So I have this issue where every time I add a new user account, it kicks out the current user that is already signed in. I read the firebase api and it said that "If the new account was created, the user is signed in automatically" But they never said anything else about avoiding that.
//ADD EMPLOYEES
addEmployees: function(formData){
firebase.auth().createUserWithEmailAndPassword(formData.email, formData.password).then(function(data){
console.log(data);
});
},
I'm the admin and I'm adding accounts into my site. I would like it if I can add an account without being signed out and signed into the new account. Any way i can avoid this?
Update 20161110 - original answer below
Also, check out this answer for a different approach.
Original answer
This is actually possible.
But not directly, the way to do it is to create a second auth reference and use that to create users:
var config = {apiKey: "apiKey",
authDomain: "projectId.firebaseapp.com",
databaseURL: "https://databaseName.firebaseio.com"};
var secondaryApp = firebase.initializeApp(config, "Secondary");
secondaryApp.auth().createUserWithEmailAndPassword(em, pwd).then(function(firebaseUser) {
console.log("User " + firebaseUser.uid + " created successfully!");
//I don't know if the next statement is necessary
secondaryApp.auth().signOut();
});
If you don't specify which firebase connection you use for an operation it will use the first one by default.
Source for multiple app references.
EDIT
For the actual creation of a new user, it doesn't matter that there is nobody or someone else than the admin, authenticated on the second auth reference because for creating an account all you need is the auth reference itself.
The following hasn't been tested but it is something to think about
The thing you do have to think about is writing data to firebase. Common practice is that users can edit/update their own user info so when you use the second auth reference for writing this should work. But if you have something like roles or permissions for that user make sure you write that with the auth reference that has the right permissions. In this case, the main auth is the admin and the second auth is the newly created user.
Update 20161108 - original answer below
Firebase just released its firebase-admin SDK, which allows server-side code for this and other common administrative use-cases. Read the installation instructions and then dive into the documentation on creating users.
original answer
This is currently not possible. Creating an Email+Password user automatically signs that new user in.
I just created a Firebase Function that triggers when a Firestore document is Created (with rules write-only to admin user). Then use admin.auth().createUser() to create the new user properly.
export const createUser = functions.firestore
.document('newUsers/{userId}')
.onCreate(async (snap, context) => {
const userId = context.params.userId;
const newUser = await admin.auth().createUser({
disabled: false,
displayName: snap.get('displayName'),
email: snap.get('email'),
password: snap.get('password'),
phoneNumber: snap.get('phoneNumber')
});
// You can also store the new user in another collection with extra fields
await admin.firestore().collection('users').doc(newUser.uid).set({
uid: newUser.uid,
email: newUser.email,
name: newUser.displayName,
phoneNumber: newUser.phoneNumber,
otherfield: snap.get('otherfield'),
anotherfield: snap.get('anotherfield')
});
// Delete the temp document
return admin.firestore().collection('newUsers').doc(userId).delete();
});
You can Algo use functions.https.onCall()
exports.createUser= functions.https.onCall((data, context) => {
const uid = context.auth.uid; // Authorize as you want
// ... do the same logic as above
});
calling it.
const createUser = firebase.functions().httpsCallable('createUser');
createUser({userData: data}).then(result => {
// success or error handling
});
Swift 5: Simple Solution
First store the current user in a variable called originalUser
let originalUser = Auth.auth().currentUser
Then, in the completion handler of creating a new user, use the updateCurrentUser method to restore the original user
Auth.auth().updateCurrentUser(originalUser, completion: nil)
Here is a simple solution using web SDKs.
