51

I'm trying to have a remote config parameter using the new Remote Config feature of Firebase, and I'm having an issue.

Here's my Remote Config console: remote config console

I'm doing a fetch and update in my Application's onCreate():

final FirebaseRemoteConfig remoteConfig = FirebaseRemoteConfig.getInstance();
remoteConfig.fetch().addOnCompleteListener(new OnCompleteListener<Void>() {
    @Override
    public void onComplete(@NonNull Task<Void> task) {
        if (task.isSuccessful()) {
            remoteConfig.activateFetched();
        }
    }
});

And here's how I'm reading it:

FirebaseRemoteConfig remoteConfig = FirebaseRemoteConfig.getInstance();
String value = remoteConfig.getString("active_subscriptions");

Value is returning null.

If I call remoteConfig.getInfo().getLastFetchStatus(), it returns LAST_FETCH_STATUS_SUCCESS, so it seems the fetch is going through successfully.

Any idea why my value is blank?

3
  • Steven, see my comment below - I tried your fix, and it didn't work for me, but I was able to make it work by moving the fetch out of onCreate.
    – jkane001
    May 22, 2016 at 18:56
  • I'm having the same problem and moving the fetch out of onCreate doesn't work for me .. if I move it into onResume, it will work on a second on Resume but not the initial onResume. This isn't exactly ideal as I want to configure aspects of my app remotely from first launch, not "at some point later down the line" :( May 24, 2016 at 16:02
  • See stackoverflow.com/questions/37501124/….
    – CoolMind
    Feb 1, 2019 at 10:51

12 Answers 12

19

You're likely hitting the caching in Remote Config. The way it works is that Config will cache incoming items locally, and return them. So your last (cached) fetch status was probably before the value was defined, and we get a cached blank value.

You can control the cache expiry, but if you fetch too often you risk getting throttled.

Because this is a common development problem though, there is a developer mode that lets you request more rapidly (for small groups of users):

FirebaseRemoteConfigSettings configSettings = 
    new FirebaseRemoteConfigSettings.Builder()
        .setDeveloperModeEnabled(BuildConfig.DEBUG)
        .build();
FirebaseRemoteConfig.getInstance().setConfigSettings(configSettings);

When you call fetch you can then pass a short cache expiration time

long cacheExpiration = 3600;
FirebaseRemoteConfig mFirebaseRemoteConfig = FirebaseRemoteConfig.getInstance();
if (mFirebaseRemoteConfig.getInfo().getConfigSettings().isDeveloperModeEnabled()) {
     cacheExpiration = 0;
}
mFirebaseRemoteConfig.fetch(cacheExpiration)
     .addOnCompleteListener(new OnCompleteListener<Void>() {
     // ...
});

That's how its done in the quickstart sample if you want a full reference.

7
  • 10
    Unfortunately that didn't change anything. May 21, 2016 at 13:06
  • 2
    This seems to be a different issue. I can confirm using gFirebaseRemoteConfig.getInfo() that fetch had never returned, so it wasn't a caching issue May 24, 2016 at 16:09
  • fetching on onCreate() is okay and there's no need to put them in onStart(). The only things you have to do are enabling development mode and passing less seconds (i.e. 100) to the fetching method. It works very well. Thanks
    – Alex
    May 31, 2016 at 13:00
  • Hi all, I have a simple boolean parameter but I can't seem to get the right value from the server. I'm calling fetch from onCreate. I have two listeners one for success and one for failure. The success one gets called and then I use the activateFetched. But I still can't get the right value, it's coming as false when is set to true.
    – Roberto
    Jun 6, 2016 at 10:10
  • Me again, keep testing and it's seems like Result inside the task response object is empty. It's like there is nothing to fetch but I have 3 properties now set LIVE on Firebase.
    – Roberto
    Jun 6, 2016 at 10:41
19

Workaround found! See below

I'm running into the "silent completion" thing - I call "fetch" but onComplete, onSuccess, or onFailure listeners never fire. I tried moving it to an activity onCreate, and still nothing happened, and therefore, the config items never get loaded from the server. I've got Developer Mode enabled, and am calling fetch with a cache value of 0.

I was able to (once) put a breakpoint on the line "public void onComplete(@NonNull Task task) {", which got hit, and then I was able to step through and the onComplete fired. I was then unable to reproduce this same result any other way, including doing the same thing (I think) a second time.

Seems like a timing or concurrency issue, but that makes little sense, given this is an asynchronous call.

