Implementation of pyfilesystem2 file system for Google Drive
  pip install fs.googledrivefs  from google.oauth2.credentials import Credentials
  from fs.googledrivefs import GoogleDriveFS
  credentials = Credentials(oauth2_access_token,
    refresh_token=oauth2_refresh_token,
    token_uri="https://www.googleapis.com/oauth2/v4/token",
    client_id=oauth2_client_id,
    client_secret=oauth2_client_secret)
  fs = GoogleDriveFS(credentials=credentials)
  # fs is now a standard pyfilesystem2 file system, alternatively you can use the opener...
  from fs.opener import open_fs
  fs2 = open_fs("googledrive:///?access_token=<oauth2 access token>&refresh_token=<oauth2 refresh token>&client_id=<oauth2 client id>&client_secret=<oauth2 client secret>")
  # fs2 is now a standard pyfilesystem2 file systemIf your application is accessing the Google Drive API as a
GCP Service Account, fs.googledrivefs will
default to authenticating using the Service Account credentials specified by the
GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS environment variable.
This can greatly simplify the URLs used by the opener:
  from fs.opener import open_fs
  fs2 = open_fs("googledrive:///required/path")You can also use the same method of authentication when using GoogleDriveFS directly:
  import google.auth
  from fs.googledrivefs import GoogleDriveFS
  credentials, _ = google.auth.default()
  fs = GoogleDriveFS(credentials=credentials)While access to the Google Drive API is straightforward to enable for a personal Google Account,
a user of an organisation's Google Account will typically only be able to enable an API in the
context of a
GCP Project.
The user can then configure a
Service Account
to access all or a sub-set of the user's files using fs.googledrivefs with the following steps:
- create a GCP Project
 - enable the Google Drive API for that Project
 - create a Service Account for that Project
 - share any Drive directory (or file) with that Service Account (using the accounts email)
 
Say that your is drive is structured as follows:
/alldata
  /data1
  /data2
   :
Also say that you have given your application's service account access to everything in data1.
If your application opens url /alldata/data1 using fs.opener.open_fs(), then fs.googledrivefs
must first get the info for alldata to which it has no access and so the operation fails.
To address this we can tell fs.googledrivefs to treat data1 as the root directory by supplying
the file id of data1 as the request parameter root_id. The fs url you would now use is
googledrive:///?root_id=12345678901234567890:
  from fs.opener import open_fs
  fs2 = open_fs("googledrive:///?root_id=12345678901234567890")You can also use the rootId when using GoogleDriveFS directly:
  import google.auth
  from fs.googledrivefs import GoogleDriveFS
  credentials, _ = google.auth.default()
  fs = GoogleDriveFS(credentials=credentials, rootId="12345678901234567890")Note that any file or directory's id is readily accessible from it's web url.
To run the tests, set the following environment variables:
- GOOGLEDRIVEFS_TEST_CLIENT_ID - your client id (see Google Developer Console)
 - GOOGLEDRIVEFS_TEST_CLIENT_SECRET - your client secret (see Google Developer Console)
 - GOOGLEDRIVEFS_TEST_CREDENTIALS_PATH - path to a json file which will contain the credentials
 
Then generate the credentials json file by running
  python tests/generate-credentials.pyThen run the tests by executing
  pytestin the root directory
(note that if GOOGLEDRIVEFS_TEST_CREDENTIALS_PATH isn't set
then the test suite will try to use the default Google credentials).
The tests may take an hour or two to complete.
They create and destroy many, many files and directories
mostly under the /test-googledrivefs directory in the user's Google Drive
and a few in the root directory
Note that, if your tests are run using a service account,
you can set the root id using GOOGLEDRIVEFS_TEST_ROOT_ID.