76

How can you delete a Document with all it's collections and nested subcollections? (inside the functions environment)

In the RTDB you can ref.child('../someNode).setValue(null) and that completes the desired behavior.

I can think of two ways you could achieve the desired delete behavior, both with tremendously ghastly drawbacks.

  1. Create a 'Super' function that will spider every document and delete them in a batch. This function would be complicated, brittle to changes, and might take a lengthy execution time.

  2. Add 'onDelete' triggers for each Document type, and make it delete any direct subcollections. You'll call delete on the root document, and the deletion calls will propagate down the 'tree'. This is sluggish, scales atrociously and is costly due to the colossal load of function executions.

Imagine you would have to delete a 'GROUP' and all it's children. It would be deeply chaotic with #1 and pricey with #2 (1 function call per doc)

groups > GROUP > projects > PROJECT > files > FILE > assets > ASSET
                                                   > urls > URL
                                    > members > MEMBER
               > questions > QUESTION > answers > ANSWER > replies > REPLY
                                      > comments > COMMENT
               > resources > RESOURCE > submissions > SUBMISSION
                                      > requests > REQUEST

Is there a superior/favored/cleaner way to delete a document and all it's nested subcollections?

It ought to be possible considering you can do it from the console.

2
  • what triggers the cloud function call?
    – dsharew
    Mar 20, 2018 at 14:26
  • 1
    A user posts a delete request object to the RTDB which has a trigger that invokes the 'deletion process'. But it really doesn't matter how it's invoked, this is more about how to deal with actually deleting the tree
    – Linxy
    Mar 20, 2018 at 15:45

13 Answers 13

37

according to firebase documentation:
https://firebase.google.com/docs/firestore/solutions/delete-collections
Deleting collection with nested subcollections might be done easy and neat with node-JS on the server side.

const client = require('firebase-tools');
await client.firestore
      .delete(collectionPath, {
        project: process.env.GCLOUD_PROJECT,
        recursive: true,
        yes: true
      }); 
9
  • 6
    a note for posterity: add "firebase-tools": "^8.0.1" in your package.json if you haven't yet Apr 3, 2020 at 14:29
  • WARNING : INCLUDING FIREBASE-TOOLS WILL LAG ALOOOOOOTTTTTT!!!
    – Ayyappa
    May 11, 2020 at 17:47
  • 9
    Note for Typescript users: there's no @types/firebase-tools definition, but you can use require like so: const firebaseTools = require('firebase-tools'); Jul 21, 2020 at 3:42
  • Is there a way to test this in a firebase emulator? Sep 1, 2020 at 22:04
  • 3
    Note that env.GCLOUD_PROJECT is deprecated, use env.GCP_PROJECT instead. cloud.google.com/functions/docs/…
    – Son Nguyen
    Mar 16, 2021 at 5:46
20

There is now a simple way delete a document and all of its subcollections using NodeJS.

This was made available in nodejs-firestore version v4.11.0.

From the docs: recursiveDelete() Recursively deletes all documents and subcollections at and under the specified level.

import * as admin from 'firebase-admin'

const ref = admin.firestore().doc('my_document')
admin.firestore().recursiveDelete(ref)
1
  • Thank you! It now finally deletes the entire document + its subcollections and docs
    – Dumitru
    Nov 6, 2023 at 14:39
16
+1000

Unfortunately, your analysis is spot on and indeed this use case does require a lot of ceremony. According to official documentation, there is no support for deep deletes in a single shot in firestore neither via client libraries nor rest-api nor the cli tool.

The cli is open sourced and its implementation lives here: https://github.com/firebase/firebase-tools/blob/master/src/firestore/delete.js. They basically implemented option 1. you described in your question, so you can take some inspiration from there.

Both options 1. and 2. are far from ideal situation and to make your solution 100% reliable you will need to keep a persistent queue with deletion tasks, as any error in the long running procedure will leave your system in some ill-defined state.

I would discourage to go with raw option 2. as recursive cloud function calls may very easily went wrong - for example, hitting max. limits.