Workaround

If you fetch from Activity#onResume (or, I presume, Activity#onStart), it works perfectly. Calling fetch from Activity#onCreate or Application#onCreate results in a call that seemingly never gets handled, and in fact, performance of the app degrades noticeably after the fetch begins, so I think there's a looper running or something.*

Workaround #2

If you really want this to run from Application#onCreate (which I do), this seems to work as well:

new Handler().postDelayed(new Runnable() {
    @Override
    public void run() {
        // Run mFirebaseRemoteConfig.fetch(timeout) here, and it works
    }
}, 0);
5
  • 1
    I had this issue as well and a handler (#2) got config fetch to work properly. Very strange.
    – user901309
    May 24, 2016 at 15:44
  • 2
    Recently (I'm now using Firebase 9.0.1), the code I use in Workaround 2 isn't working for me anymore (and the bug still exists). So it looks like Workaround 1 is the only valid workaround now.
    – jkane001
    May 29, 2016 at 2:20
  • This fixed it for me. I am running mine in a DialogFragment. I tried moving it from onViewCreated to onResume, but it still didn't work. Once I added the Handler.post(Runnable), the fetch call started working correctly. Jun 9, 2016 at 20:02
  • 2
    I was using this workaround since version 9.0.0. Version 9.4.0 solved this problem, it's working checking it out.
    – Lucas
    Aug 2, 2016 at 10:41
  • Version 9.4.0 does the trick for me too. If you still have the problem that the callback is not called, then check your device time. In my case the test device was 2 weeks in the past and therefore the fetching didn't work.
    – Thomas R.
    Aug 10, 2016 at 10:41
12

Found the problem.

After adding some logging, I found that the fetch job's onComplete() was never being called. I moved the fetch from my Application's onCreate to a fragment's, and now it works properly!

(Ian Barber, this might be something to look into or clarify, as the logs indicated that Firebase was initialized without an issue when it was in the Application, and the fetches were silent failures.)

5
  • what if you need to use a fragment?
    – Chirag
    May 24, 2016 at 5:42
  • I am using a fragment. Moving the fetch() call into the fragment fixed it for me. May 24, 2016 at 12:35
  • That's interesting, we'll look into that. Thanks for the feedback!
    – Ian Barber
    May 24, 2016 at 18:10
  • 1
    @IanBarber I have it in an activity, in onCreate, just like in the samples : github.com/firebase/quickstart-android/blob/master/config/app/… , but for some reason, the function onComplete doesn't get called on most devices, while it seems ok on Nexus 5 with Android 6. How come? What can I do to fix it? I tried running it on both UI thread and background thread. Both didn't work well. Jun 23, 2016 at 12:14
  • in my case am using 10.2.4 and facing the same issue, code reached in onComplete but value is always null.
    – Rohit
    May 9, 2017 at 12:13
8

I also encountered this problem. Turns out I hadn't seen the 'Publish' button in the the Firebase console. :facepalm:

0
6

I had the same problem and no workarounds were helpful in my case. The problem was in the testing device. I used emulator without installing Google Mobile Services, because of this the Complete event was not fired. I tried my phone with GMS and everything worked great. Good luck.

2

First thing in such case is check if you have the correct firebase config and you are connected to firebase .If you have android studio 2.2 got to Tools->Firebase->RemoteConfig - Connect to Firebase and see if you get a notification saying connected.Once Connected do the following in your code: mFirebaseRemoteConfig = FirebaseRemoteConfig.getInstance();

    /** NOTE: At this point, your app can use in-app default parameter values.To use in-app
     *        default values,skip the next section. You can deploy your app without setting
     *        parameter values on the server,and then later set values on the server to
     *        override the default behavior and appearance of your app.
     */

    mFirebaseRemoteConfig.setDefaults(R.xml.remote_config_defaults);
    FirebaseRemoteConfigSettings configSettings = new FirebaseRemoteConfigSettings.Builder()
            .setDeveloperModeEnabled(true)
            .build();
    mFirebaseRemoteConfig.setConfigSettings(configSettings);

And then for fetching config do the following long cacheExpiration = 2000; // Can increase this usually 12hrs is what is recommended

    /** If in developer mode cacheExpiration is set to 0 so each fetch will retrieve values from
     * the server.*/

    if (mFirebaseRemoteConfig.getInfo().getConfigSettings().isDeveloperModeEnabled()) {
        cacheExpiration = 0;
    }