Create a cloud function (https://firebase.google.com/docs/functions)
import admin from 'firebase-admin';
import * as functions from 'firebase-functions';
const createUser = functions.https.onCall((data) => {
return admin.auth().createUser(data)
.catch((error) => {
throw new functions.https.HttpsError('internal', error.message)
});
});
export default createUser;
Call this function from your app
import firebase from 'firebase/app';
const createUser = firebase.functions().httpsCallable('createUser');
createUser({ email, password })
.then(console.log)
.catch(console.error);
Optionally, you can set user document information using the returned uid.
createUser({ email, password })
.then(({ data: user }) => {
return database
.collection('users')
.doc(user.uid)
.set({
firstname,
lastname,
created: new Date(),
});
})
.then(console.log)
.catch(console.error);
I got André's very clever workaround working in Objective-C using the Firebase iOS SDK:
NSString *plistPath = [[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:#"GoogleService-Info" ofType:#"plist"];
FIROptions *secondaryAppOptions = [[FIROptions alloc] initWithContentsOfFile:plistPath];
[FIRApp configureWithName:#"Secondary" options:secondaryAppOptions];
FIRApp *secondaryApp = [FIRApp appNamed:#"Secondary"];
FIRAuth *secondaryAppAuth = [FIRAuth authWithApp:secondaryApp];
[secondaryAppAuth createUserWithEmail:user.email
password:user.password
completion:^(FIRUser * _Nullable user, NSError * _Nullable error) {
[secondaryAppAuth signOut:nil];
}];
Update for Swift 4
I have tried a few different options to create multiple users from a single account, but this is by far the best and easiest solution.
Original answer by Nico
First Configure firebase in your AppDelegate.swift file
func application(_ application: UIApplication, didFinishLaunchingWithOptions launchOptions: [UIApplicationLaunchOptionsKey: Any]?) -> Bool {
// Override point for customization after application launch.
FirebaseApp.configure()
FirebaseApp.configure(name: "CreatingUsersApp", options: FirebaseApp.app()!.options)
return true
}
Add the following code to action where you are creating the accounts.
if let secondaryApp = FirebaseApp.app(name: "CreatingUsersApp") {
let secondaryAppAuth = Auth.auth(app: secondaryApp)
// Create user in secondary app.
secondaryAppAuth.createUser(withEmail: email, password: password) { (user, error) in
if error != nil {
print(error!)
} else {
//Print created users email.
print(user!.email!)
//Print current logged in users email.
print(Auth.auth().currentUser?.email ?? "default")
try! secondaryAppAuth.signOut()
}
}
}
}
You can use firebase function for add users.
const functions = require('firebase-functions');
const admin = require('firebase-admin');
admin.initializeApp();
const cors = require('cors')({
origin: true,
});
exports.AddUser = functions.https.onRequest(( req, res ) => {
// Grab the text parameter.
cors( req, res, () => {
let email = req.body.email;
let passwd = req.body.passwd;
let role = req.body.role;
const token = req.get('Authorization').split('Bearer ')[1];
admin.auth().verifyIdToken(token)
.then(
(decoded) => {
// return res.status(200).send( decoded )
return creatUser(decoded);
})
.catch((err) => {
return res.status(401).send(err)
});
function creatUser(user){
admin.auth().createUser({
email: email,
emailVerified: false,
password: passwd,
disabled: false
})
.then((result) => {
console.log('result',result);
return res.status(200).send(result);
}).catch((error) => {
console.log(error.message);
return res.status(400).send(error.message);
})
}
});
});
CreateUser(){
//console.log('Create User')
this.submitted = true;
if (this.myGroup.invalid) {
return;
}
let Email = this.myGroup.value.Email;
let Passwd = this.myGroup.value.Passwd;
let Role = 'myrole';
let TechNum = this.myGroup.value.TechNum;
let user = JSON.parse(localStorage.getItem('user'));
let role = user.role;
let AdminUid = user.uid;
let authToken = user.stsTokenManager.accessToken;
let httpHeaders = new HttpHeaders().set('Authorization', 'Bearer ' + authToken);
let options = { headers: httpHeaders };
let params = { email:Email,passwd:Passwd,role:Role };
this.httpClient.post('https://us-central1-myproject.cloudfunctions.net/AddUser', params, options)
.subscribe( val => {
//console.log('Response from cloud function', val );
let createdUser:any = val;
//console.log(createdUser.uid);
const userRef: AngularFirestoreDocument<any> = this.afs.doc(`users/${createdUser.uid}`);
const userUpdate = {
uid: createdUser.uid,
email: createdUser.email,
displayName: null,
photoURL: null,
emailVerified: createdUser.emailVerified,
role: Role,
TechNum:TechNum,
AccountAccess:this.AccountAccess,
UserStatus:'open',
OwnerUid:AdminUid,
OwnerUidRole:role,
RootAccountAccess:this.RootAccountAccess
}
userRef.set(userUpdate, {
merge: false
});
this.toastr.success('Success, user add','Success');
this.myGroup.reset();
this.submitted = false;
},
err => {
console.log('HTTP Error', err.error)
this.toastr.error(err.error,'Error')
},
() => console.log('HTTP request completed.')