In case the link changed, below the full source of https://github.com/firebase/firebase-tools/blob/master/src/firestore/delete.js:

"use strict";

var clc = require("cli-color");
var ProgressBar = require("progress");

var api = require("../api");
var firestore = require("../gcp/firestore");
var FirebaseError = require("../error");
var logger = require("../logger");
var utils = require("../utils");

/**
 * Construct a new Firestore delete operation.
 *
 * @constructor
 * @param {string} project the Firestore project ID.
 * @param {string} path path to a document or collection.
 * @param {boolean} options.recursive true if the delete should be recursive.
 * @param {boolean} options.shallow true if the delete should be shallow (non-recursive).
 * @param {boolean} options.allCollections true if the delete should universally remove all collections and docs.
 */
function FirestoreDelete(project, path, options) {
  this.project = project;
  this.path = path;
  this.recursive = Boolean(options.recursive);
  this.shallow = Boolean(options.shallow);
  this.allCollections = Boolean(options.allCollections);

  // Remove any leading or trailing slashes from the path
  if (this.path) {
    this.path = this.path.replace(/(^\/+|\/+$)/g, "");
  }

  this.isDocumentPath = this._isDocumentPath(this.path);
  this.isCollectionPath = this._isCollectionPath(this.path);

  this.allDescendants = this.recursive;
  this.parent = "projects/" + project + "/databases/(default)/documents";

  // When --all-collections is passed any other flags or arguments are ignored
  if (!options.allCollections) {
    this._validateOptions();
  }
}

/**
 * Validate all options, throwing an exception for any fatal errors.
 */
FirestoreDelete.prototype._validateOptions = function() {
  if (this.recursive && this.shallow) {
    throw new FirebaseError("Cannot pass recursive and shallow options together.");
  }

  if (this.isCollectionPath && !this.recursive && !this.shallow) {
    throw new FirebaseError("Must pass recursive or shallow option when deleting a collection.");
  }

  var pieces = this.path.split("/");

  if (pieces.length === 0) {
    throw new FirebaseError("Path length must be greater than zero.");
  }

  var hasEmptySegment = pieces.some(function(piece) {
    return piece.length === 0;
  });

  if (hasEmptySegment) {
    throw new FirebaseError("Path must not have any empty segments.");
  }
};

/**
 * Determine if a path points to a document.
 *
 * @param {string} path a path to a Firestore document or collection.
 * @return {boolean} true if the path points to a document, false
 * if it points to a collection.
 */
FirestoreDelete.prototype._isDocumentPath = function(path) {
  if (!path) {
    return false;
  }

  var pieces = path.split("/");
  return pieces.length % 2 === 0;
};

/**
 * Determine if a path points to a collection.
 *
 * @param {string} path a path to a Firestore document or collection.
 * @return {boolean} true if the path points to a collection, false
 * if it points to a document.
 */
FirestoreDelete.prototype._isCollectionPath = function(path) {
  if (!path) {
    return false;
  }

  return !this._isDocumentPath(path);
};

/**
 * Construct a StructuredQuery to find descendant documents of a collection.
 *
 * See:
 * https://firebase.google.com/docs/firestore/reference/rest/v1beta1/StructuredQuery
 *
 * @param {boolean} allDescendants true if subcollections should be included.
 * @param {number} batchSize maximum number of documents to target (limit).
 * @param {string=} startAfter document name to start after (optional).
 * @return {object} a StructuredQuery.
 */
FirestoreDelete.prototype._collectionDescendantsQuery = function(
  allDescendants,
  batchSize,
  startAfter
) {
  var nullChar = String.fromCharCode(0);

  var startAt = this.parent + "/" + this.path + "/" + nullChar;
  var endAt = this.parent + "/" + this.path + nullChar + "/" + nullChar;

  var where = {
    compositeFilter: {
      op: "AND",
      filters: [
        {
          fieldFilter: {
            field: {
              fieldPath: "__name__",
            },
            op: "GREATER_THAN_OR_EQUAL",
            value: {
              referenceValue: startAt,
            },
          },
        },
        {
          fieldFilter: {
            field: {
              fieldPath: "__name__",
            },
            op: "LESS_THAN",
            value: {
              referenceValue: endAt,
            },
          },
        },
      ],
    },
  };

  var query = {
    structuredQuery: {
      where: where,
      limit: batchSize,
      from: [
        {
          allDescendants: allDescendants,
        },
      ],
      select: {
        fields: [{ fieldPath: "__name__" }],
      },
      orderBy: [{ field: { fieldPath: "__name__" } }],
    },
  };

  if (startAfter) {
    query.structuredQuery.startAt = {
      values: [{ referenceValue: startAfter }],
      before: false,
    };
  }

  return query;
};

