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Download a SharePoint File by Path using HttpCurl
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This example shows how to use Chilkat's HttpCurl class to download a file from SharePoint when the file path within the document library is already known. The example uses Microsoft Graph to automatically resolve the SharePoint site name to a site ID, find the drive ID for the Documents document library, and then download the file directly by path using the Graph root:/path:/content syntax.
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Add-Type -Path "C:\chilkat\ChilkatDotNet47-x64\ChilkatDotNet47.dll"
$success = $false
# This example downloads a file from a SharePoint Documents document library
# when the file's path within the library is already known.
#
# The file downloaded in this example is:
#
# images/sea_creatures/starfish.jpg
#
# Unlike the previous example that searched for a file by name and obtained
# its Microsoft Graph item ID, this example uses the Graph path-based API.
#
# The example demonstrates how HttpCurl automatically resolves:
#
# site_name -> site_id
# site_id -> document_library_id
#
# and then uses the known file path to download the file directly.
$success = $false
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Before running this example, create an Azure App Registration and grant it
# the Microsoft Graph permissions required to access SharePoint.
#
# The application will authenticate using OAuth2 Client Credentials.
# See:
# How to Create SharePoint App Registration for OAuth 2.0 Client Credentials
# --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Build a JSON authentication configuration.
# HttpCurl will use this information to automatically obtain OAuth2 access tokens.
$jsonAuth = New-Object Chilkat.JsonObject
# Enable secret lookup.
#
# Instead of hard-coding sensitive values such as the client ID,
# client secret, and token endpoint, secret specification strings
# are used. Chilkat automatically retrieves the actual values from
# Windows Credential Manager (Windows) or Apple Keychain (macOS).
#
# See:
# Secret Specification Strings
$jsonAuth.EnableSecrets = $true
$success = $jsonAuth.UpdateString("oauth2.client_id","!!sharepoint|oauth2|client_id")
if ($success -eq $true) {
$success = $jsonAuth.UpdateString("oauth2.client_secret","!!sharepoint|oauth2|client_secret")
}
if ($success -eq $true) {
$success = $jsonAuth.UpdateString("oauth2.token_endpoint","!!sharepoint|oauth2|token_endpoint")
}
if ($success -eq $false) {
$($jsonAuth.LastErrorText)
exit
}
# Request Microsoft Graph permissions that were granted to the application.
$jsonAuth.UpdateString("oauth2.scope","https://graph.microsoft.com/.default")
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$curl = New-Object Chilkat.HttpCurl
# Associate the OAuth2 configuration with HttpCurl.
#
# When the request is executed, Chilkat automatically obtains an access token
# if needed and adds the Authorization: Bearer header to the HTTP request.
$curl.SetAuth($jsonAuth)
# Define values that are already known.
#
# These variables are referenced in curl commands using
# {{variable_name}} substitution syntax.
$curl.SetVar("sharepoint_hostname","example.sharepoint.com")
$curl.SetVar("site_name","test")
# The download request requires a Microsoft Graph site ID.
#
# Because the application only knows the SharePoint site name,
# define a helper function that can retrieve the site information.
$curl.AddFunction("getSite","GET https://graph.microsoft.com/v1.0/sites/root:/sites/{{site_name}}")
# Extract the site's ID and store it in the HttpCurl variable named site_id.
$curl.AddOutput("getSite","id","site_id")
# The download request also requires the drive ID of the Documents
# document library.
#
# Microsoft Graph refers to document libraries as "drives".
$curl.AddFunction("getDrives","GET https://graph.microsoft.com/v1.0/sites/{{site_id}}/drives")
# Search the returned drives for the one named "Documents"
# and save its drive ID in the document_library_id variable.
$curl.AddOutput2("getDrives","value","name","Documents",$true,"id","document_library_id")
# This is the target Microsoft Graph request.
#
# GET /sites/{site-id}/drives/{drive-id}/root:/{path-to-file}:/content
#
# The path-based API allows a file to be downloaded directly when its
# location within the document library is known.
#
# The -L option causes HttpCurl to follow redirects.
# Microsoft Graph typically returns a redirect to the actual download URL.
#
# The -o option specifies the output filename.
# The --output-dir option specifies the directory where the downloaded
# file will be saved.
$curlCommand = "GET -L --output-dir c:/temp/qa_output -o starfish.jpg https://graph.microsoft.com/v1.0/sites/{{site_id}}/drives/{{document_library_id}}/root:/images/sea_creatures/starfish.jpg:/content"
# Execute the request.
#
# HttpCurl examines the target request and determines that both
# site_id and document_library_id are required.
#
# To obtain these values, it automatically builds and executes
# the following dependency chain:
#
# 1) getSite -> site_id
# 2) getDrives -> document_library_id
# 3) download -> file content
#
# The file is streamed directly to the output file specified by
# the curl command.
$success = $curl.DoYourThing($curlCommand)
if ($success -eq $false) {
$($curl.LastErrorText)
exit
}
# A successful Graph response should return HTTP 200.
# Any other status code typically indicates an authentication,
# permission, site lookup, document library lookup, or file lookup error.
$statusCode = $curl.StatusCode
if ($statusCode -ne 200) {
$($curl.ResponseBodyStr)
$("status code = " + $statusCode)
exit
}
# The file has been downloaded successfully and written to:
#
# c:/temp/qa_output/starfish.jpg
#
$("Success.")