);
}
On the web, this is due to unexpected behavior when you call createUserWithEmailAndPassword out of the registration context; e.g. inviting a new user to your app by creating a new user account.
Seems like, createUserWithEmailAndPassword method triggers a new refresh token and user cookies are updated too. (This side-effect is not documented)
Here is a workaround for Web SDK:
After creating the new user;
firebase.auth().updateCurrentUser (loggedInUser.current)
provided that you initiate loggedInUser with the original user beforehand.
Hey i had similar problem ,trying to create users through admin , as it is not possible to signUp user without signIn ,I created a work around ,adding it below with steps
Instead of signup create a node in firebase realtime db with email as key (firebase do not allow email as key so I have created a function to generate key from email and vice versa, I will attach the functions below)
Save a initial password field while saving user (can even hash it with bcrypt or something, if you prefer though it will be used one time only)
Now Once user try to login check if any node with that email (generate key from email) exist in the db and if so then match the password provided.
If the password matched delete the node and do authSignUpWithEmailandPassword with provided credentials.
User is registered successfully
//Sign In
firebaseDB.child("users").once("value", (snapshot) => {
const users = snapshot.val();
const userKey = emailToKey(data.email);
if (Object.keys(users).find((key) => key === userKey)) {
setError("user already exist");
setTimeout(() => {
setError(false);
}, 2000);
setLoading(false);
} else {
firebaseDB
.child(`users`)
.child(userKey)
.set({ email: data.email, initPassword: data.password })
.then(() => setLoading(false))
.catch(() => {
setLoading(false);
setError("Error in creating user please try again");
setTimeout(() => {
setError(false);
}, 2000);
});
}
});
//Sign Up
signUp = (data, setLoading, setError) => {
auth
.createUserWithEmailAndPassword(data.email, data.password)
.then((res) => {
const userDetails = {
email: res.user.email,
id: res.user.uid,
};
const key = emailToKey(data.email);
app
.database()
.ref(`users/${key}`)
.remove()
.then(() => {
firebaseDB.child("users").child(res.user.uid).set(userDetails);
setLoading(false);
})
.catch(() => {
setLoading(false);
setError("error while registering try again");
setTimeout(() => setError(false), 4000);
});
})
.catch((err) => {
setLoading(false);
setError(err.message);
setTimeout(() => setError(false), 4000);
});
};
//Function to create a valid firebase key from email and vice versa
const emailToKey = (email) => {
//firebase do not allow ".", "#", "$", "[", or "]"
let key = email;
key = key.replace(".", ",0,");
key = key.replace("#", ",1,");
key = key.replace("$", ",2,");
key = key.replace("[", ",3,");
key = key.replace("]", ",4,");
return key;
};
const keyToEmail = (key) => {
let email = key;
email = email.replace(",0,", ".");
email = email.replace(",1,", "#");
email = email.replace(",2,", "$");
email = email.replace(",3,", "[");
email = email.replace(",4,", "]");
return email;
};
If you want to do it in your front end create a second auth reference use it to create other users and sign out and delete that reference. If you do it this way you won't be signed out when creating a new user and you won't get the error that the default firebase app already exists.
