Django app for Firebase Cloud Messaging. Used as an unified platform for sending push notifications to mobile devices & browsers (android / ios / chrome / firefox / ...).
Supports Firebase Cloud Messaging HTTP v1 API. If you're looking for the legacy API, use fcm-django<1
!
- FCMDevice model fields
- registration_id (required - is FCM token)
- name (optional)
- active (default: true)
- user (optional)
- device_id (optional - can be used to uniquely identify devices)
- type ('android', 'web', 'ios')
- Functionality:
- all necessary migrations
- model admins for django admin
- admin actions for testing single and bulk notification sending
- automatic device pruning: devices to which notifications fail to send are marked as inactive
- devices marked as inactive will not be sent notifications
- Django rest framework viewsets
Unsure how to use this project? Check out the demo at: https://github.com/xtrinch/fcm-django-web-demo
We've replaced Python package pyfcm
for Firebase's own package firebase-admin
.
Thus, we no longer use an API key. Instead, you'll need an environment variable
GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS
which is a path pointing to your JSON-file stored
credentials. To learn more or view other options to input credentials, visit the
Google Cloud docs.
Finally, in your settings.py
(or whatever imported file), add:
from firebase_admin import initialize_app
FIREBASE_APP = initialize_app()
# Or just
initialize_app()
The API for sending messages is now under the firebase-admin
package; hence,
we removed the methods send_data_message
from the QuerySet and class instance
methods. Instead, everything is under a single method: send_message
from firebase_admin.messaging import Message, Notification
FCMDevice.objects.send_message(Message(data=dict()))
# Note: You can also combine the data and notification kwarg
FCMDevice.objects.send_message(
Message(notification=Notification(title="title", body="body", image="image_url"))
)
device = FCMDevice.objects.first()
device.send_message(Message(...))
Additionally, we've added Firebase's new Topic API, allowing for easier sending of bulk messages.
from firebase_admin.messaging import Message, Notification
topic = "A topic"
FCMDevice.objects.handle_subscription(True, topic)
message = Message(..., topic=topic)
FCMDevice.objects.filter(is_cool=True).send_message(message)
There are two additional parameters to both methods:
skip_registration_id_lookup
and additional_registration_ids
.
Visit Sending Messages to learn more.
Note: registration_ids
is actually incorrect terminology as it
should actually be called registration tokens
. However, to be
consistent with django-push-notifications
, we've refrained from
switching to stay backwards compatible in the docs and with the
sister package.
You can install the library directly from pypi using pip:
pip install fcm-django
Edit your settings.py file:
from firebase_admin import initialize_app
INSTALLED_APPS = (
...
"fcm_django"
...
)
# Optional ONLY IF you have initialized a firebase app already:
# Visit https://firebase.google.com/docs/admin/setup/#python
# for more options for the following:
# Store an environment variable called GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS
# which is a path that point to a json file with your credentials.
# Additional arguments are available: credentials, options, name
FIREBASE_APP = initialize_app()
# To learn more, visit the docs here:
# https://cloud.google.com/docs/authentication/getting-started>
FCM_DJANGO_SETTINGS = {
# default: _('FCM Django')
"APP_VERBOSE_NAME": "[string for AppConfig's verbose_name]",
# true if you want to have only one active device per registered user at a time
# default: False
"ONE_DEVICE_PER_USER": True/False,
# devices to which notifications cannot be sent,
# are deleted upon receiving error response from FCM
# default: False
"DELETE_INACTIVE_DEVICES": True/False,
# Transform create of an existing Device (based on registration id) into
# an update. See the section
# "Update of device with duplicate registration ID" for more details.
"UPDATE_ON_DUPLICATE_REG_ID": True/False,
}
Native Django migrations are in use. manage.py migrate
will install and migrate all models.
You can read more about different types of messages here.
In short, there are two types: notifications and data messages.
Notification:
from firebase_admin.messaging import Message, Notification
Message(
notification=Notification(title="title", body="text", image="url"),
topic="Optional topic parameter: Whatever you want",
)
Data message:
from firebase_admin.messaging import Message
Message(
data={
"Nick" : "Mario",
"body" : "great match!",
"Room" : "PortugalVSDenmark"
},
topic="Optional topic parameter: Whatever you want",
)
As in the following example, you can send either a notification, a data message, or both.
You can also customize the Android, iOS, and Web configuration along with additional
FCM conditions. Visit firebase_admin.messaging.Message
to learn more about those
configurations.
