Step 1: Get the file I would like to save (in this case a small png).
var fileBytes = getFileBytes();
Step 2: Get a content uri from google drive.
var intent = new Intent(Intent.ActionCreateDocument);
intent.AddCategory(Intent.CategoryOpenable);
intent.SetType(mimeType);
intent.PutExtra(Intent.ExtraTitle, fileNameWithExtension);
StartActivityForResult(Intent.CreateChooser(intent, "Select Save Location"), 43);
Step 3: Create a FileOutputStream
to handle writing for the content provider.
protected override async void OnActivityResult (int requestCode, [GeneratedEnum] Result resultCode, Intent data)
{
base.OnActivityResult (requestCode, resultCode, data);
if (resultCode == Result.Canceled && requestCode == 43) {
using (var pFD = ContentResolver.OpenFileDescriptor(data.Data, "w"))
using (var outputSteam = new FileOutputStream(pFD.FileDescriptor))
{
await outputSteam.WriteAsync(fileBytes);
}
}
}
This code works if I save the file locally. But when I save the file to Google Drive the file is there but it has 0 bytes. This is concerning because if i'm doing this right and it doesn't work on Google Drive then who knows if it will work on other content providers.
To be clear, it creates the file in Step 2. So is the code in Step 3 correct? Again, it does work if I save the file locally.
ActionCreateDocument
was used. This is actually a "bug" in Xamarin converted Java->C# streams, been there for years....outputStream
manually but obviously that didn't help..Flush
..Close
/ usingContentResolver.OpenFileDescriptor
vs. using the.FileDescriptor
to get a stream, etc... It all results in the same thing, a zero byte file in some providers (FileProvider-based ones seem to always work, but the virtual ones like Drive typically fail). In Java, the stream code always works. I either use Java class reflection to get theopenOutputStream
method from the resolver and theOutputStream
andInputStream
classes or just write it in Java (Jar-library) and wrap it in a X.A binding library.