const createOtherUser =()=>{
var config = {
//your firebase config
};
let secondaryApp = firebase.initializeApp(config, "secondary");
secondaryApp.auth().createUserWithEmailAndPassword(email, password).then((userCredential) => {
console.log(userCredential.user.uid);
}).then(secondaryApp.auth().signOut()
)
.then(secondaryApp.delete()
)
}
Update 19.05.2022 - using #angular/fire (latest available = v.7.3.0)
If you are not using firebase directly in your app, but use e.g. #angular/fire for auth purposes only, you can use the same approach as suggested earlier as follows with the #angular/fire library:
import { Auth, getAuth, createUserWithEmailAndPassword } from '#angular/fire/auth';
import { deleteApp, initializeApp } from '#angular/fire/app';
import { firebaseConfiguration } from '../config/app.config'; // <-- Your project's configuration here.
const tempApp = initializeApp(firebaseConfiguration, "tempApp");
const tempAppAuth = getAuth(tempApp);
await createUserWithEmailAndPassword(tempAppAuth, email, password)
.then(async (newUser) => {
resolve( () ==> {
// Do something, e.g. add user info to database
});
})
.catch(error => reject(error))
.finally( () => {
tempAppAuth.signOut()
.then( () => deleteApp(tempApp));
});
The Swift version:
FIRApp.configure()
// Creating a second app to create user without logging in
FIRApp.configure(withName: "CreatingUsersApp", options: FIRApp.defaultApp()!.options)
if let secondaryApp = FIRApp(named: "CreatingUsersApp") {
let secondaryAppAuth = FIRAuth(app: secondaryApp)
secondaryAppAuth?.createUser(...)
}
Here is a Swift 3 adaptaion of Jcabrera's answer :
let bundle = Bundle.main
let path = bundle.path(forResource: "GoogleService-Info", ofType: "plist")!
let options = FIROptions.init(contentsOfFile: path)
FIRApp.configure(withName: "Secondary", options: options!)
let secondary_app = FIRApp.init(named: "Secondary")
let second_auth = FIRAuth(app : secondary_app!)
second_auth?.createUser(withEmail: self.username.text!, password: self.password.text!)
{
(user,error) in
print(user!.email!)
print(FIRAuth.auth()?.currentUser?.email ?? "default")
}
If you are using Polymer and Firebase (polymerfire) see this answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/46698801/1821603
Essentially you create a secondary <firebase-app> to handle the new user registration without affecting the current user.
Android solution (Kotlin):
1.You need FirebaseOptions BUILDER(!) for setting api key, db url, etc., and don't forget to call build() at the end
2.Make a secondary auth variable by calling FirebaseApp.initializeApp()
3.Get instance of FirebaseAuth by passing your newly created secondary auth, and do whatever you want (e.g. createUser)
// 1. you can find these in your project settings under general tab
val firebaseOptionsBuilder = FirebaseOptions.Builder()
firebaseOptionsBuilder.setApiKey("YOUR_API_KEY")
firebaseOptionsBuilder.setDatabaseUrl("YOUR_DATABASE_URL")
firebaseOptionsBuilder.setProjectId("YOUR_PROJECT_ID")
firebaseOptionsBuilder.setApplicationId("YOUR_APPLICATION_ID") //not sure if this one is needed
val firebaseOptions = firebaseOptionsBuilder.build()
// indeterminate progress dialog *ANKO*
val progressDialog = indeterminateProgressDialog(resources.getString(R.string.progressDialog_message_registering))
progressDialog.show()
// 2. second auth created by passing the context, firebase options and a string for secondary db name
val newAuth = FirebaseApp.initializeApp(this#ListActivity, firebaseOptions, Constants.secondary_db_auth)
// 3. calling the create method on our newly created auth, passed in getInstance
FirebaseAuth.getInstance(newAuth).createUserWithEmailAndPassword(email!!, password!!)