/**
 * Construct a StructuredQuery to find descendant documents of a document.
 * The document itself will not be included
 * among the results.
 *
 * See:
 * https://firebase.google.com/docs/firestore/reference/rest/v1beta1/StructuredQuery
 *
 * @param {boolean} allDescendants true if subcollections should be included.
 * @param {number} batchSize maximum number of documents to target (limit).
 * @param {string=} startAfter document name to start after (optional).
 * @return {object} a StructuredQuery.
 */
FirestoreDelete.prototype._docDescendantsQuery = function(allDescendants, batchSize, startAfter) {
  var query = {
    structuredQuery: {
      limit: batchSize,
      from: [
        {
          allDescendants: allDescendants,
        },
      ],
      select: {
        fields: [{ fieldPath: "__name__" }],
      },
      orderBy: [{ field: { fieldPath: "__name__" } }],
    },
  };

  if (startAfter) {
    query.structuredQuery.startAt = {
      values: [{ referenceValue: startAfter }],
      before: false,
    };
  }

  return query;
};

/**
 * Query for a batch of 'descendants' of a given path.
 *
 * For document format see:
 * https://firebase.google.com/docs/firestore/reference/rest/v1beta1/Document
 *
 * @param {boolean} allDescendants true if subcollections should be included,
 * @param {number} batchSize the maximum size of the batch.
 * @param {string=} startAfter the name of the document to start after (optional).
 * @return {Promise<object[]>} a promise for an array of documents.
 */
FirestoreDelete.prototype._getDescendantBatch = function(allDescendants, batchSize, startAfter) {
  var url;
  var body;
  if (this.isDocumentPath) {
    url = this.parent + "/" + this.path + ":runQuery";
    body = this._docDescendantsQuery(allDescendants, batchSize, startAfter);
  } else {
    url = this.parent + ":runQuery";
    body = this._collectionDescendantsQuery(allDescendants, batchSize, startAfter);
  }

  return api
    .request("POST", "/v1beta1/" + url, {
      auth: true,
      data: body,
      origin: api.firestoreOrigin,
    })
    .then(function(res) {
      // Return the 'document' property for each element in the response,
      // where it exists.
      return res.body
        .filter(function(x) {
          return x.document;
        })
        .map(function(x) {
          return x.document;
        });
    });
};

/**
 * Progress bar shared by the class.
 */
FirestoreDelete.progressBar = new ProgressBar("Deleted :current docs (:rate docs/s)", {
  total: Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER,
});

/**
 * Repeatedly query for descendants of a path and delete them in batches
 * until no documents remain.
 *
 * @return {Promise} a promise for the entire operation.
 */
FirestoreDelete.prototype._recursiveBatchDelete = function() {
  var self = this;

  // Tunable deletion parameters
  var readBatchSize = 7500;
  var deleteBatchSize = 250;
  var maxPendingDeletes = 15;
  var maxQueueSize = deleteBatchSize * maxPendingDeletes * 2;

  // All temporary variables for the deletion queue.
  var queue = [];
  var numPendingDeletes = 0;
  var pagesRemaining = true;
  var pageIncoming = false;
  var lastDocName;

  var failures = [];
  var retried = {};

  var queueLoop = function() {
    if (queue.length == 0 && numPendingDeletes == 0 && !pagesRemaining) {
      return true;
    }

    if (failures.length > 0) {
      logger.debug("Found " + failures.length + " failed deletes, failing.");
      return true;
    }

    if (queue.length <= maxQueueSize && pagesRemaining && !pageIncoming) {
      pageIncoming = true;

      self
        ._getDescendantBatch(self.allDescendants, readBatchSize, lastDocName)
        .then(function(docs) {
          pageIncoming = false;

          if (docs.length == 0) {
            pagesRemaining = false;
            return;
          }

          queue = queue.concat(docs);
          lastDocName = docs[docs.length - 1].name;
        })
        .catch(function(e) {
          logger.debug("Failed to fetch page after " + lastDocName, e);
          pageIncoming = false;
        });
    }

    if (numPendingDeletes > maxPendingDeletes) {
      return false;
    }

    if (queue.length == 0) {
      return false;
    }

    var toDelete = [];
    var numToDelete = Math.min(deleteBatchSize, queue.length);

    for (var i = 0; i < numToDelete; i++) {
      toDelete.push(queue.shift());
    }

    numPendingDeletes++;
    firestore
      .deleteDocuments(self.project, toDelete)
      .then(function(numDeleted) {
        FirestoreDelete.progressBar.tick(numDeleted);
        numPendingDeletes--;
      })
      .catch(function(e) {
        // For server errors, retry if the document has not yet been retried.
        if (e.status >= 500 && e.status < 600) {
          logger.debug("Server error deleting doc batch", e);

