This issue has been bugging me since the inception of the new Google Drive Android Api (GDAA).
First discussed here, I hoped it would go away in later releases, but it is still there (as of 2014/03/19). The user-trashed (referring to the 'Remove' action in 'drive.google.com') files/folders keep appearing in both the
Drive.DriveApi.query(_gac, query), and
DriveFolder.queryChildren(_gac, query)
as well as
DriveFolder.listChildren(_gac)
methods, even if used with
Filters.eq(SearchableField.TRASHED, false)
query qualifier, or if I use a filtering construct on the results
for (Metadata md : result.getMetadataBuffer()) {
if ((md == null) || (!md.isDataValid()) || md.isTrashed()) continue;
dMDs.add(new DrvMD(md));
}
Using
Drive.DriveApi.requestSync(_gac);
has no impact. And the time elapsed since the removal varies wildly, my last case was over 12 HOURS. And it is completely random.
What's worse, I can't even rely on EMPTY TRASH in 'drive.google.com', it does not yield any predictable results. Sometime the file status changes to 'isTrashed()' sometimes it disappears from the result list.
As I kept fiddling with this issue, I ended up with the following superawfulhack:
find file with TRASH status equal FALSE
if (file found and is not trashed) {
try to write content
if ( write content fails)
create a new file
}
Not even this helps. The file shows up as healthy even if the file is in the trash (and it's status was double-filtered by query and by metadata test). It can even be happily written into and when inspected in the trash, it is modified.
The conclusion here is that a fix should get higher priority, since it renders multi-platform use of Drive unreliable. It will be discovered by developers right away in the development / debugging process, steering them away.
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