Firestore
The Firestore integration is built on redux-firestore
. Auth, Storage, and RTDB interactions still occur within react-redux-firebase
, while redux-firestore
handles attaching listeners and updating state for Firestore.
To begin using Firestore with react-redux-firebase
, make sure you have the following:
v2.0.0
or higher ofreact-redux-firebase
- Install
redux-firestore
in your project usingnpm i --save redux-firestore@latest
firestore
imported withimport 'firebase/firestore'
firestore
initialize withfirebase.firestore()
ReactReduxFirebaseProvider
orReduxFirestoreProvider
used to make instance available to HOCsfirestoreReducer
added to your reducers
Should look something similar to:
import React from 'react'
import { render } from 'react-dom'
import { Provider } from 'react-redux'
import firebase from 'firebase/app'
import 'firebase/auth'
import 'firebase/firestore' // <- needed if using firestore
import { createStore, combineReducers, compose } from 'redux'
import {
ReactReduxFirebaseProvider,
firebaseReducer
} from 'react-redux-firebase'
import { createFirestoreInstance, firestoreReducer } from 'redux-firestore' // <- needed if using firestore
const firebaseConfig = {}
// react-redux-firebase config
const rrfConfig = {
userProfile: 'users'
// useFirestoreForProfile: true // Firestore for Profile instead of Realtime DB
}
// Initialize firebase instance
firebase.initializeApp(firebaseConfig)
// Initialize other services on firebase instance
firebase.firestore() // <- needed if using firestore
// Add firebase to reducers
const rootReducer = combineReducers({
firebase: firebaseReducer,
firestore: firestoreReducer // <- needed if using firestore
})
// Create store with reducers and initial state
const initialState = {}
const store = createStore(rootReducer, initialState)
const rrfProps = {
firebase,
config: rrfConfig,
dispatch: store.dispatch,
createFirestoreInstance // <- needed if using firestore
}
// Setup react-redux so that connect HOC can be used
function App() {
return (
<Provider store={store}>
<ReactReduxFirebaseProvider {...rrfProps}>
<Todos />
</ReactReduxFirebaseProvider>
</Provider>
)
}
render(<App />, document.getElementById('root'))
Profile
If you would like to have your users profiles go to Firestore instead of Real Time Database, you can enable the
useFirestoreForProfile
option when making store creator like so:
// react-redux-firebase config
const rrfConfig = {
userProfile: 'users',
useFirestoreForProfile: true // Firestore for Profile instead of Realtime DB
}
Queries
Firestore queries can be created in the following ways:
- Automatically with Hook - Using
useFirestoreConnect
hook (manages mounting/unmounting) - Automatically with HOC - Using
firestoreConnect
HOC (manages mounting/unmounting) - Manually - Using
get
, or by setting listeners withsetListeners
/setListener
(requires managing of listeners)
Automatically with Hook
useFirestoreConnect
is a React hook that manages attaching and detaching listeners for you as the component mounts and unmounts.
Examples
- Basic query that will attach/detach as the component passed mounts/unmounts. In this case we are setting a listener for the
'todos'
collection:
import React from 'react'
import { useSelector } from 'react-redux'
import { useFirestoreConnect } from 'react-redux-firebase'
export default function SomeComponent() {
useFirestoreConnect([
{ collection: 'todos' } // or 'todos'
])
const todos = useSelector((state) => state.firestore.ordered.todos)
}
- Props can be used as part of queries. In this case we will get a specific todo:
import React from 'react'
import { useSelector } from 'react-redux'
import { useFirestoreConnect } from 'react-redux-firebase'
export default function SomeComponent({ todoId }) {
useFirestoreConnect(() => [
{ collection: 'todos', doc: todoId } // or `todos/${props.todoId}`
])
const todo = useSelector(
({ firestore: { data } }) => data.todos && data.todos[todoId]
)
}
Automatically with HOC
firestoreConnect
is a React Higher Order component that manages attaching and detaching listeners for you as the component mounts and unmounts. It is possible to roll a similar solution yourself, but can get complex when dealing with advanced situations (queries based on props, props changing, etc.)