Additional parameters are additional_registration_ids
and
skip_registration_id_lookup
. View the "Additional Parameters"
section for more information.
from firebase_admin.messaging import Message
from fcm_django.models import FCMDevice
# You can still use .filter() or any methods that return QuerySet (from the chain)
device = FCMDevice.objects.all().first()
# send_message parameters include: message, dry_run, app
device.send_message(Message(data={...}))
from firebase_admin.messaging import Message
from fcm_django.models import FCMDevice
# You can still use .filter() or any methods that return QuerySet (from the chain)
devices = FCMDevice.objects.all()
devices.send_message(Message(data={...}))
# Or (send_message parameters include: messages, dry_run, app)
FCMDevice.objects.send_message(Message(...))
from fcm_django.models import FCMDevice
# Subscribing
FCMDevice.objects.all().handle_topic_subscription(True, topic="TOPIC NAME"))
device = FCMDevice.objects.all().first()
device.handle_topic_subscription(True, topic="TOPIC NAME"))
# Finally you can send a message to that topic
from firebase_admin.messaging import Message
message = Message(..., topic="A topic")
# You can still use .filter() or any methods that return QuerySet (from the chain)
FCMDevice.objects.send_message(message)
# Unsubscribing
FCMDevice.objects.all().handle_topic_subscription(False, topic="TOPIC NAME"))
device = FCMDevice.objects.all().first()
device.handle_topic_subscription(False, topic="TOPIC NAME"))
from firebase_admin.messaging import Message
from fcm_django.models import FCMDevice
# You can still use .filter() or any methods that return QuerySet (from the chain)
FCMDevice.objects.all().send_message(Message(data={...}, topic="TOPIC NAME"))
device = FCMDevice.objects.all().first()
device.send_message(Message(data={...}, topic="TOPIC NAME"))
You can add additional_registration_ids (Sequence) for manually sending registration IDs. It will append these IDs to the queryset lookup's returned registration IDs.
You can also add skip_registration_id_lookup (bool) to skip database lookup that goes along with your query.
from firebase_admin.messaging import Message
from fcm_django.models import FCMDevice
FCMDevice.objects.send_message(Message(...), False, ["registration_ids"])
By default the message will be sent using the default FCM firebase_admin.App
(we initialized this in our settings). This default can be overridden by specifying an app when calling send_message. This can be used to send messages using different firebase projects.
from firebase_app import App
from firebase_app.messaging import Notification
from fcm_django.models import FCMDevice
device = FCMDevice.objects.all().first()
device.send_message(notification=Notification(...), app=App(...))
Viewsets come in two different varieties:
FCMDeviceViewSet
- Permissions as specified in settings (
AllowAny
by default, which is not recommended) - A device may be registered without associating it with a user
- Will not allow duplicate registration_id's
- Permissions as specified in settings (
FCMDeviceAuthorizedViewSet
- Permissions are
IsAuthenticated
and custom permissionIsOwner
, which will only allow therequest.user
to get and update devices that belong to that user - Requires a user to be authenticated, so all devices will be associated with a user
- Will allow duplicate registration_id's for different users, so you are responsible for cleanup (if that is generally perceived as undesired behaviour or if the package itself should be doing the cleanup, open an issue or email me)
- Permissions are
Routes can be added one of two ways:
- Routers (include all views)
from fcm_django.api.rest_framework import FCMDeviceAuthorizedViewSet
from rest_framework.routers import DefaultRouter
router = DefaultRouter()
router.register('devices', FCMDeviceAuthorizedViewSet)
urlpatterns = [
# URLs will show up at <api_root>/devices
# DRF browsable API which lists all available endpoints
path('', include(router.urls)),
# ...
]
- Using as_view (specify which views to include)
from fcm_django.api.rest_framework import FCMDeviceAuthorizedViewSet
urlpatterns = [
# Only allow creation of devices by authenticated users
path('devices', FCMDeviceAuthorizedViewSet.as_view({'post': 'create'}), name='create_fcm_device'),
# ...
]
The DRF viewset enforce the uniqueness of the registration ID. In same use case it may cause an issue: If an already registered mobile device changes its user, then it will fail to register because the registration ID already exist.
When option UPDATE_ON_DUPLICATE_REG_ID
is set to True, then any creation of
device with an already existing registration ID will be transformed into an update.
The UPDATE_ON_DUPLICATE_REG_ID
only works with DRF.
fcm-django
is fully compatible with Python 3.6+
Compatible with Django versions 2.2+. For lower django versions, use version fcm-django < 1
.
Library relies on firebase-admin-sdk for sending notifications, for more info about all the possible fields, see: https://github.com/firebase/firebase-admin-python
Migration from v0 to v1 was done by Andrew-Chen-Wang
Submit an issue/PR on this project. Please do not send me emails, as then the community has no chance to see your questions / provide answers.
To setup the development environment, simply do pip install -r requirements.txt
To manually run the pre-commit hook, run pre-commit run --all-files.