The Firebase JavaScript SDK implements the client-side libraries used by applications using Firebase services. This SDK is distributed via:
- CDN (
<script src="https://www.gstatic.com/firebasejs/5.5.3/firebase.js"></script>
) - npm package
- Bower package
To get started using Firebase, see Add Firebase to your JavaScript Project.
Please see Environment Support.
Before you can start working on the Firebase JS SDK, you need to have Node.js
installed on your machine. The currently supported versions are 8.13.0
or greater.
To download Node.js visit https://nodejs.org/en/download/.
NOTE: You can use a tool like NVM
or N
to install and manage multiple node versions
In addition to Node.js we use yarn
to facilitate multi package development.
To install yarn
follow the instructions listed on their website:
https://yarnpkg.com/en/docs/install
The closure compiler requires a modern Java installation. Java 8+ should be installed: http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jdk8-downloads-2133151.html
You can verify your setup by running the following commands in your terminal:
$ node -v
$ yarn -v
$ java -version
Your Node.js version should be 8.0.0
or greater, your yarn
version should
be 1.0.0
or greater, and your java
version should be 1.8.0
or greater.
NOTE: We will update the documentation as new versions are required, however for continuing development on the SDK, staying up to date on the stable versions of these packages is advised
Once you have Node.js and yarn
installed on your machine and have validated
that you are running the proper version, you can set up the development environment
by running the following at the root of the SDK:
$ yarn
Once you have installed all the dependencies, you can build the entire SDK by running the following command the root of the SDK:
$ yarn build
A production project is required to test the Firebase JS SDK. You can create a new project by visiting the Firebase Console.
Visit the database section of the console and enable the Cloud Firestore Beta. You can select either of the default permissions settings as we will overwrite them below.
Visit the authentication config in your project and enable the Anonymous
sign-in provider to complete your project config.
The remainder of the test setup requires choosing a test project. You can choose the project manually or specify the project directly at the root of the package.
# Select a project manually when running setup
$ yarn test:setup
# Specify the specific project for setup
$ yarn test:setup --projectId=<your-test-project>
Each of the directories in the integration
directory as well as the packages
directory have their own test suites. You will need to build the SDK before
running tests. Test suites can be run all together by running the following
command at the root of the package:
$ yarn test
In addition, you can run any of the tests individually by running yarn test
in
an individual package directory.
The Firebase JS SDK is built with a series of individual packages that are all contained in this repository. Development is coordinated via yarn workspaces and Lerna (a monorepo management tool).
Each package in the packages
directory, constitute a piece of our
implementation. The SDK is built via a combination of all of these packages
which are published under the firebase
scope on NPM.
Each package in the packages
directory exposes a dev
script. This script
will set up a watcher for development on the individual piece of the SDK. In
addition, there is a top level dev
script that can be run to start all of the
watch tasks as well as a sandbox server.
You can run the dev script by running the following at the root of the package:
$ yarn dev
As part of this repo, we use the NPM package husky
to
implement git hooks. We leverage the prepush hook to do two things:
- Automated code styling (using
prettier
) - Automated LICENSE header insertion
See Contributing for more information on contributing to the Firebase JavaScript SDK.
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