Cloud Storage allows you to list the contents of your Storage Bucket. The SDKs return both the items and the prefixes of objects under the current Storage reference.
Projects that use the List API require Firebase Storage Rules Version 2. If you have an existing Firebase Project, please follow the steps in the Security Rules Guide.
List() uses Google Cloud Storage’s List API.
In Firebase Storage, we use / as a delimiter, which allows us to emulate file
system semantics. To allow for efficient traversal of large, hierarchical
Storage Buckets, the List API returns prefixes and items separately.
For example, if you upload one file /images/uid/file1,
root.child('images').listAll()will return/images/uidas a prefix.root.child('images/uid').listAll()will return the file as an item.
The Firebase Storage SDK does not return object paths that contain two
consecutive /s or end with a /.. For example, if a bucket has the
following objects:
correctPrefix/happyItemwrongPrefix//sadItemlonelyItem/
List operations on items in this bucket will give the following results:
- The list operation at the root returns the references to
correctPrefix,wrongPrefixandlonelyItemasprefixes. - The list operation at the
correctPrefix/returns the references tocorrectPrefix/happyItemasitems. - The list operation at the
wrongPrefix/doesn't return any references becausewrongPrefix//sadItemcontains two consecutive/s. - The list operation at the
lonelyItem/doesn't return any references because the objectlonelyItem/ends with/.
List all files
You can use listAll to fetch all results for a directory.
This is best used for small directories as all results are buffered in memory.
The operation also may not return a consistent snapshot if objects are added or
removed during the process.
For a large list, use the paginated list() method as listAll() buffers all
results in memory.
The following example demonstrates listAll.
Java
StorageReference listRef = storage.getReference().child("files/uid");
listRef.listAll()
.addOnSuccessListener(new OnSuccessListener<ListResult>() {
@Override
public void onSuccess(ListResult listResult) {
for (StorageReference prefix : listResult.getPrefixes()) {
// All the prefixes under listRef.
// You may call listAll() recursively on them.
}
for (StorageReference item : listResult.getItems()) {
// All the items under listRef.
}
}
})
.addOnFailureListener(new OnFailureListener() {
@Override
public void onFailure(@NonNull Exception e) {
// Uh-oh, an error occurred!
}
});
Kotlin+KTX
val storage = Firebase.storage
val listRef = storage.reference.child("files/uid")
// You'll need to import com.google.firebase.storage.ktx.component1 and
// com.google.firebase.storage.ktx.component2
listRef.listAll()
.addOnSuccessListener { (items, prefixes) ->
prefixes.forEach { prefix ->
// All the prefixes under listRef.
// You may call listAll() recursively on them.
}
items.forEach { item ->
// All the items under listRef.
}
}
.addOnFailureListener {
// Uh-oh, an error occurred!
}
Paginate list results
The list() API places a limit on the number of results it returns. list()
provides a consistent pageview and exposes a pageToken that allows control over
when to fetch additional results.
The pageToken encodes the path and version of the last item returned in the previous result. In a subsequent request using the pageToken, items that come after the pageToken are shown.
The following example demonstrates paginating a result:
Java
public void listAllPaginated(@Nullable String pageToken) {
FirebaseStorage storage = FirebaseStorage.getInstance();
StorageReference listRef = storage.getReference().child("files/uid");
// Fetch the next page of results, using the pageToken if we have one.
Task<ListResult> listPageTask = pageToken != null
? listRef.list(100, pageToken)
: listRef.list(100);
listPageTask
.addOnSuccessListener(new OnSuccessListener<ListResult>() {
@Override
public void onSuccess(ListResult listResult) {
List<StorageReference> prefixes = listResult.getPrefixes();
List<StorageReference> items = listResult.getItems();
// Process page of results
// ...
// Recurse onto next page
if (listResult.getPageToken() != null) {
listAllPaginated(listResult.getPageToken());
}
}
}).addOnFailureListener(new OnFailureListener() {
@Override
public void onFailure(@NonNull Exception e) {
// Uh-oh, an error occurred.
}
});
}
Kotlin+KTX
fun listAllPaginated(pageToken: String?) {
val storage = Firebase.storage
val listRef = storage.reference.child("files/uid")
// Fetch the next page of results, using the pageToken if we have one.
val listPageTask = if (pageToken != null) {
listRef.list(100, pageToken)
} else {
listRef.list(100)
}
// You'll need to import com.google.firebase.storage.ktx.component1 and
// com.google.firebase.storage.ktx.component2
listPageTask
.addOnSuccessListener { (items, prefixes, pageToken) ->
// Process page of results
processResults(items, prefixes)
// Recurse onto next page
pageToken?.let {
listAllPaginated(it)
}
}.addOnFailureListener {
// Uh-oh, an error occurred.
}
}
Handle errors
list() and listAll() fail if you haven't upgraded
the Security Rules to version 2. Upgrade your Security Rules if you see this
error:
Listing objects in a bucket is disallowed for rules_version = "1".
Please update storage security rules to rules_version = "2" to use list.
Other possible errors may indicate the user does not have the right permission. More information on errors can be found in the Handle Errors.

