Book Image

Firebase Cookbook

By : Houssem Yahiaoui
Book Image

Firebase Cookbook

By: Houssem Yahiaoui

Overview of this book

Do you feel tired just thinking or even hearing about backend technologies, authentication or the tedious task of deployment? Firebase is here to change the way you develop and make your app a first-class citizen of the cloud. This books takes a solution based approach by providing you recipes that would help you understand the features of Firebase and implement them in your existing web or mobile applications. We start-off by creating our first Firebase application and integrating its services into different platforms and environments for mobile as well as web applications. Then we deep dive into Real-time Database and Firebase Storage that allows your users to access data across various devices with realtive ease. With each chapter you will gradually create the building blocks of your application from securing your data with Firebase Rules to authenticating your users with O-Auth. Moving along we would explore modern application development techniques such as creating serverless applications with Firebase Cloud Functions or turning your traditional applications into progressive apps with Service workers. Finally you will learn how to create cross-platform mobile apps, integrate Firebase in native platforms, and learn how to monetize your mobile applications using Admob for Android and iOS.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
14
Firebase Cloud FireStore

Implementing notification sending

In Chapter 6, Progressive Applications powered by Firebase, we introduced how we can integrate the old FCM utility within our NodeJS server. Now the Firebase SDK provides us with more diverse methods to send push notification messages; plus, it plays nicely with other services, so let's see how we can send push notifications directly to our users using nothing but the Firebase Admin SDK.

How to do it...

In order to send push notification messages to users, we need to have their registration_token; such a token is grabbed from the user browser side, whether it's mobile or desktop. Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox support this functionality, and at the time of writing this book, Safari...