I'm using the 2018 version of the Google Photos API to upload images and media as documented here: "Uploading Bytes"
When I upload a new image or video I never get an upload token in the body of the response. It's always an empty body, which according to the above link means that the bytes have already been uploaded (but this is a new upload).
Here's an example request/response:
request:
POST https://photoslibrary.googleapis.com/v1/uploads
request headers:
authorization: Bearer abcd1234
X-Goog-Upload-Protocol: raw
X-Goog-Upload-File-Name: 20140317T082917_001.jpg
content-type: application/octet-stream
content-length: 1292868
accept: application/json
-----------------------------------------------------
response: OK [200]
response headers:
Alt-Svc: [quic=":443"; ma=2592000; v="44,43,39,35"]
Server: [UploadServer]
X-GUploader-UploadID: [AEnB2UqT6y8KyZNCPyAaFeCj7I_ABIlwLJQMpltYzQ7D8blW4v3uKSlMT7dbNjFV0i_7ApzoR-i26ZtZ9kHkB7bI8n8ojgOnNA]
Content-Length: [510]
Date: [Sun, 05 Aug 2018 11:19:15 GMT]
Content-Type: [text/plain]
response body:
null
I've also tried using the value returned in the X-GUploader-UploadID
header, but that causes a 500
error.
Can someone provide a working example of how to upload bytes to the Google Photos API?
Thank you!
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I think you're just not looking at the Response content. The following works in Python, surely you can make it work for Java as well:
def upload_files(self, filepath, album_id):
filename = os.path.basename(filepath)
url = 'https://photoslibrary.googleapis.com/v1/uploads'
authorization = 'Bearer ' + creds.access_token
headers = {
"Authorization": authorization,
'Content-type': 'application/octet-stream',
'X-Goog-Upload-File-Name': filename,
'X-Goog-Upload-Protocol': 'raw',
}
with open(filepath, "rb") as image_file:
response = requests.post(url, headers=headers, data=image_file)
assert response.status_code == 200
token = response.text # !!!
return service.mediaItems().batchCreate(body=dict(
albumId=album_id,
newMediaItems=[
{"simpleMediaItem": {"uploadToken": token}}]
)).execute()
You in fact do get a response body. If you look at your response
response: OK [200]
response headers:
Alt-Svc: [quic=":443"; ma=2592000; v="44,43,39,35"]
Server: [UploadServer]
X-GUploader-UploadID: [AEnB2UqT6y8KyZNCPyAaFeCj7I_ABIlwLJQMpltYzQ7D8blW4v3uKSlMT7dbNjFV0i_7ApzoR-i26ZtZ9kHkB7bI8n8ojgOnNA]
Content-Length: [510]
Date: [Sun, 05 Aug 2018 11:19:15 GMT]
Content-Type: [text/plain]
response body:
null
there is the field Content-Length
that indicates the length in bytes of the body, which is 510 in your case. Which method did you use to get this info? And what is your current implementation?
If you only tried to do the request e.g. via curl
then I actually have no idea, why there is no response body, but then it wouldn't fit into the scope of the java tag anyways, so I'm assuming you parsed the response yourself in some self-written java code?
Because you didn't provide it, this is only speculation, but I'm assuming you missed something, when parsing the response.
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