.addOnCompleteListener { it ->
if (it.isSuccessful) {
// 'it' is a Task<AuthResult>, so we can get our newly created user from result
val newUser = it.result.user
// store wanted values on your user model, e.g. email, name, phonenumber, etc.
val user = User()
user.email = email
user.name = name
user.created = Date().time
user.active = true
user.phone = phone
// set user model on /db_root/users/uid_of_created_user/, or wherever you want depending on your structure
FirebaseDatabase.getInstance().reference.child(Constants.db_users).child(newUser.uid).setValue(user)
// send newly created user email verification link
newUser.sendEmailVerification()
progressDialog.dismiss()
// sign him out
FirebaseAuth.getInstance(newAuth).signOut()
// DELETE SECONDARY AUTH! thanks, Jimmy :D
newAuth.delete()
} else {
progressDialog.dismiss()
try {
throw it.exception!!
// catch exception for already existing user (e-mail)
} catch (e: FirebaseAuthUserCollisionException) {
alert(resources.getString(R.string.exception_FirebaseAuthUserCollision), resources.getString(R.string.alertDialog_title_error)) {
okButton {
isCancelable = false
}
}.show()
}
}
}
For Android, i suggest a simpler way to do it, without having to provide api key, application id...etc by hand by just using the FirebaseOptions of the default instance.
val firebaseDefaultApp = Firebase.auth.app
val signUpAppName = firebaseDefaultApp.name + "_signUp"
val signUpApp = try {
FirebaseApp.initializeApp(
context,
firebaseDefaultApp.options,
signUpAppName
)
} catch (e: IllegalStateException) {
// IllegalStateException is throw if an app with the same name has already been initialized.
FirebaseApp.getInstance(signUpAppName)
}
// Here is the instance you can use to sign up without triggering auth state on the default Firebase.auth
val signUpFirebaseAuth = Firebase.auth(signUpApp)
How to use ?
signUpFirebaseAuth
.createUserWithEmailAndPassword(email, password)
.addOnSuccessListener {
// Optional, you can send verification email here if you need
// As soon as the sign up with sign in is over, we can sign out the current user
firebaseAuthSignUp.signOut()
}
.addOnFailureListener {
// Log
}
My solution to this question is to store the User Name/Email and password in a static class and then add a new user log out the new user and immediately log in as the admin user(id pass you saved). Works like a charm for me :D
This is a version for Kotlin:
fun createUser(mail: String, password: String) {
val opts = FirebaseOptions.fromResource(requireContext())
if (opts == null) return
val app = Firebase.initialize(requireContext(), opts, "Secondary")
FirebaseAuth.getInstance(app)
.createUserWithEmailAndPassword(mail, password)
.addOnSuccessListener {
app.delete()
doWhateverWithAccount(it)
}.addOnFailureListener {
app.delete()
showException(it)
}
}
It uses the configuration from your default Firebase application instance, just under a different name.
It also deletes the newly created instance afterwards, so you can call this multiple times without any exception about already existing Secondary application.
I've been studying kafkajs and socket.io I'm am very new to it and i cant seem to understand some things.
I have created a chat application that basically by opening a browser(client) you can type messages and they get displayed in a chat-window.
I found a tutorial that makes kafka print "this message + i".
I want to instead of sending to the topic and printing message+i to print what people type in chat and I'm not sure how I'm supposed to do that.