          // Retry each doc up to one time
          toDelete.forEach(function(doc) {
            if (retried[doc.name]) {
              logger.debug("Failed to delete doc " + doc.name + " multiple times.");
              failures.push(doc.name);
            } else {
              retried[doc.name] = true;
              queue.push(doc);
            }
          });
        } else {
          logger.debug("Fatal error deleting docs ", e);
          failures = failures.concat(toDelete);
        }

        numPendingDeletes--;
      });

    return false;
  };

  return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
    var intervalId = setInterval(function() {
      if (queueLoop()) {
        clearInterval(intervalId);

        if (failures.length == 0) {
          resolve();
        } else {
          reject("Failed to delete documents " + failures);
        }
      }
    }, 0);
  });
};

/**
 * Delete everything under a given path. If the path represents
 * a document the document is deleted and then all descendants
 * are deleted.
 *
 * @return {Promise} a promise for the entire operation.
 */
FirestoreDelete.prototype._deletePath = function() {
  var self = this;
  var initialDelete;
  if (this.isDocumentPath) {
    var doc = { name: this.parent + "/" + this.path };
    initialDelete = firestore.deleteDocument(doc).catch(function(err) {
      logger.debug("deletePath:initialDelete:error", err);
      if (self.allDescendants) {
        // On a recursive delete, we are insensitive to
        // failures of the initial delete
        return Promise.resolve();
      }

      // For a shallow delete, this error is fatal.
      return utils.reject("Unable to delete " + clc.cyan(this.path));
    });
  } else {
    initialDelete = Promise.resolve();
  }

  return initialDelete.then(function() {
    return self._recursiveBatchDelete();
  });
};

/**
 * Delete an entire database by finding and deleting each collection.
 *
 * @return {Promise} a promise for all of the operations combined.
 */
FirestoreDelete.prototype.deleteDatabase = function() {
  var self = this;
  return firestore
    .listCollectionIds(this.project)
    .catch(function(err) {
      logger.debug("deleteDatabase:listCollectionIds:error", err);
      return utils.reject("Unable to list collection IDs");
    })
    .then(function(collectionIds) {
      var promises = [];

      logger.info("Deleting the following collections: " + clc.cyan(collectionIds.join(", ")));

      for (var i = 0; i < collectionIds.length; i++) {
        var collectionId = collectionIds[i];
        var deleteOp = new FirestoreDelete(self.project, collectionId, {
          recursive: true,
        });

        promises.push(deleteOp.execute());
      }

      return Promise.all(promises);
    });
};

/**
 * Check if a path has any children. Useful for determining
 * if deleting a path will affect more than one document.
 *
 * @return {Promise<boolean>} a promise that retruns true if the path has
 * children and false otherwise.
 */
FirestoreDelete.prototype.checkHasChildren = function() {
  return this._getDescendantBatch(true, 1).then(function(docs) {
    return docs.length > 0;
  });
};

/**
 * Run the delete operation.
 */
FirestoreDelete.prototype.execute = function() {
  var verifyRecurseSafe;
  if (this.isDocumentPath && !this.recursive && !this.shallow) {
    verifyRecurseSafe = this.checkHasChildren().then(function(multiple) {
      if (multiple) {
        return utils.reject("Document has children, must specify -r or --shallow.", { exit: 1 });
      }
    });
  } else {
    verifyRecurseSafe = Promise.resolve();
  }

  var self = this;
  return verifyRecurseSafe.then(function() {
    return self._deletePath();
  });
};

module.exports = FirestoreDelete;
4
  • I presume there is no easy way to make the CLI delete command work within functions.. Thanks for the info though, I'll try to port this to work with functions
    – Linxy
    Mar 26, 2018 at 13:15
  • 1
    Link is dead :-(
    – Jimmy Kane
    Dec 9, 2018 at 10:55
  • @JimmyKane thanks I updated the answer and included the code. Unfortunately it still seems not to be option to do an atomic delete. Dec 10, 2018 at 19:41
  • @arturgrzesiak yeah it sucks a bit. I saw they had also functions for it, started following the example , saw in the source that it's also not atomic.
    – Jimmy Kane
    Dec 10, 2018 at 19:59
12

