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Get onenoteOperation

Namespace: microsoft.graph

Get the status of a long-running OneNote operation. This applies to operations that return the Operation-Location header in the response, such as CopyNotebook, CopyToNotebook, CopyToSectionGroup, and CopyToSection.

You can poll the Operation-Location endpoint until the status property returns completed or failed.

If the status is completed, the resourceLocation property contains the resource endpoint URI.

If the status is failed, the error and @api.diagnostics properties provide error information.

This API is available in the following national cloud deployments.

Global service US Government L4 US Government L5 (DOD) China operated by 21Vianet

Permissions

Choose the permission or permissions marked as least privileged for this API. Use a higher privileged permission or permissions only if your app requires it. For details about delegated and application permissions, see Permission types. To learn more about these permissions, see the permissions reference.

Permission type Least privileged permissions Higher privileged permissions
Delegated (work or school account) Notes.Create Notes.Read, Notes.Read.All, Notes.ReadWrite, Notes.ReadWrite.All
Delegated (personal Microsoft account) Notes.Create Notes.Read, Notes.ReadWrite
Application Notes.Read.All Notes.ReadWrite.All

HTTP request

GET /me/onenote/operations/{id}
GET /users/{id | userPrincipalName}/onenote/operations/{id}
GET /groups/{id}/onenote/operations/{id}
GET /sites/{id}/onenote/operations/{id}

Optional query parameters

None.

Request headers

Name Type Description
Authorization string Bearer {token}. Required. Learn more about authentication and authorization.
Accept string application/json

Request body

Don't supply a request body for this method.

Response

If successful, this method returns a 200 OK response code and onenoteOperation object in the response body.

Example

Request

The following example shows a request.

GET https://graph.microsoft.com/v1.0/me/onenote/operations/{id}
Response

The following example shows the response. Note: The response object shown here might be shortened for readability.

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-type: application/json

{
  "id": "id-value",
  "status": "status-value",
  "createdDateTime": "2016-10-19T10:37:00Z",
  "lastActionDateTime": "2016-10-19T10:37:00Z",
  "resourceLocation": "resourceLocation-value",
  "resourceId": "resourceId-value"
}