9

For example, I have following database structure:

/ 
+ users
  + 1
    + items
      + -xxx: "hello"
  + 2
    + items

Then;

var usersRef = new Firebase("https://mydb.firebaseio.com/users");
usersRef.on("child_changed", function(snapshot) {
  utils.debug(JSON.stringify(snapshot.exportVal()));
});

If a value, "world", is pushed to "/users/1/items", I may get:

{"items": {"-xxx": "hello", "-yyy": "world"}}

So, how to tell which one is changed?

I need to on("child_added") every single ref to "/users/$id/items"?

NOTE: I'm trying to write an admin process in node.js.

2
  • Your "I may get" doesn't match the structure you've shown above; you have "items": { "1": { "items", additionally, you couldn't get that result by listening on /users for 'child_changed'; you would get something like this: {"items: {....}}
    – Kato
    Mar 1, 2013 at 15:51
  • I fixed what "I may get". thanks.
    – hiroshi
    Mar 2, 2013 at 1:00

2 Answers 2

23

The child_changed event only provides information on which immediate child has changed. If a node deeper in a data structure changed, you'll know which immediate child was affected but not the full path to the changed data. This is by design.

If you want granular updates about exactly what changed, you should attach callbacks recursively to all of the elements you care about. That way when an item changes, you'll know what the item was by which callback is triggered. Firebase is actually optimized for this use case; attaching large numbers of callbacks -- even thousands -- should work fine. Behind the scenes, Firebase aggregates all of callbacks together and only synchronizes the minimum set of data needed.

So, for your example, if you want to get alerted every time a new item is added for any user, you could do the following:

var usersRef = new Firebase("https://mydb.firebaseio.com/users");
usersRef.on("child_added", function(userSnapshot) {
  userSnapshot.ref().child("items").on("child_added", function(itemSnapshot) 
    utils.debug(itemSnapshot.val());
  });
});

If you are working with a very large number of users (hundreds of thousands or millions), and synchronizing all of the data is impractical, there's another approach. Rather than have your server listen to all of the data directly, you could have it listen to a queue of changes. Then when clients add items to their item lists, they could also add an item to this queue so that the server becomes aware of it.

This is what the client code might look like:

var itemRef = new Firebase("https://mydb.firebaseio.com/users/MYID/items");
var serverEventQueue = new Firebase("https://mydb.firebaseio.com/serverEvents");
itemRef.push(newItem);
serverEventQueue.push(newItem);

You could then have the server listen for child_added on that queue and handle the events when they come in.

3
  • Thanks Andrew. I got a glimpse of how the on() handler works. I'll go with the first approach for now, and may use second one for a occasion.
    – hiroshi
    Mar 2, 2013 at 1:07
  • 3
    Watch out! you should now use userSnapshot.ref instead of userSnapshot.ref() Jan 4, 2017 at 9:49
  • Thanks Andrew, I think this is the direction I need to go and this post is very helpful.
    – Lucy
    Jun 11, 2017 at 3:20
5

Andrew Lee gave a nice answer, but I think you should try to use cloud functions. something like this should work:

exports.getPath = functions.database.ref('/users/{id}/items/{itemId}')
.onWrite(event => {
  // Grab the current value of what was written to the Realtime Database.
  const original = event.data.val();
  console.log('user id', event.params.id);
  console.log('item id', event.params.itemId);
});
5
  • Thanks also Yernar. I will move to Cloud Functions in the near future and will update here if I'm successful. The wildcarding is just the power I need.
    – Lucy
    Jun 11, 2017 at 3:22
  • @Yernar, doe the "ref('/users/{id}/items/{itemId}')" structure work for the database reference api? (that is, the non cloud functions api) Jul 12, 2017 at 22:45
  • @bernatfortet, I do not think so, because that is the point of cloud functions. they have features that you can use on your own backend.
    – yernarun
    Aug 1, 2017 at 4:19
  • You're a saviour Yernar, this cloud function saved my day. I needed to distinguish which user has updated a certain path in db and it works fines.
    – MbaiMburu
    Oct 5, 2017 at 7:19
  • @MbaiMburu vote for my answer then :) I am glad it worked
    – yernarun
    Oct 10, 2017 at 6:51

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