For those who don't want or can't use cloud functions, I found a recursiveDelete function in the admin sdk:

https://googleapis.dev/nodejs/firestore/latest/Firestore.html#recursiveDelete

// Recursively delete a reference and log the references of failures.
const bulkWriter = firestore.bulkWriter();
bulkWriter
  .onWriteError((error) => {
    if (error.failedAttempts < MAX_RETRY_ATTEMPTS) {
      return true;
    } else {
      console.log('Failed write at document: ', error.documentRef.path);
      return false;
    }
  });
await firestore.recursiveDelete(docRef, bulkWriter);
5
  • 1
    I wonder what that MAX_RETRY_ATTEMPTS variable should be set to within a Cloud Functions environment. Jun 18, 2022 at 17:12
  • Love this function, but it wont work with transactions
    – supertux
    Aug 16, 2022 at 10:55
  • It's not available inside admin sdk. It's available in @google-cloud/firestore.
    – vovahost
    Feb 3, 2023 at 7:01
  • @vovahost It is available in the node firebase-admin sdk, that's how I am using it. You can also see it was confirmed by the firebase team in this github issue: github.com/firebase/firebase-admin-node/issues/1566 Feb 3, 2023 at 14:35
  • 1
    @KillianHuyghe You're right. I think the issue was that I was trying to call it on the class itself instead of the instance.
    – vovahost
    Feb 4, 2023 at 9:56
4

i don't know how much helpful for you but test it and compare the execution time which i get use it from fire store doc

  /** Delete a collection in batches to avoid out-of-memory errors.
     * Batch size may be tuned based on document size (atmost 1MB) and application requirements.
    */



 void deleteCollection(CollectionReference collection, int batchSize) {
      try {
        // retrieve a small batch of documents to avoid out-of-memory errors
        ApiFuture<QuerySnapshot> future = collection.limit(batchSize).get();
        int deleted = 0;
        // future.get() blocks on document retrieval
        List<QueryDocumentSnapshot> documents = future.get().getDocuments();
        for (QueryDocumentSnapshot document : documents) {
          document.getReference().delete();
          ++deleted;
        }
        if (deleted >= batchSize) {
          // retrieve and delete another batch
          deleteCollection(collection, batchSize);
        }
      } catch (Exception e) {
        System.err.println("Error deleting collection : " + e.getMessage());
      }
    }
1
  • 3
    This is useful for a single subcollection, however won't do anything with nested subcollections.
    – Linxy
    Mar 20, 2018 at 15:43
4

As mentioned above, you need to write good bit of code for this. For each document that is to be deleted you need to check if it has one or more collections. If it does, then you need to queue those up for deletion too. I wrote the code below to do this. It's not tested to be scalable to large data sets, which is fine for me as I'm using it to clean up after small scale integration tests. If you need something more scalable, feel free to take this as a starting point and play around with batching more.

class FirebaseDeleter {


constructor(database, collections) {
    this._database = database;
    this._pendingCollections = [];
  }

  run() {
    return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
      this._callback = resolve;
      this._database.getCollections().then(collections => {
        this._pendingCollections = collections;
        this._processNext();
      });
    });
  }

  _processNext() {
    const collections = this._pendingCollections;
    this._pendingCollections = [];
    const promises = collections.map(collection => {
      return this.deleteCollection(collection, 10000);
    });

    Promise.all(promises).then(() => {
      if (this._pendingCollections.length == 0) {
        this._callback();
      } else {
        process.nextTick(() => {
          this._processNext();
        });
      }
    });
  }

  deleteCollection(collectionRef, batchSize) {
    var query = collectionRef;

    return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
      this.deleteQueryBatch(query, batchSize, resolve, reject);
    });
  }

  deleteQueryBatch(query, batchSize, resolve, reject) {
    query
      .get()
      .then(snapshot => {
        // When there are no documents left, we are done
        if (snapshot.size == 0) {
          return 0;
        }

