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craigecraig's avatar
craigecraig
Explorer | Level 4
6 years ago

Easiest way to allow users to download single file from any mobile web browser.

Hi.  I currently have the Saver method setup, but it doesn't work on iOS chrome, so this isn't a viable solution for me.  What is the best option for me to allow any logged-in user to download their video to their Dropbox account, ideally without them having to enter an API key?

My site is developed using PHP.

Thanks!

Craig

  • Using the Dropbox Saver would be the easiest way, but as you found, the Dropbox Saver isn't supported in Chrome for iOS unfortunately. I'm sending this along as a feature request for support for the Saver in Chrome for iOS, but I can't promise if or when that might be done.

    The alternative would be to use the Dropbox API, e.g., with the /2/files/save_url endpoint to save a file from a URL, or the /2/files/upload endpoint to upload file data directly. That would be substantially more work than using the Saver though, as you'd need to build out that implementation yourself. Note that the end-user wouldn't need to supply their own app key though. You as the developer just register the app once yourself, and use the resulting app key in your app's code. You would then send the user through the OAuth app authorization flow so they can choose whether or not to authorize your app.

  • Greg-DB's avatar
    Greg-DB
    Icon for Dropbox Staff rankDropbox Staff

    Using the Dropbox Saver would be the easiest way, but as you found, the Dropbox Saver isn't supported in Chrome for iOS unfortunately. I'm sending this along as a feature request for support for the Saver in Chrome for iOS, but I can't promise if or when that might be done.

    The alternative would be to use the Dropbox API, e.g., with the /2/files/save_url endpoint to save a file from a URL, or the /2/files/upload endpoint to upload file data directly. That would be substantially more work than using the Saver though, as you'd need to build out that implementation yourself. Note that the end-user wouldn't need to supply their own app key though. You as the developer just register the app once yourself, and use the resulting app key in your app's code. You would then send the user through the OAuth app authorization flow so they can choose whether or not to authorize your app.

      • craigecraig's avatar
        craigecraig
        Explorer | Level 4

        One more question, so I set up the save api and most of it appears to be working, but the file I need them to save is an Amazon s3 file.  I create a presigned url and put that in the PATH spot.  But I am getting errors:

        Error in call to API function "files/upload": HTTP header "Dropbox-API-Arg": path: The root folder is unsupported

        Is this doable?

        Thanks!

        Craig

    • Greg-DB's avatar
      Greg-DB
      Icon for Dropbox Staff rankDropbox Staff

      Update: the Dropbox Saver should now work in Chrome on iOS.

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