airflow.providers.google.cloud.transfers.gdrive_to_gcs

Module Contents

Classes

GoogleDriveToGCSOperator

Writes a Google Drive file into Google Cloud Storage.

class airflow.providers.google.cloud.transfers.gdrive_to_gcs.GoogleDriveToGCSOperator(*, bucket_name, object_name=None, file_name, folder_id, drive_id=None, gcp_conn_id='google_cloud_default', impersonation_chain=None, **kwargs)[source]

Bases: airflow.models.BaseOperator

Writes a Google Drive file into Google Cloud Storage.

See also

For more information on how to use this operator, take a look at the guide: Operator

Parameters
  • bucket_name (str) – The destination Google cloud storage bucket where the file should be written to

  • object_name (str | None) – The Google Cloud Storage object name for the object created by the operator. For example: path/to/my/file/file.txt.

  • folder_id (str) – The folder id of the folder in which the Google Drive file resides

  • file_name (str) – The name of the file residing in Google Drive

  • drive_id (str | None) – Optional. The id of the shared Google Drive in which the file resides.

  • gcp_conn_id (str) – The GCP connection ID to use when fetching connection info.

  • impersonation_chain (str | Sequence[str] | None) – Optional service account to impersonate using short-term credentials, or chained list of accounts required to get the access_token of the last account in the list, which will be impersonated in the request. If set as a string, the account must grant the originating account the Service Account Token Creator IAM role. If set as a sequence, the identities from the list must grant Service Account Token Creator IAM role to the directly preceding identity, with first account from the list granting this role to the originating account (templated).

template_fields: Sequence[str] = ('bucket_name', 'object_name', 'folder_id', 'file_name', 'drive_id', 'impersonation_chain')[source]
execute(context)[source]

Derive when creating an operator.

Context is the same dictionary used as when rendering jinja templates.

Refer to get_template_context for more context.

Was this entry helpful?