5

In transaction I only want to write data if data not present

DocumentReference callConnectionRef1 = firestore.collection("connectedCalls").document(callChannelModel.getUid());

  firestore.runTransaction(new Transaction.Function < Void > () {
 @Override
 public Void apply(Transaction transaction) throws FirebaseFirestoreException {
  DocumentSnapshot snapshot = transaction.get(callConnectionRef1);

   Log.d(TAG, callChannelModel.getUid());


  if (!snapshot.exists()) {
   //my code
   transaction.set(callConnectionRef1, model);
  } else {
   //do nothing   
  }
  return null;

 });

You can see in my Document reference is uid based and in my log I am printing uid

So where uid's data not exist my Log prints only once and I call transaction.set() elsewhere it keep showing Log of uid where data exists already it looks like my transaction keep running if I don't call transaction.set()

How can I stop it.

6
  • Could you elaborate on what you mean by "keeps running"? Does runTransaction just not return at all?
    – Jon Skeet
    Jun 7, 2018 at 7:32
  • I added logs of transaction starting......it keep showing that log
    – Monu
    Jun 7, 2018 at 7:33
  • Please could you give more details in the question? It's not clear to me what you mean at the moment. If you could provide a minimal reproducible example that would be very helpful.
    – Jon Skeet
    Jun 7, 2018 at 7:34
  • I edited my question...Please take a look
    – Monu
    Jun 7, 2018 at 7:41
  • My guess is that an exception is happening separately. Again, if you could edit your question into a minimal reproducible example which would make it easy for someone to reproduce the problem, that would really help. (The example should do nothing but demonstrate the problem.)
    – Jon Skeet
    Jun 7, 2018 at 7:44

2 Answers 2

3

There is an example given in the documentation, just throw an exception and it will exit the transaction and stop executing.


db.runTransaction(new Transaction.Function<Double>() {
    @Override
    public Double apply(Transaction transaction) throws FirebaseFirestoreException {
        DocumentSnapshot snapshot = transaction.get(sfDocRef);
        double newPopulation = snapshot.getDouble("population") + 1;
        if (newPopulation <= 1000000) {
            transaction.update(sfDocRef, "population", newPopulation);
            return newPopulation;
        } else {
            throw new FirebaseFirestoreException("Population too high",
                    FirebaseFirestoreException.Code.ABORTED);
        }
    }
}).addOnSuccessListener(new OnSuccessListener<Double>() {
    @Override
    public void onSuccess(Double result) {
        Log.d(TAG, "Transaction success: " + result);
    }
})
.addOnFailureListener(new OnFailureListener() {
    @Override
    public void onFailure(@NonNull Exception e) {
        Log.w(TAG, "Transaction failure.", e);
    }
});
DocSnippets.java
1
  • 1
    This example kind of not working since the transaction tried for like 5 times on Android. Aug 9, 2020 at 11:32
3

It happened to me too on Android. The transaction performs 5 attempts to apply itself, and only then the onFailure() function is called (even if you throw an exception in the apply() function).

But looks like this is the expected behavior:

  1. See here: https://googleapis.dev/python/firestore/latest/transaction.html
    Notice MAX_ATTEMPTS defaults to 5.
  2. In this github issue https://github.com/firebase/firebase-js-sdk/issues/520 there's a request to add a "number of retries" option.

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