        // Delete documents in a batch
        var batch = this._database.batch();
        const collectionPromises = [];
        snapshot.docs.forEach(doc => {
          collectionPromises.push(
            doc.ref.getCollections().then(collections => {
              collections.forEach(collection => {
                this._pendingCollections.push(collection);
              });
            })
          );
          batch.delete(doc.ref);
        });

        // Wait until we know if all the documents have collections before deleting them.
        return Promise.all(collectionPromises).then(() => {
          return batch.commit().then(() => {
            return snapshot.size;
          });
        });
      })
      .then(numDeleted => {
        if (numDeleted === 0) {
          resolve();
          return;
        }

        // Recurse on the next process tick, to avoid
        // exploding the stack.
        process.nextTick(() => {
          this.deleteQueryBatch(query, batchSize, resolve, reject);
        });
      })
      .catch(reject);
  }
}
2
  • 1
    collections inside the constructor is never used. Did you mean to write this._pendingCollections = collections || []; instead?
    – dcts
    Jun 2, 2020 at 11:16
  • 1
    also for this to work for me I had to replace getCollections with listCollections.
    – dcts
    Jun 2, 2020 at 11:45
2

You can write a handler which will recursive delete all nested descendants when triggers onDelete Firestore event.

Example of handler:

const deleteDocumentWithDescendants = async (documentSnap: FirebaseFirestore.QueryDocumentSnapshot) => {
  return documentSnap.ref.listCollections().then((subCollections) => {
    subCollections.forEach((subCollection) => {
      return subCollection.get().then((snap) => {
        snap.forEach((doc) => {
          doc.ref.delete();
          deleteDocumentWithDescendants(doc);
        });
      });
    });
  });
};

// On any document delete
export const onDocumentDelete = async (documentSnap: FirebaseFirestore.QueryDocumentSnapshot) => {
  await deleteDocumentWithDescendants(documentSnap);
};

Tie it up with firestore event:

exports.onDeleteDocument = functions.firestore.document('{collectionId}/{docId}')
    .onDelete(onDocumentDelete);
2

Solution using Node.js Admin SDK


export const deleteDocument = async (doc: FirebaseFirestore.DocumentReference) => {
    const collections = await doc.listCollections()
    await Promise.all(collections.map(collection => deleteCollection(collection)))
    await doc.delete()
}

export const deleteCollection = async (collection: FirebaseFirestore.CollectionReference) => {
    const query = collection.limit(100)
    while (true) {
        const snap = await query.get()
        if (snap.empty) {
            return
        }
        await Promise.all(snap.docs.map(doc => deleteDocument(doc.ref)))
    }
}

1
  • 1
    nice but a batch delete would be better
    – Ruben
    Aug 6, 2020 at 22:33
0
// You can add all the collection hierarchy to object
private collectionsHierarchy = { 

    groups: [

        [
        'groups',
        'projects', 
        'files', 
        'assets',
        'urls',
        'members'
      ]

    ]

 };

async deleteDocument(rootDocument: string) {
     // if (!rootDocument.startsWith(`groups/${this.groupId()}`)) {
     //  rootDocument = `groups/${this.groupId()}/${rootDocument}`;
     // }

    const batchSize: number = 100;
    let root = await this.db
      .doc(rootDocument)
      .get()
      .toPromise();

    if (!root.exists) {
      return;
    }

    const segments = rootDocument.split('/');
    const documentCollection = segments[segments.length - 2]; 
    const allHierarchies = this.collectionsHierarchy[documentCollection];

    for (let i = 0; i < allHierarchies.length; i = i + 1) {
      const hierarchy = allHierarchies[i];
      const collectionIndex = hierarchy.indexOf(documentCollection) + 1;
      const nextCollections: [] = hierarchy.slice(collectionIndex);

      const stack = [`${root.ref.path}/${nextCollections.shift()}`];

      while (stack.length) {
        const path = stack.pop();
        const collectionRef = this.db.firestore.collection(path);
        const query = collectionRef.orderBy('__name__').limit(batchSize);
        let deletedIems = await this.deleteQueryBatch(query, batchSize);
        const nextCollection = nextCollections.shift();
        deletedIems = deletedIems.map(di => `${di}/${nextCollection}`);
        stack.push(...deletedIems);
      }
    }

