
  drive_file = service.files().get(fileId=file_id).execute()
  download_url = drive_file.get('downloadUrl')
  total_size = int(drive_file.get('fileSize'))
  s = partial(total_size, 100000000) # I'm downloading BIG files, so 100M chunk size is fine for me
  title = drive_file.get('title')
  originalFilename = drive_file.get('originalFilename')
  filename = './' + originalFilename
  if download_url:
      with open(filename, 'wb') as file:
        print "Bytes downloaded: "
        for bytes in s:
          headers = {"Range" : 'bytes=%s-%s' % (bytes[0], bytes[1])}
          resp, content = service._http.request(download_url, headers=headers)
          if resp.status == 206 :
                file.write(content)
                file.flush()
          else:
            print 'An error occurred: %s' % resp
            return None
          print str(bytes[1])+"..."
      return title, filename
  else:
    return None          


gauth = GoogleAuth()
gauth.CommandLineAuth() #requires cut and paste from a browser 

FILE_ID = 'SOMEID' #FileID is the simple file hash, like 0B1NzlxZ5RpdKS0NOS0x0Ym9kR0U

drive = GoogleDrive(gauth)
service = gauth.service
#file = drive.CreateFile({'id':FILE_ID})    # Use this to get file metadata
GD_download_file(service, FILE_ID) 

p
ppetraki

This works as of Nov 2017 https://gist.github.com/ppetraki/258ea8240041e19ab258a736781f06db

#!/bin/bash

SOURCE="$1"
if [ "${SOURCE}" == "" ]; then
    echo "Must specify a source url"
    exit 1
fi

DEST="$2"
if [ "${DEST}" == "" ]; then
    echo "Must specify a destination filename"
    exit 1
fi

FILEID=$(echo $SOURCE | rev | cut -d= -f1 | rev)
COOKIES=$(mktemp)

CODE=$(wget --save-cookies $COOKIES --keep-session-cookies --no-check-certificate "https://docs.google.com/uc?export=download&id=${FILEID}" -O- | sed -rn 's/.*confirm=([0-9A-Za-z_]+).*/Code: \1\n/p')

# cleanup the code, format is 'Code: XXXX'
CODE=$(echo $CODE | rev | cut -d: -f1 | rev | xargs)

wget --load-cookies $COOKIES "https://docs.google.com/uc?export=download&confirm=${CODE}&id=${FILEID}" -O $DEST

rm -f $COOKIES

Although there is stated "source url" and there is some parsing I didn't try to understand it worked by simply directly using what is called fileid here and in other answers as first parameter.
@jan That may mean there is more than one url style. I'm glad it still worked for you over all.
R
Roshan Sethia

I found a working solution to this... Simply use the following

wget --load-cookies /tmp/cookies.txt "https://docs.google.com/uc?export=download&confirm=$(wget --quiet --save-cookies /tmp/cookies.txt --keep-session-cookies --no-check-certificate 'https://docs.google.com/uc?export=download&id=1HlzTR1-YVoBPlXo0gMFJ_xY4ogMnfzDi' -O- | sed -rn 's/.*confirm=([0-9A-Za-z_]+).*/\1\n/p')&id=1HlzTR1-YVoBPlXo0gMFJ_xY4ogMnfzDi" -O besteyewear.zip && rm -rf /tmp/cookies.txt

when doing this I get WARNING: cannot verify docs.google.com's certificate, issued by `/C=US/O=Google Trust Services/CN=Google Internet Authority G3': Unable to locally verify the issuer's authority. HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 404 Not Found 2019-02-08 02:56:30 ERROR 404: Not Found. any workarounds?
WOW! Great answer and very logical. Thanks for writing it up. Downloaded 1.3 GB file using this command... Fully auto mode from linux terminal by this command only. Also tried on GCP. Works great there as well. Year 2020... I believe this is the right way... even if they change a bit of commands this should stand test of time.
J
Jadli

the easy way to down file from google drive you can also download file on colab

pip install gdown

import gdown

Then

url = 'https://drive.google.com/uc?id=0B9P1L--7Wd2vU3VUVlFnbTgtS2c'
output = 'spam.txt'
gdown.download(url, output, quiet=False)

or

fileid='0B9P1L7Wd2vU3VUVlFnbTgtS2c'

gdown https://drive.google.com/uc?id=+fileid

Document https://pypi.org/project/gdown/


cool. but how is it different from phi's answer that was posted over a year before yours?
G
Grey Christoforo

Here's a little bash script I wrote that does the job today. It works on large files and can resume partially fetched files too. It takes two arguments, the first is the file_id and the second is the name of the output file. The main improvements over previous answers here are that it works on large files and only needs commonly available tools: bash, curl, tr, grep, du, cut and mv.

