As Doug said, Google Cloud Storage would show you the structure of different directories, but there are actually no folders within the buckets.
However, you can find perform some workarounds within your code to create that very same folder structure yourself. For the workaround I came up with, you need to use libraries such as shelljs, which will allow you to create folders in your system.
Following this GCP tutorial on Cloud Storage, you will find examples on, for instance, how to list or download files from your bucket.
Now, putting all this together, you can get the full path of the file you are going to download, parse it to separate the folders from the actual file, then create the folder structure using the method mkdir
from shelljs.
For me, modifying the method for downloading files in the tutorial, was something like this:
var shell = require('shelljs');
[...]
async function downloadFile(bucketName, srcFilename, destFilename) {
// [START storage_download_file]
// Imports the Google Cloud client library
const {Storage} = require('@google-cloud/storage');
// Creates a client
const storage = new Storage();
//Find last separator index
var index = srcFilename.lastIndexOf('/');
//Get the folder route as string using previous separator
var str = srcFilename.slice(0, index);
//Create recursively the folder structure in the current directory
shell.mkdir('-p', './'+str);
//Path of the downloaded file
var destPath = str+'/'+destFilename;
const options = {
destination: destPath,
};
// Downloads the file
await storage
.bucket(bucketName)
.file(srcFilename)
.download(options);
console.log(
`gs://${bucketName}/${srcFilename} downloaded to ${destPath}.`
);
// [END storage_download_file]
}