97

Seems I can only download dropbox files using explorer such as chrome and firefox. If I use wget to download, then I would get a file which is in html format. Why?

For example you can open this link

You would not get the content of this file, why? The following is part of test.txt to download it, this is not the content of test.txt at all.

So is it possible to download Dropbox files using wget rather than explorer?

document.observe('script:loaded', function() {
SharingModel.init('test\x2etxt', Util.from_json('\x7b\x22item\x5fid\x22\x3a\x20\x22\x22\x2c\x20\x22secure\x5fhash\x22\x3a\x20\x22\x22\x2c\x20\x22subpath\x22\x3a\x20\x22\x22\x2c\x20\x22tkey\x22\x3a\x20\x22mx9eqve5l2ipgyk\x22\x7d'))
SharingModel.init_file()
$('emsnippet-9911dfc627e1d541').innerHTML = 'test\x2etxt'.em_snippet(50, 0.750).escapeHTML();
$('emsnippet-add7879f5d805012').innerHTML = 'test\x2etxt'.em_snippet(20, 0.750).escapeHTML();
$('emsnippet-981ac0639529f983').innerHTML = 'test\x2etxt'.em_snippet(20, 0.750).escapeHTML();
FilePreview.init_text('https\x3a\x2f\x2fdl\x2edropbox\x2ecom\x2fs\x2fmx9eqve5l2ipgyk\x2ftest\x2etxt', 0)                        });
                    } else if (window.jQuery) {
jQuery(function () {
SharingModel.init('test\x2etxt', Util.from_json('\x7b\x22item\x5fid\x22\x3a\x20\x22\x22\x2c\x20\x22secure\x5fhash\x22\x3a\x20\x22\x22\x2c\x20\x22subpath\x22\x3a\x20\x22\x22\x2c\x20\x22tkey\x22\x3a\x20\x22mx9eqve5l2ipgyk\x22\x7d'))
SharingModel.init_file()
$('emsnippet-9911dfc627e1d541').innerHTML = 'test\x2etxt'.em_snippet(50, 0.750).escapeHTML();
$('emsnippet-add7879f5d805012').innerHTML = 'test\x2etxt'.em_snippet(20, 0.750).escapeHTML();
$('emsnippet-981ac0639529f983').innerHTML = 'test\x2etxt'.em_snippet(20, 0.750).escapeHTML();
FilePreview.init_text('https\x3a\x2f\x2fdl\x2edropbox\x2ecom\x2fs\x2fmx9eqve5l2ipgyk\x2ftest\x2etxt', 0)                        });
                    } 

I cannot get test.txt with command

wget https://www.dropbox.com/s/mx9eqve5l2ipgyk/test.tx


ls -l 
-rw-rw-r-- 1 mirror mirror  30K Sep  6 15:01 test.txt
7
  • Stupid question: were you logged into DropBox when you tried to download using a browser?
    – user3463
    Sep 6, 2012 at 5:23
  • 1
    Using wget on your link retrieves test.txt (containing the 4 bytes "test") just fine on my side. Maybe something in your .wgetrc is causing this?
    – jjlin
    Sep 6, 2012 at 6:31
  • @jjlin what is your command? mine is add above
    – hugemeow
    Sep 6, 2012 at 7:02
  • 7
    I used wget --no-check-cert https://dl.dropbox.com/s/mx9eqve5l2ipgyk/test.txt. That worked fine for me, but if you want to force a download, you might consider trying wget --no-check-cert 'https://dl.dropbox.com/s/mx9eqve5l2ipgyk/test.txt?dl=1' instead (note the ?dl=1 query parameter).
    – jjlin
    Sep 6, 2012 at 15:43
  • @jjlin so maybe a script is needed if i want to download file from dropbox:)
    – hugemeow
    Sep 6, 2012 at 15:54

6 Answers 6

25

The link in your question is not the link to the file, is a link to the Dropbox page of this file.

If you want to use wget to download it, you should copy the link to direct download from the menu that drops when pushing the download button to the right.

In my case, that worked fine.

However, sometimes problems in downloading links from outside the browser relate to parameters other than the link itself. A common element that does not exist when you simply copy the link are the site cookies.