Examples
- Basic query that will attach/detach as the component passed mounts/unmounts. In this case we are setting a listener for the
'todos'
collection:
import { compose } from 'redux'
import { connect } from 'react-redux'
import { firestoreConnect } from 'react-redux-firebase'
export default compose(
firestoreConnect(() => ['todos']), // or { collection: 'todos' }
connect((state, props) => ({
todos: state.firestore.ordered.todos
}))
)(SomeComponent)
- Create a query based on props by passing a function. In this case we will get a specific todo:
import { compose } from 'redux'
import { connect } from 'react-redux'
import { firestoreConnect } from 'react-redux-firebase'
export default compose(
firestoreConnect((props) => [
{ collection: 'todos', doc: props.todoId } // or `todos/${props.todoId}`
]),
connect(({ firestore: { data } }, props) => ({
todos: data.todos && data.todos[todoId]
}))
)(SomeComponent)
Manual
If you want to trigger a query based on a click or mange listeners yourself, you can use setListener
or setListeners
. When doing this, make sure you call unsetListener
for each listener you set.
Component Class
import React, { Component } from 'react'
import PropTypes from 'prop-types'
import { connect } from 'react-redux'
class Todos extends Component {
static contextTypes = {
store: PropTypes.object.isRequired
}
componentDidMount() {
const { firebase } = this.context.store
firebase.setListener('todos')
// firebase.setListener({ collection: 'todos' }) // or object notation
}
componentDidUnmount() {
const { firebase } = this.context.store
firebase.unsetListener('todos')
// firebase.unsetListener({ collection: 'todos' }) // or object notation
}
render() {
return (
<div>
{todos.map((todo) => (
<div key={todo.id}>{JSON.stringify(todo)}</div>
))}
</div>
)
}
}
export default connect((state) => ({
todos: state.firestore.ordered.todos
}))(Todos)
Functional Components
It is common to make react components "stateless" meaning that the component is just a function.
import { compose } from 'redux'
import { withFirestore, isLoaded, isEmpty } from 'react-redux-firebase'
const Todos = ({ firestore, todos }) => (
<div>
<button onClick={() => firestore.get('todos')}>Get Todos</button>
{
!isLoaded(todos)
? 'Loading'
: isEmpty(todos)
? 'Todo list is empty'
: todos.map((todo) =>
<TodoItem key={todo.id} todo={todo} />
)
}
<div>
)
export default compose(
withFirestore,
connect((state) => ({
todos: state.firestore.ordered.todos
}))
)(Todos)
This can be useful, but then can limit usage of lifecycle hooks and other features of Component Classes.
recompose
helps solve this by providing Higher Order Component functions such as lifecycle
, and withHandlers
.
import { connect } from 'react-redux'
import { withFirestore } from 'react-redux-firebase'
import { compose, withHandlers, lifecycle } from 'recompose'
const enhance = compose(
withFirestore, // add firestore to props
withHandlers({
loadData: (props) => (path) => props.firestore.get(path)
}),
lifecycle({
componentDidMount() {
this.props.loadData('todos')
// this.props.firestore.get('todos') // equivalent without withHandlers
}
}),
connect((state) => ({
todos: state.firestore.ordered.todos
}))
)
export default enhance(SomeComponent)
For more information on using recompose visit the docs
storeAs
By default the results of queries are stored in redux under the path of the query. If you would like to change where the query results are stored in redux, use storeAs
.
Examples
- Querying the same path with different query parameters
import { compose } from 'redux'
import { connect } from 'react-redux'
import { firestoreConnect } from 'react-redux-firebase'
const myProjectsReduxName = 'myProjects'
compose(
firestoreConnect((props) => [
{ collection: 'projects' },
{
collection: 'projects',
where: [['uid', '==', '123']],
storeAs: myProjectsReduxName
}
]),
connect((state, props) => ({
projects: state.firestore.data.projects,
myProjects: state.firestore.data[myProjectsReduxName] // use storeAs path to gather from redux
}))
)
- Set
useFirestoreConnect
for subcollections documents For example, in Firestore cloud you have such message structure:chatMessages (collection) / chatID (document) / messages (collection) / messageID (document)
You can't write the path in useFirestoreConnect
like:
useFirestoreConnect(`chatMessages/${chatID}/messages`)
You will have error:
Queries with subcollections must use "storeAs" to prevent invalid store updates. This closley matches the upcoming major release (v1), which stores subcollections at the top level by default.
Solution:
Use subcollections
for 'messages' and storeAs
.
`import { useFirestoreConnect } from 'react-redux-firebase'
useFirestoreConnect([
{
collection: 'chatMessages',
doc: chatID,
subcollections: [{ collection: 'messages' }],
storeAs: 'myMessages'
}
])
Populate
Populate is supported for Firestore as of v0.6.0 of redux-firestore. It was added as part of issue #48. ````