This is my consumer.js:
const { Kafka } = require("kafkajs")
const clientId = "my-app"
const brokers = ["localhost:9092"]
const topic = "message-log"
const kafka = new Kafka({ clientId, brokers })
// create a new consumer from the kafka client, and set its group ID
// the group ID helps Kafka keep track of the messages that this client
// is yet to receive
const consumer = kafka.consumer({ groupId: clientId })
const consume = async () => {
// first, we wait for the client to connect and subscribe to the given topic
await consumer.connect()
await consumer.subscribe({ topic })
await consumer.run({
// this function is called every time the consumer gets a new message
eachMessage: ({ message }) => {
// here, we just log the message to the standard output
console.log(`received message: ${message.value}`)
},
})
}
module.exports = consume
This is my producer.js:
// import the `Kafka` instance from the kafkajs library
const { Kafka } = require("kafkajs")
// the client ID lets kafka know who's producing the messages
const clientId = "my-app"
// we can define the list of brokers in the cluster
const brokers = ["localhost:9092"]
// this is the topic to which we want to write messages
const topic = "message-log"
// initialize a new kafka client and initialize a producer from it
const kafka = new Kafka({ clientId, brokers })
const producer = kafka.producer()
// we define an async function that writes a new message each second
const produce = async () => {
await producer.connect()
let i = 0
// after the produce has connected, we start an interval timer
setInterval(async () => {
try {
// send a message to the configured topic with
// the key and value formed from the current value of `i`
await producer.send({
topic,
messages: [
{
key: String(i),
value: "this is message " + i,
},
],
})
// if the message is written successfully, log it and increment `i`
console.log("writes: ", i)
i++
} catch (err) {
console.error("could not write message " + err)
}
}, 1000)
}
module.exports = produce
I know I'm supposed to somehow connect the topics brokers and clients with the socket.io but I'm not sure how.
Here is my chat.js:
/* Kane connection sto server opos prin
exw tin ikanotita na xrhsimopoihsw to io logo tou library pou phra apo to documentation*/
var socket = io.connect('http://localhost:8000');
// linking Variables toy indexhtml
var message = document.getElementById('message');
var username = document.getElementById('username');
var btn = document.getElementById('send');
var output = document.getElementById('output');
var feedback = document.getElementById('feedback');
// Stelnw events pou ginonte apo ton xristi kai stelnonte ston server
btn.addEventListener('click', function(){
socket.emit('chat', {
message: message.value,
username: username.value
});
message.value = "";
});
message.addEventListener('keypress', function(){
socket.emit('typing', username.value);
})
// Events wste na perimenw to data apo ton server
socket.on('chat', function(data){
feedback.innerHTML = '';
output.innerHTML += '<p><strong>' + data.username + ': </strong>' + data.message + '</p>';
});
socket.on('typing', function(data){
feedback.innerHTML = '<p><em>' + data + ' is typing a message...</em></p>';
});
You'll need a socket.io server.
Example:
const consume = require('consumer.js');
const produce = require('producer.js');
const { Server } = require('socket.io');
const io = new Server();
consume(({ from, to, message }) => {
io.sockets.emit('newMessage', { from, to, message });
})
io.on('connection', function(socket) {
socket.emit('Hi!', { message: 'Chat connected', id: socket.id });
socket.on('sendMessage', ({ message, to }) => {
produce({ from: socket.id, to, message });
});
});
You also need to modify your consumer & producer to accept parameters and callbacks.
Consumer Example:
...
const consume = async cb => {
// first, we wait for the client to connect and subscribe to the given topic
await consumer.connect()
await consumer.subscribe({ topic })
await consumer.run({
// this function is called every time the consumer gets a new message
eachMessage: ({ from, to, message }) => {
cb({ from, to, message });
},
});
}
Producer Example:
const produce = async ({ from, to, message }) => {
producer.send(topic, { from, to, message });
}
Don't forget to modify your chat.js on the client side
All of this can be optimized and is just a brief example
I am trying to modify a Node.js function called 'splunk-logger'. The problem is that when the SNS Message comes into the function, the events from the Anti-Virus (Trend Micro DeepSecurity) console are grouped together. I already contacted their support and they said this is just the way events are sent and they can't help.