Try this cool FF add-on to get the correct wget links

And also, especially if we are talking about a known workstation and not a casual one, you can of course install the Dropbox client. This will be the easiest way, just let your box be part of your file structure and eliminate the need of complicated downloads.

See this askubuntu.com post, and the Dropbox download page.

6
  • 4
    Trying to get the direct link in the browser pops up an ad for an upgrade option. I see the other answer (superuser.com/a/486351/106977) involving ?dl=1, but that does not allow one to get at the link either (probably due to Box's preventing use unless you upgrade).
    – bgoodr
    Mar 23, 2013 at 14:20
  • @amotzg is there a way to resume the download from dropbox with flag --continue? It seems not working to me. (unix.stackexchange.com/questions/174850/…)
    – prayagupa
    Dec 19, 2014 at 13:36
  • @PrayagUpd, found this stackoverflow.com/questions/18084677/….
    – amotzg
    Jan 1, 2015 at 12:25
  • 1
    This add-on helped with a shared dropbox link which requires a password to download it. Note, right clicking on the "download" button, selecting cliget gives you the URL to the ?dl=0 output, which is a smaller file. Changing that to ?dl=1 gives the correct download path. Mar 2, 2017 at 10:37
  • Thanks for that extension. Helpful. Wondering why most pages don't give wget links. How are we supposed to figure it out ourselves?
    – 5A7335H
    May 30, 2020 at 9:50
155

Just add ?dl=1 at the end of the link! For example: https://www.dropbox.com/s/mx9eqve5l2ipgyk/test.txt?dl=1

That should give you a fine retrieval of the file in question without adding anything to the file.

One more thing! If you wanna save the file somewhere else use the -O option like this

wget -O /root/Desktop/test.txt "https://www.dropbox.com/s/mx9eqve5l2ipgyk/test.txt?dl=1"

And if you want to have a little bit of GUI you can use zenity to mark the location to where the file is going to be downloaded!

Here's an example code:

#!/bin/bash
dir=$(zenity --file-selection --directory)
wget -O $dir/test.txt "https://www.dropbox.com/s/mx9eqve5l2ipgyk/test.txt?dl=1"
9
  • 2
    That is awesome, works out of the box... Dec 1, 2013 at 16:11
  • 4
    Much better answer than the accepted one. This helped a lot, thanks.
    – Seiyria
    Sep 22, 2015 at 17:08
  • 5
    Is this method still working? Using the command wget 'https://www.dropbox.com/sh/my_folder_url?dl=1' I keep getting ERROR 400: Bad Request. Nov 7, 2016 at 9:31
  • 3
    It works for me. Even today. This solution is better than the answer Nov 11, 2019 at 6:39
  • 1
    Worked like a charm! But for some reason the file name is not equal to what it was uploaded as
    – birgersp
    Feb 25, 2021 at 10:05
17

Dropbox has modified it so that wget will do the right thing and retrieve the file instead of the interstitial.

Use "Share Link" to retrieve the direct link to the file.

3
  • This should be the correct answer, it's trivial with the share link. Jan 8, 2017 at 23:04
  • Nice! I got a wget: No match output, which was solved using the link enclosed within single quotation marks (due to the ? in the url maybe?)
    – Matifou
    Oct 16, 2017 at 18:51
  • You sure that is the correct answer. It seems download is only for folks with business account! Please correct me if I am wrong!
    – chikitin
    Feb 27, 2020 at 14:25
3

Saw this question and thought this may help someone trying to download many files at once.

Here's a small Windows CMD/Batch script you can use.
It can easily be adjusted to work under a Bash shell (Mac/Linux/etc).
It uses CURL. WGET should also work with some minor adjustments..

  1. Install Curl for Windows.
  2. Put the individual SHARED links in a text file (1 per line).
  3. Adjust all the "?dl=0" parameter(s) in your text file to "?dl=1" and save.
  4. Copy script below to a file called 'geturllist.cmd' (or your choosing)
  5. Open a CMD prompt and execute the CMD script.

Downloaded files will appear in current working directory you executed script from.

NOTE:
You must have properly formatted SHARED LINKS that "Anyone with the link" can open. This script does NOT work with password protected links or shares based on a Dropbox login/email.
NOTE:
If the single file or file group(auto zipped) is over a certain size, it will fail with error ("The (zip) file is too large. Please add it to your Dropbox."). In this case you must do as it says.. this script will not work because share link isn't directly downloadable.

