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Thanks to this answer I am able to connect to Firebase 3 via HTTP REST API and an email/password. Logging in with this API returns an access token that is used to access the Firebase Database. This access token expires after 1 hour. A refresh token is also returned after logging in, which I can use to refresh my access token. Here is what I am doing specifically:

Method:

POST

URL:

https://www.googleapis.com/identitytoolkit/v3/relyingparty/verifyPassword?key=<my-firebase-api-key>

Payload:

{
    email: "<email>",
    password: "<password>",
    returnSecureToken: true
}

Response:

{
    "kind": "identitytoolkit#VerifyPasswordResponse",
    "localId": "<firebase-user-id>", // Use this to uniquely identify users
    "email": "<email>",
    "displayName": "",
    "idToken": "<provider-id-token>", // Use this as the auth token in database requests
    "registered": true,
    "refreshToken": "<refresh-token>",
    "expiresIn": "3600"
}

In the case of refreshing my access token:

URL:

https://securetoken.googleapis.com/v1/token?key=<my-firebase-api-key>

Payload:

{
    grant_type: "refresh_token",
    refresh_token: "<refresh-token>"
}

Response:

{
  "access_token": "<access-token>",
  "expires_in": "3600",
  "token_type": "Bearer",
  "refresh_token": "<refresh-token>",
  "id_token": "<id-token>",
  "user_id": "<user-id>",
  "project_id": "<project-id>"
}

How do I access my database via HTTP REST API given that I have my access token?

1

1 Answer 1

17

So after communicating with technical support, here's my answer:

In your database rules, include something like this that is compatible with what you're doing:

{
"rules": {
"users": {
"$user_id": {
// grants write access to the owner of this user account
// whose uid must exactly match the key ($user_id)
".write": "$user_id === auth.uid",
".read": "$user_id === auth.uid"
}
    }
  } 
}

And in your database, create a users table, and within that, create a table with the name of your <user-id> of the authentication email/password account you are using. Within that table is the information you will be able to access via your access-key.

Then send a request like this:

https://samplechat.firebaseio-demo.com/users/<user-id>.json?auth=<access-key>

Where access-key is the key that can be known as idToken, id_Token, or access_key in JSON responses from Google.

7
  • 8
    This is the best answer I got. Firebase document is so messy and confusing! They don't even talk about idToken anywhere in REST docs. Such a shame. Thanks so much for this.
    – Richeek
    Jun 8, 2017 at 10:32
  • 1
    Hi, I am trying to allow some json files to be publicly available and others not. I was doing this {"rules": {"publicjson": {".read": true, ".write": false}, ".read": "auth != null", ".write": false}}. I have no problems accessing the publicjson. However, I cannot access any other json that falls under the ".read": "auth != null" rule. I am trying on postman to do a GET request with the Authorization: Bearer xxx but no luck. Do you know anything about this? The idea would be just having the access key stored in the app and used in the requests. No user table needed. Thanks Jun 19, 2017 at 20:22
  • @Richeek Do you know anything of what I asked above? ^^^ Thanks Jun 19, 2017 at 21:16
  • 1
    @EdisonSpencer if you just want to have a kind of admin user, then what you need to do is 1. create an admin user from firebase console (using some email & password combination) 2. Note its UID and change your read permission as auth.uid=='<add-uid>' 3. From your client side using email and password creds to login to firebase. Note if you are using REST for login then your login url is of the form (googleapis.com/identitytoolkit/v3/relyingparty/…). May be its better to create a separate question so that others can leverage as well!
    – Richeek
    Jun 20, 2017 at 6:46
  • @Richeek Thanks for the tip about the user created in order to get its token. I didn't want to have the need to create any kind of user. I just wanted to host some information on Firebase and make it publicly available as long as you have a token in order to make GET requests to those JSONs. Otherwise it would be unauthorised. But I think I can create a user and ship it's token with the app(?) Jun 20, 2017 at 17:14

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