#!/usr/bin/env bash
fileid="$1"
destination="$2"

# try to download the file
curl -c /tmp/cookie -L -o /tmp/probe.bin "https://drive.google.com/uc?export=download&id=${fileid}"
probeSize=`du -b /tmp/probe.bin | cut -f1`

# did we get a virus message?
# this will be the first line we get when trying to retrive a large file
bigFileSig='<!DOCTYPE html><html><head><title>Google Drive - Virus scan warning</title><meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"/>'
sigSize=${#bigFileSig}

if (( probeSize <= sigSize )); then
  virusMessage=false
else
  firstBytes=$(head -c $sigSize /tmp/probe.bin)
  if [ "$firstBytes" = "$bigFileSig" ]; then
    virusMessage=true
  else
    virusMessage=false
  fi
fi

if [ "$virusMessage" = true ] ; then
  confirm=$(tr ';' '\n' </tmp/probe.bin | grep confirm)
  confirm=${confirm:8:4}
  curl -C - -b /tmp/cookie -L -o "$destination" "https://drive.google.com/uc?export=download&id=${fileid}&confirm=${confirm}"
else
  mv /tmp/probe.bin "$destination"
fi

Welcome to SO. If you have used any reference for this purpose please include them in your answer. Anyhow, nice job +1
Y
Yesh

There's an easier way.

Install cliget/CURLWGET from firefox/chrome extension.

Download the file from browser. This creates a curl/wget link that remembers the cookies and headers used while downloading the file. Use this command from any shell to download


This is no doubt the easiest and simplest way.
Neat, a no fuss method.
E
Ender

After messing around with this garbage. I've found a way to download my sweet file by using chrome - developer tools.

At your google docs tab, Ctr+Shift+J (Setting --> Developer tools) Switch to Network tabs At your docs file, click "Download" --> Download as CSV, xlsx,.... It will show you the request in the "Network" console Right click -> Copy -> Copy as Curl Your Curl command will be like this, and add -o to create a exported file. curl 'https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Cjsryejgn29BDiInOrGZWvg/export?format=xlsx&id=1Cjsryejgn29BDiInOrGZWvg' -H 'authority: docs.google.com' -H 'upgrade-insecure-requests: 1' -H 'user-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X..... -o server.xlsx

Solved!


that link expires and is only for 1 ip address at a time
You can just make a silent constant request to keep the session alive. @bluejayke
I did exactly that and when came here to write another answer, stumbled upon yours. I confirm that it works with different IPs as I needed to download a 36gb file to the server that doesn't have a browser. And I extracted the link from my laptop.
S
S V Praveen

Alternative Method, 2020

Works well for headless servers. I was trying to download a ~200GB private file but couldn't get any of the other methods, mentioned in this thread, to work.

Solution

(Skip this step if the file is already in your own google drive) Make a copy of the file you want to download from a Public/Shared Folder into your Google Drive account. Select File -> Right Click -> Make a copy

https://i.stack.imgur.com/ORYfI.png

Install and setup Rclone, an open-source command line tool, to sync files between your local storage and Google Drive. Here's a quick tutorial to install and setup rclone for Google Drive. Copy your file from Google Drive to your machine using Rclone

rclone copy mygoogledrive:path/to/file /path/to/file/on/local/machine -P

-P argument helps to track progress of the download and lets you know when its finished.


V
Vikas Gautam

Here is workaround which I came up download files from Google Drive to my Google Cloud Linux shell.

Share the file to PUBLIC and with Edit permissions using advanced sharing. You will get a sharing link which would have an ID. See the link:- drive.google.com/file/d/[ID]/view?usp=sharing Copy that ID and Paste it in the following link:-

googledrive.com/host/[ID]

The above link would be our download link. Use wget to download the file:-

wget https://googledrive.com/host/[ID]

This command will download the file with name as [ID] with no extension and but with same file size on the same location where you ran the wget command. Actually, I downloaded a zipped folder in my practice. so I renamed that awkward file using:-

mv [ID] 1.zip

then using

unzip 1.zip

we will get the files.


Google has taken away hosting from drive, so this no longer works.
c
castaway2000

For anyone who stumbles on this thread the following works as of May 2022 to get around the antivirus check on large files:

#!/bin/bash
fileid="FILEIDENTIFIER"
filename="FILENAME"
html=`curl -c ./cookie -s -L "https://drive.google.com/uc?export=download&id=${fileid}"`
curl -Lb ./cookie "https://drive.google.com/uc?export=download&`echo ${html}|grep -Po '(confirm=[a-zA-Z0-9\-_]+)'`&id=${fileid}" -o ${filename}