    await root.ref.delete();
  }

  private async deleteQueryBatch(
    query: firebase.firestore.Query,
    batchSize: number
  ) {
    let deletedItems: string[] = [];
    let snapshot = await query.get();

    if (snapshot.size === 0) {
      return deletedItems;
    }

    const batch = this.db.firestore.batch();
    snapshot.docs.forEach(doc => {
      deletedItems.push(doc.ref.path);
      batch.delete(doc.ref);
    });


    await batch.commit();

    if (snapshot.size === 0) {
      return deletedItems;
    }

    const result = await this.deleteQueryBatch(query, batchSize);
    return [...deletedItems, ...result];
  }
0

Another solution using Node.js Admin SDK with Batch.

const traverseDocumentRecursively = async (
  docRef: FirebaseFirestore.DocumentReference<FirebaseFirestore.DocumentData>,
  accumulatedRefs: FirebaseFirestore.DocumentReference<FirebaseFirestore.DocumentData>[],
) => {  
  const collections = await docRef.listCollections();
  
  if (collections.length > 0) {
    for (const collection of collections) {
      const snapshot = await collection.get();
      for (const doc of snapshot.docs) {
        accumulatedRefs.push(doc.ref); 
        await traverseDocumentRecursively(doc.ref, accumulatedRefs);
      } 
    } 
  } 
};
import { chunk } from 'lodash';

const doc = admin.firestore().collection('users').doc('001');
const accumulatedRefs: FirebaseFirestore.DocumentReference<FirebaseFirestore.DocumentData>[] = [];

await traverseDocumentRecursively(doc, accumulatedRefs);
await Promise.all(
  // Each transaction or batch of writes can write to a maximum of 500 documents
  chunk(accumulatedRefs, 500).map((chunkedRefs) => {
    const batch = admin.firestore().batch();
    for (const ref of chunkedRefs) {
      batch.delete(ref);
    } 
    return batch.commit();
  }),
);
0

Not sure if this is helpful for anyone here, but I am frequently facing the error "Fatal error deleting docs <list of docs>" when using firebase-tools.firestore.delete method (firebase-tools version 9.22.0).

I am currently handling these deletion failures using the returned error message in order to avoid rewriting the code cited at Oleg Bondarenko's answer. It uses admin.firestore to effectively delete the failed docs.

It's a poor solution since it relies on the error message, but at least it doesn't force us to copy the whole FirestoreDelete code to modify just a few lines of it:

firebase_tools.firestore
    .delete(path, {
      project: JSON.parse(process.env.FIREBASE_CONFIG!).projectId,
      recursive: true,
      yes: true,
      token: getToken(),
    })
    .catch((err: Error) => {
      if (err.name == "FirebaseError") {
        // If recursive delete fails to delete some of the documents, 
        // parse the failures from the error message and delete it manually
        const failedDeletingDocs = err.message.match(
          /.*Fatal error deleting docs ([^\.]+)/
        );
        if (failedDeletingDocs) {
          const docs = failedDeletingDocs[1].split(", ");
          const docRefs = docs.map((doc) =>
            firestore.doc(doc.slice(doc.search(/\(default\)\/documents/) + 19))
          );

          firestore
            .runTransaction(async (t) => {
              docRefs.forEach((doc) => t.delete(doc));
              return docs;
            })
            .then((docs) =>
              console.log(
                "Succesfully deleted docs after failing: " + docs.join(", ")
              )
            )
            .catch((err) => console.error(err));
        }
      }
    });
0

If you are looking to delete user data, a solution to consider in 2022 is the Delete User Data Firebase Extension.

Once this is active, you can simply delete the user from Firebase Auth to trigger the recursive deletion of the user documents:

import admin from "firebase-admin";
admin.auth().deleteUser(userId); 
-1

You can call firebase.firestore().doc("whatever").set() and that will delete everything in that document.

The only way .set does not erase everything is if you set the merge flag to true.

See Firestore Documentation on Add Data

var cityRef = db.collection('cities').doc('BJ');

var setWithMerge = cityRef.set({
    capital: true
}, { merge: true });
2
  • 1
    .set doesn't exist on collections, only on documents. Sep 3, 2018 at 4:13
  • Unfortunately it doesn't replace collections under this path. Jun 24, 2019 at 21:52

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