Simple script to download a Flickr set.
To use it you need to get your own Flickr API key here: https://www.flickr.com/services/api/misc.api_keys.html
flickr_download -k <api key> -s <api secret> -d <set id>
It can also list the public set ids for a given user:
flickr_download -k <api key> -s <api secret> -l <user name>
The user name can be passed in as a URL, email, or user name.
Get a public set using the title and id to name the downloaded files:
flickr_download -k <api key> -s <api secret> -d <set id> -n title_and_id
Download private or restricted photos by authorizing against the users account. (see below)
To install this script use the Python pip utility bundled with your Python distribution:
> pip install flickr_download
Get your Flickr API key.
You can also set your API key and secret in ~/.flickr_download
:
api_key: my_key
api_secret: my_secret
The script also allows you to authenticate as a user account. That way you can download sets that
are private and public photos that are restricted. To use this mode, initialize the authorization by
running the script with the t
parameter to authorize the app.
flickr_download -k <api key> -s <api secret> -t
This will save ~/.flickr_token
containing the authorization. Subsequent calls with -t
will use the
stored token. For example using
flickr_download -k <api key> -s <api secret> -l <USER>
with USER set to your own username, will only fetch your publicly available sets, whereas adding -t
flickr_download -k <api key> -s <api secret> -l <USER> -t
will fetch all your sets including private restricted sets.
Note, if you want to log in as another user delete ~/.flickr_token
.
If you are downloading a lot of photos, two parameters will speed things up. Especially on errors (which the Flickr API seems to like to throw regularly). Those parameters are:
--cache <cache_file>
– this will cache API responses in the given file, and will thus speed up repeated calls to the same API--metadata_store
- this will store metadata information for the set downloads in.metadata.db
, which makes it faster to skip already downloaded files.
So to download all the sets for a given user XXX
, including private photos and sets, do:
> flickr_download -k KEY -s SECRET --user_auth --cache api_cache --metadata_store --download_user XXX
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-k API_KEY, --api_key API_KEY
Flickr API key
-s API_SECRET, --api_secret API_SECRET
Flickr API secret
-t, --user_auth Enable user authentication
-l USER, --list USER List photosets for a user
-d SET_ID, --download SET_ID
Download the given set
-p USERNAME, --download_user_photos USERNAME
Download all photos for a given user
-u USERNAME, --download_user USERNAME
Download all sets for a given user
-i PHOTO_ID, --download_photo PHOTO_ID
Download one specific photo
-q SIZE_LABEL, --quality SIZE_LABEL
Quality of the picture. Examples: Original/Large/Medium/Small. By default the largest available is used.
-n NAMING_MODE, --naming NAMING_MODE
Photo naming mode. Use --list_naming to get a list of possible NAMING_MODEs
-m, --list_naming List naming modes
-o, --skip_download Skip the actual download of the photo
-j, --save_json Save photo info like description and tags, one .json file per photo
-c CACHE_FILE, --cache CACHE_FILE
Cache results in CACHE_FILE (speed things up on large downloads in particular)
--metadata_store Store information about downloads in a metadata file (helps with retrying downloads)
-v, --verbose Turns on verbose logging
--version Lists the version of the tool