Deprecated: please see the accepted answer.
Some details to note:
- Firebase Storage is no longer used with Node.js, so all documentation there is useless for Node.js. Instead, use
google-cloud
. The references and guides for Firebase and Google Cloud do not reflect this as of today.
- Unlike Firebase, google-cloud costs money, even for small projects.
- In my case, I'm using the
firebase-admin
SDK so I don't have to mess with user authentication at the moment.
Purpose
To create a single Node.js project which uses Firebase and Google Cloud. Why? Firebase has a useful database, among other features, and Google Cloud allows cloud file storage and retrieval.
Directions
Step 1: Project Creation
Create Firebase and Google Cloud (Storage) projects.
Step 2: Install Packages
Using npm, install firebase-admin
and google-cloud
in Node.js
project.
Note 1: I used the admin SDK, so after creating the Firebase project, you'll need to go to:
- Settings(the gear) > Project Settings > Service Accounts > Firebase Admin SDK
- Then you: Select
Node.js
> [Copy/paste the generated code into
your project] > [click "Generate New Private Key"] > [download the
generated json
to preferred location] > [replace
"path/to...AccountKey.json"
with the path to the key you just
generated]
Note 2: the generated key can be reused in firebase or google-cloud credentials.
Step 3: Firebase Setup
Once your project is created, import the firebase-admin
sdk:
The code should look like this, but filled with your info:
var admin = require("firebase-admin");
admin.initializeApp({
credential: admin.credential.cert("/path/to/generated/json/here.json"),
databaseURL: "database-url-from-firebase"
});
To find the databaseURL, go to 'Storage' in Firebase, and note the URL starting with gs:
and copy/paste it the the value field of databaseURL.
Next, get a reference to the database you can use:
var db = admin.database();
var ref = db.ref("/");
console.log('DB ref: ' + ref); //just to debug, if undefined, there's a problem.
To learn more about reading/writing to the database, follow Firebase's own documentation.
Step 4: Google-Cloud Billing Setup
After creating a project on Google Cloud, add billing information; buckets cannot be used without billing info.
Step 5: Google-Cloud Storage Setup
- Scrolling through the menu (the horizontal 3-bars), click "Storage", then "Enable Billing". Yes, you added billing info, now you need to enable it for that project's buckets.
- You should see that a bucket should already exists from your Firebase project.
- Click on menu again(3-bar icon), then > IAM & Admin > Settings
- At settings, you'll see "Project ID" which should look like "projectName-00000" or "projectName-Some#", copy that project ID
Step 6: Google Cloud in Node.js
In your index.js
:
var gcloud = require('google-cloud');
var gcs = gcloud.storage({
projectId: 'paste-that-project-id-here',
keyFilename: 'paste-that-path-to-the-previously-downloaded-json-from-firebase-here'
});
Now you can send a file to your storage by:
var bucket = gcs.bucket('bucket_name');
var remoteFile = bucket.file('somefile-inThisCaseASong.mp3');
var localFilename = '/Users/you/Music/somefile-inThisCaseASong.mp3';
bucket.upload(localFilename, function(err, file) {
if (!err) {
console.log('somefile-inThisCaseASong.mp3 is now in your bucket.');
} else {
console.log('Error uploading file: ' + err);
}
});
Step 7: Verify
If the file is visible in Firebase Storage and Google Cloud Storage, you're done!
Firebase is not a function
. Their error was they did not initialize Firebase properly, whereas I did, and able to utilize the Firebase database and other features accordingly. Firebase Storage is the issue.firebase.storage
object? Try to do console.log(JSON.stringify(firebase.storage)). Is it undefined?