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Forum Discussion
af11
4 years agoExplorer | Level 4
dropbox.exceptions.AuthError: expired access token
When I run an app I developed, I get an error.
dropbox.exceptions.AuthError: AuthError('89ade68e26bd49d592d01bfbfae5659b', AuthError('expired_access_token', None))
What could be wrong with my OAu...
- 4 years ago
That's correct, Dropbox is in the process of switching to only issuing short-lived access tokens (and optional refresh tokens) instead of long-lived access tokens. You can find more information on this migration here.
Apps can still get long-term access by requesting "offline" access though, in which case the app receives a "refresh token" that can be used to retrieve new short-lived access tokens as needed, without further manual user intervention. You can find more information in the OAuth Guide and authorization documentation.
For reference, while the creation of new long-lived access tokens is now deprecated, we don't currently have a plan to disable existing long-lived access tokens. (If that changes, we will of course announce that ahead of time.) That being the case, you can continue using existing long-lived access token(s) without interruption, if you have any. Also, note though that after the change you won't be able to create new long-lived access tokens.
While the change began on September 30th 2021, we're releasing it gradually, so you may not have seen your app(s) affected until now. Once it applies to your app, it would apply regardless of the "Access token expiration" setting for your app, and that setting may no longer be available for your app.You can find an example of getting and setting the refresh token with the Dropbox API v2 Python SDK here.
Greg-DB
Dropbox Community Moderator
4 years agoIf you're getting "Successfully set up client" from that code, that indicates you've processed the app authorization flow and should now have the necessary credentials, so you can use that dropbox.Dropbox object to make calls. That particular example just shows the authorization flow, but you can save that object like 'with dropbox.Dropbox(<credentials as shown>) as dbx' or 'dbx = dropbox.Dropbox(<credentials as shown>)' and then use the 'dbx' object to make whatever API calls you need. As long as you give it those credentials and the credentials are still valid, the SDK will perform the refresh for you automatically.
Здравко
4 years agoLegendary | Level 20
Greg-DB wrote:... and then use the 'dbx' object to make whatever API calls you need. As long as you give it those credentials and the credentials are still valid, the SDK will perform the refresh for you automatically.
Johnson9070, If there is automatic access token refresh, why are you thinking that authorization would be ever need anew (I assume wouldn't explicitly revoked somehow)?! 🤷 Refresh token doesn't expire itself, despite regular access token expire after 4 hours. Whenever needed the SDK will take care to "refresh" regular access token using the refresh token. 😉 That's it. It's up to you to call method(s) needed to perform desired action in your application; nothing more once authenticated already.
Good luck.
- Johnson90704 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Hi ,
I'm relatively new at python.
At the moment i log on like this:
def Dropbox_logon(self):
self.dbx = dropbox.Dropbox(self.token)
x = self.dbx.users_get_current_account()
print('Logon ok')I'm a bit lost how to write this with the auth flow.
- Здравко4 years agoLegendary | Level 20
🤔 To be honest, I'm not sure what exactly you are looking for.
You have OAuth flow completed already and received corresponding authentication info (oauth_result.access_token, oauth_result.expires_at, and oauth_result.refresh_token); take a look on your post above. You can keep this entire information in the same way you do for your access token (the only thing seems you are keeping now). You can have fields like 'self.access_token', 'self.expires_at', and 'self.refresh_token' in your class (for example), instead of 'self.token' only. Isn't it? 😉 So, when you build a Dropbox client, like in your last post, you can perform it the same way like in your previous post.
What confused you actually and so you have wiped out the correct initialization? 🤷 Just take one more look on your own post above! If need learn little more the basic Python syntax.
Hope this gives some direction.
- tahsini4 years ago
Dropbox Staff
Johnson9070 wrote:
Hi Greg,
Does this mean that the user gets the logon window to authorize each time ?
Cheers , John
The user will see the login window to authorize just once.
Johnson9070 wrote:
Hi ,
I'm relatively new at python.
At the moment i log on like this:
def Dropbox_logon(self):
self.dbx = dropbox.Dropbox(self.token)
x = self.dbx.users_get_current_account()
print('Logon ok')I'm a bit lost how to write this with the auth flow.
You can see an example of OAuth flows written using our Python SDKs here, and here.
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