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Reverse Proxy for Firebase Realtime Database events -> Particle.io Cloud Events

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particle-firebase-proxy

A proxy/reverse-proxy for Firebase Realtime Database events -> Particle.io cloud events

Introduction

TL;DR - Now you can use Firebase Realtime Database events with Particle.io devices.

Particle.io Webhooks can retrieve static pages, but can't subscribe to Server Sent Event streams, such as event streams (that used to be) provided by Firebase database events. Furthermore, Firebase v3+ requires authentication token generation that doesn't work well for IoT devices.

This proxy/reverse-proxy can be configured to work with a Firebase app via a Service Account. Particle.io devices can push or pull data via REST webhooks, as well as subscribe to the proxy. Database events are published to the subscribing event stream.

How To Use REST Calls

Once you've set up the proxy/reverse-proxy somewhere, you can make REST calls to the proxy as if it were the Firebase database itself. It more or less conforms to the the documentation in the REST Firebase Realtime Database docs. However, you must add device_id and particle_token query parameters to your REST call. The particle_token is validated before the database is accessed, and the device_id is translated to the Firebase database security rules auth.uid claim.

curl https://myproxy:9000/my/data?device_id=0123456789&particle_token=0123456789abcdef -X PUT -H "Content: application/json" -d '{ "key" : "value" }'

How To Subscribe To Realtime Database Events

Make a REST call to the database location which you would like monitored for events. Add an additional query parameter event_type that corresponds to the event types listed in the documentation for Firebase database events -- value, child_added, child_changed, child_removed, child_moved.

curl https://myproxy:9000/my/data?device_id=0123456789&particle_token=0123456789abcdef&event_type=value -X GET

The proxy will respond with a (200) OK if it was successful, or an error message. After that, you should see events being published with the name corresponding to your event_type parameter. The data payload will be:

{
	"key" : "snapshot.key",
	"val" : "snapshot.val()",
}

If an error is ever generated by the event subscription (for exmaple, if permissions changed and your subscription was cancelled) a cancel event will be generated with error data in the payload.

The reverse-proxy will only store one event subscription at a time. A subsequent event subscription will cancel the previous one. Regular REST calls without event_type will not cancel any existing subscriptions.

Setup

  • Installed NodeJS and a git client.

  • Clone this repo with

     git clone https://github.com/jychuah/particle-firebase-proxy
    
  • Install the required modules with

     npm install
    
  • Setup a Firebase App and some database access rules!

  • Setup a Google Service Account and download the credentials .json. Instructions for creating a service account for your Firebase App can be found here, under the Add Firebase to your app heading. Save this file in the root of your clone of this repo.

  • After adding the service account and downloading the credentials in the developer console, go to the IAM tab and add the service account with the Editor role. (This isn't in the docs, but is a necessary step.)

  • Configure DATABASE and SERVICEACCOUNTFILE environment variables.

    • DATABASE should be set to your Firebase database's URL. For example, http://myfirebase.firebaseio.com
    • SERVICEACCOUNTFILE should be set to your service account.json file. For example, serviceAccount.json
    • If you are using Node Foreman, you may simply edit the .env file.
  • If you are testing the reverse proxy locally, you can launch it with npm start. If you have Node Forman installed, you can run nf start and it will grab all the environment variables automatically.

  • Deploy it somewhere.

Testing

Two scripts are available for testing your proxy with curl. Fill in the necessary variables in the scripts to run them.

The ./tests/test_rest.sh script is included to test non-EventSource REST calls. You should receive an OK in the command line for PUT and DELETE calls, a keyname for any POST calls and JSON data for any GET calls.

The ['./tests/test_events.sh'] script is included to test EventSource GET calls. You should receive an OK in the command line, with any events appearing in your Particle.io Console.

Setting Up A Webhook

It's a good idea to let your Particle.io device interact with the proxy using Webhooks. ./examples/webhook.json.example has been included to illustrate a Webhook that passes the necessary data to your proxy to subscribe to realtime database events. That way, you can simply call...

Particle.subscribe("value", handlerFunction);
Particle.publish("valueSub");

...from within your device firmware.

Access Token Security

When you setup your Webhook, you will want to create a non-expiring Particle.io access token and store it in your Webhook. When you have it stored in a Webhook, the token is transmitted over HTTPS to the reverse proxy. The reverse proxy does not save the access token and uses it only to publish events back to the requesting device.

Firebase Database Security

It's a good idea to secure access to any Firebase Database paths that you will access using the reverse proxy. The reverse proxy authenticates using your Service Account, with auth.uid set to your device_id query parameter. The provided ./examples/database.rules.json.example demonstrates how to secure read access using auth.uid, limiting any authenticated device to reading its own /device/device_id path.

Deploying to Heroku

I tested this reverse proxy on Heroku. To setup Heroku, make sure you have command line git, the Heroku Toolbelt, and a verified account. To deploy this reverse proxy, do the following:

  • Clone this repo

     git clone https://github.com/jychuah/particle-firebase-proxy
     cd particle-firebase-proxy
    
  • Save your serviceAccount.json file in the root of your clone. Add it to your repo with:

     git add serviceAccount.json
     git commit -m "Added serviceAccount"
    
  • Edit the .env file to point to your serviceAccount.json file and your Firebase database

  • Create a Heroku dyno and make a note of the endpoint. (Heroku services always run on port 80, so your PORT variable will be ignored.)

     heroku login
     heroku create
    
  • Send your environment variables to your Heroku dyno. You can use the included script.

     ./heroku_config.sh
    
  • Push it to Heroku

     git push heroku master
    
  • Check to see if it's running with

     heroku logs --tail
    

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