Example: {Message {Event_1} {Event_2} {Event_3}}
Now the JavaScript function works great and the events are forwarded to Splunk. However, since they are grouped together BEFORE they even hit the Lambda function, Splunk sees them as 1 single event instead of 3.
My thought is to take the 'event' variable (since it contains the sns 'message') and parse through that to separate each event (probably using regex or something). Then, I can either create another function to send each event immediately or simply call the "logger.flushAsync" function to send them.
Link to splunk-dev explaining the funciton: http://dev.splunk.com/view/event-collector/SP-CAAAE6Y#create.
Here is the code from the index.js:
const loggerConfig = {
url: process.env.SPLUNK_HEC_URL,
token: process.env.SPLUNK_HEC_TOKEN,
};
const SplunkLogger = require('./lib/mysplunklogger');
const logger = new SplunkLogger(loggerConfig);
exports.handler = (event, context, callback) => {
console.log('Received event:', JSON.stringify(event, null, 2));
// Log JSON objects to Splunk
logger.log(event);
// Send all the events in a single batch to Splunk
logger.flushAsync((error, response) => {
if (error) {
callback(error);
} else {
console.log(`Response from Splunk:\n${response}`);
callback(null, event.key1); // Echo back the first key value
}
});
};
Here is the code from the mysplunklogger.js file.
'use strict';
const url = require('url');
const Logger = function Logger(config) {
this.url = config.url;
this.token = config.token;
this.addMetadata = true;
this.setSource = true;
this.parsedUrl = url.parse(this.url);
// eslint-disable-next-line import/no-dynamic-require
this.requester = require(this.parsedUrl.protocol.substring(0, this.parsedUrl.protocol.length - 1));
// Initialize request options which can be overridden & extended by consumer as needed
this.requestOptions = {
hostname: this.parsedUrl.hostname,
path: this.parsedUrl.path,
port: this.parsedUrl.port,
method: 'POST',
headers: {
Authorization: `Splunk ${this.token}`,
},
rejectUnauthorized: false,
};
this.payloads = [];
};
// Simple logging API for Lambda functions
Logger.prototype.log = function log(message, context) {
this.logWithTime(Date.now(), message, context);
};
Logger.prototype.logWithTime = function logWithTime(time, message, context) {
const payload = {};
if (Object.prototype.toString.call(message) === '[object Array]') {
throw new Error('message argument must be a string or a JSON object.');
}
payload.event = message;
// Add Lambda metadata
if (typeof context !== 'undefined') {
if (this.addMetadata) {
// Enrich event only if it is an object
if (message === Object(message)) {
payload.event = JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(message)); // deep copy
payload.event.awsRequestId = context.awsRequestId;
}
}
if (this.setSource) {
payload.source = `lambda:${context.functionName}`;
}
}
payload.time = new Date(time).getTime() / 1000;
this.logEvent(payload);
};
Logger.prototype.logEvent = function logEvent(payload) {
this.payloads.push(JSON.stringify(payload));
};
Logger.prototype.flushAsync = function flushAsync(callback) {
callback = callback || (() => {}); // eslint-disable-line no-param-reassign
console.log('Sending event(s)');
const req = this.requester.request(this.requestOptions, (res) => {
res.setEncoding('utf8');
console.log('Response received');
res.on('data', (data) => {
let error = null;
if (res.statusCode !== 200) {
error = new Error(`error: statusCode=${res.statusCode}\n\n${data}`);
console.error(error);
}
this.payloads.length = 0;
callback(error, data);
});
});
req.on('error', (error) => {
callback(error);
});
req.end(this.payloads.join(''), 'utf8');
};
module.exports = Logger;
import requests
import re
import json
import os
def lambda_handler(event, context):
data = json.dumps(event)
EventIds = re.findall(r'{\\\".+?\\\"}', data)
EventLength = len(EventIds)
headers = {'Authorization': 'Splunk ' + os.environ['SPLUNK_HEC_TOKEN']}
i = 0
while i < EventLength:
response = requests.post(os.environ['SPLUNK_HEC_URL'], headers=headers, json={"event":EventIds[i]}, verify=True)
i+=1
Arrays are the data type used when Deep Security 10.0 or newer sends events to Amazon SNS. But Splunk wants one event per message. So don't send the array directly.