   /**  cacheExpirationSeconds is set to cacheExpiration here, indicating that any previously
    * fetched and cached config would be considered expired because it would have been fetched
    * more than cacheExpiration seconds ago. Thus the next fetch would go to the server unless
    * throttling is in progress. The default expiration duration is 43200 (12 hours).
    */

    mFirebaseRemoteConfig.fetch(cacheExpiration)//TODO Bring this from a config file
            .addOnCompleteListener(new OnCompleteListener<Void>() {
                @Override
                public void onComplete(@NonNull Task<Void> task) {
                    if (task.isSuccessful()) {
                        Log.d(TAG, "Firebase Remote config Fetch Succeeded");
                        // Once the config is successfully fetched it must be activated before newly fetched
                        // values are returned.
                        mFirebaseRemoteConfig.activateFetched();
                    } else {
                        Log.d(TAG, "Firebase Remote config Fetch failed");
                    }
                    showRemoteConfig();
                }
            });

Run your App and check in logs " Firebase Remote config Fetch Succeeded ". If you see the same your remote configs are loaded and activated.

2

I've used a similar code like @Ian Barber (copy):

FirebaseRemoteConfigSettings configSettings = 
    new FirebaseRemoteConfigSettings.Builder()
        .setDeveloperModeEnabled(BuildConfig.DEBUG)
        .build();
FirebaseRemoteConfig.getInstance().setConfigSettings(configSettings);

My problem was the "BuildConfig.DEBUG", it returns false. So it takes the value 1h in cache until it was fetched again!

1
  • 1
    Just make sure that BuildConfig is actually from you app, not some other package
    – jujka
    Sep 26, 2018 at 13:01
2

Well in my case, I am able to receive control in addOnCompleteListener for fetch method but I have fetched values firebaseRemoteConfig just after I called firebaseRemoteConfig.activate(), so when I have tried to get the values from firebaseRemoteConfig it returns me previously saved values because firebaseRemoteConfig.activate() runs asynchronously and new values didn't saved before I am getting them from firebaseRemoteConfig, so I have added complete listener for activate() method also, Here:

firebaseRemoteConfig.fetch()
            .addOnCompleteListener(activity, OnCompleteListener {
                if (it.isSuccessful)
                {
                    Log.d("task","success")
                    firebaseRemoteConfig.activate().addOnCompleteListener {  // here I have added a listener
                        val base_url=firebaseRemoteConfig.getString("base_url")
                        Log.d("base url",base_url)
                        Toast.makeText(activity, "Base url: $base_url",Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show()
                    }
                }
                else
                {
                    Log.d("task","failure")
                }

            })
1

I had a problem that Firebase Remote Config didn't fire OnCompleteListener with fetch(0), but with fetch() did.

Looking at FirebaseRemoteConfig.fetch() does not trigger OnCompleteListener every time, I found that the first answer was working sometimes even with fetch(0). Then I again set 3600 seconds for interval, as errors continued to appear:

override fun onPostResume() {
    super.onPostResume()

    // Initialize FirebaseRemoteConfig here.
    ...

    firebaseRemoteConfig.fetch(3600).addOnCompleteListener { task ->
        if (task.isSuccessful) {
            firebaseRemoteConfig.activateFetched()
            //calling function to check if new version is available or not
            checkForUpdate(currentVersionCode, firebaseRemoteConfig.getString(VERSION_CODE_KEY))
        } else
            Toast.makeText(this@MainActivity, "Someting went wrong please try again",
                Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show()
    }

}
0

I work on a big project and the problem was buried in an unexpected place. Long story short: the firebase application id(normally set through google-services.json) was changed through code:

FirebaseOptions.Builder builder = new FirebaseOptions.Builder();
builder.setApplicationId(applicationId);
builder.setApiKey(apiKey);
FirebaseOptions options = builder.build();
FirebaseApp.initializeApp(context, options);

The solution was to remove that code and let firebase use the info from "google-services.json".

0

Use fetchAndActivate instead of fetch

I was facing the same problem. After fetching, no listener get call for first time only. I try fetchAndActivate in single line and it works for me. Use below code

mFirebaseRemoteConfig.fetchAndActivate()
    .addOnCompleteListener(this, new OnCompleteListener<Boolean>() {
        @Override
        public void onComplete(@NonNull Task<Boolean> task) {
            if (task.isSuccessful()) {
                boolean updated = task.getResult();
                Log.d(TAG, "Config params updated: " + updated);
                Toast.makeText(MainActivity.this, "Fetch and activate succeeded",
                        Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();

            } else {
                Toast.makeText(MainActivity.this, "Fetch failed",
                        Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
            }
            displayWelcomeMessage();
        }
    });

It will fetch and activate immediately. You can find this way in official documentation here

0

Does Android Studio's Build Variant match your intended Firebase project?

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