Example text file:
("RandomShareCharacters/Here" will be replaced with what it says in share link)

 https://www.dropbox.com/sh/RandomShareCharacters/Here?dl=1
 https://www.dropbox.com/sh/RandomShareCharacters/Here?dl=1
 https://www.dropbox.com/sh/RandomShareCharacters/Here?dl=1

geturllist.cmd:

@echo off
set count=0
setlocal ENABLEDELAYEDEXPANSION
IF [%1]==[] GOTO BLANK
SET PARAMETER=%1
SET _PARAMETER=%PARAMETER:~0,2%

IF [%1]==[/?] GOTO HELP
IF [%1]==[--help] GOTO HELP
IF %_PARAMETER%==-h GOTO HELP

IF EXIST %1 (

  for /f "delims=" %%u in (%1) do (

      set /a count=count+1
      curl -kL "%%u" -O -J

      REM For other share sites:
      REM (ZIP EXAMPLE) if no filename type header sent:
      REM > curl -kL "%%u" -o "!count!.zip"
      REM > echo "!count!.zip"
      REM Will download file(s) called 1.zip, 2.zip, etc.
      )
  ) ELSE (
GOTO BLANK
)
GOTO DONE

:HELP
ECHO.
ECHO    Usage:
ECHO.
ECHO    geturllist [path]\[filename]
ECHO.
ECHO.
ECHO    Required Parameters:
ECHO.
ECHO    [filename]  A text file with one url per line
ECHO    -h      Help
ECHO.
GOTO DONE

:BLANK
ECHO.
ECHO Error: no input file found

:HELPMSG
ECHO.
ECHO Try -h for Help

:DONE
ECHO.
ECHO Exiting.
ECHO.

Example Usage:

geturllist.cmd X:\somepath\dropbox.txt

7
  • 2
    Down-votes with no comments are lovely. Thanks. Hurt your feelings?
    – B. Shea
    Aug 15, 2017 at 20:55
  • 1
    Unbelievable why people downvoted this answer ffs, upvoted. Sep 16, 2018 at 10:11
  • Is there a way to get all links automatically? There are hundreds of files I need to download! Jun 20, 2021 at 2:50
  • @NagabhushanSN - How are they shared? You need a list of the links (put in a text file) beforehand for the above batch file to work. I was frequently emailed a bunch of dropbox links in the past and got sick of clicking each one so made the script.
    – B. Shea
    Jun 20, 2021 at 3:23
  • The link to the folder containing the files is shared. Jun 20, 2021 at 3:49
0

There is a python script on GitHub which accomplishes this:

https://github.com/dpdornseifer/dropbox_download

Also the dropbox server does not support resuming transfers.

It seems that dropbox supports the use of wget as a client and automatically redirects to the right file. Or perhaps wget is merely following redirects?

-1

The easiest and most guaranteed method for these type of downloads is to use google chrome's developer tools.

  • Press F12 to open developer tools

  • Go to network tab

  • Press the download link to start the download

  • Find the download event in the network events

  • Right click the line and select "Copy as cURL (bash)" or windows if you want

  • The url will look like this:

      curl "http://yoururl.com/yourfile" -H "Pragma: no-cache" -H "Origin: http://yoururl.com" -H "Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate" -H "Accept: */*" -H "Cache-Control: max-age=0" -H "Referer: http://yoururl.com/downloadpage" -H "Cookie: e07214fb60a1a; _ga=98987; "
    
  • Replace curl with wget

  • Replace -H "some headers" with --header="some headers"

  • Add -o parameter

  • The new command will look like this:

      wget "http://yoururl.com/yourfile" --header="Pragma: no-cache" --header="Origin: http://yoururl.com" --header="Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate" --header="Accept: */*" --header="Cache-Control: max-age=0" --header="Referer: http://yoururl.com/downloadpage" --header="Cookie: e07214fb60a1a; _ga=98987; " -o test.txt
    
  • Paste that to your bash window

  • Press enter and enjoy your download.

2
  • OP requested usage with wget.
    – twerdster
    Nov 14, 2016 at 10:17
  • This is what I used. It works great. I tried it in Edge.
    – TyanTowers
    Jan 15, 2021 at 2:51

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