Instead, use the Splunk logger or Lambda to iterate through the array, sending each item as an individual message. You can modify this sample Lambda script for Node.js:
https://github.com/deep-security/amazon-sns/blob/master/lambda-save-ds-event-to-s3.js
It sends events to S3 individually (which is what you need). Just change it to send to Splunk instead.
Disclosure: I work for Trend Micro.
So Today I updated the firebase cli and after that deployed a new function. Although the firebase log shows that notifications has been sent to this many tokens, no notification occurs. An error shows in the log
Function returned undefined, expected Promise or value
I searched for answers in stack overflow but nothing helped.
Also I would like to add that before it was showing some different error
TypeError: Cannot read property 'description' of null
and now suddenly it is showing function returned undefined.
Not sure what is wrong. Any help is appreciated.
Index.js
const functions = require('firebase-functions');
const admin = require('firebase-admin');
admin.initializeApp();
function token_send(admin,title_input,body_input,getBody,getDeviceTokensPromise,change){
// Only edit data when it is first created.
if (change.before.val()) {
return 0;
}
// Exit when the data is deleted.
if (!change.after.val()) {
return 0;
}
return Promise.all([getDeviceTokensPromise,getBody]).then(results => {
const tokensSnapshot = results[0];
const notify=results[1];
if (!tokensSnapshot.hasChildren()) {
return console.log('There are no notification tokens to send to.');
}
console.log('There are', tokensSnapshot.numChildren(), 'tokens to send notifications to.');
var contentAlert = change.after.val();
// Notification details.
const payload = {
'data': {
'title': title_input,
'body': body_input
}
};
const tokens = Object.keys(tokensSnapshot.val());
// Send notifications to all tokens.
return admin.messaging().sendToDevice(tokens, payload).then(response => {
console.log("Successfully sent message:", response);
console.log("content alert",contentAlert);
// For each message check if there was an error.
const tokensToRemove = [];
response.results.forEach((result, index) => {
const error = result.error;
if (error) {
console.error('Failure sending notification to', tokens[index], error);
// Cleanup the tokens who are not registered anymore.
if (error.code === 'messaging/invalid-registration-token' ||
error.code === 'messaging/registration-token-not-registered') {
tokensToRemove.push(tokensSnapshot.ref.child(tokens[index]).remove());
}
}
});
return Promise.all(tokensToRemove);
});
});
}
exports.sendNotificationCouncil = functions.database.ref(`path/Post/{pushId}`).onWrite((change,context) => {
const getDeviceTokensPromise = admin.database().ref(`/Token/token_no`).once('value');
const getBody=admin.database().ref(`/Post`).once('value');
var title_input='You have new Post';
var contentAlert = change.after.val();
var body_input=contentAlert.description; //showing error here
token_send(admin,title_input,body_input,getBody,getDeviceTokensPromise,change);
});
You should return the promise (returned by token_send()) in the sendNotificationCouncil Cloud Function, as follows:
exports.sendNotificationCouncil = functions.database.ref(`path/Post/{pushId}`).onWrite((change,context) => {
const getDeviceTokensPromise = admin.database().ref(`/Token/token_no`).once('value');
const getBody=admin.database().ref(`/Post`).once('value');
var title_input='You have new Post';
var contentAlert = change.after.val();
var body_input=contentAlert.description; //showing error here
return token_send(admin,title_input,body_input,getBody,getDeviceTokensPromise,change);
});
Note that it is also a best practice to catch the errors in your Function and in this case return false.