Authenticate with Firebase on Android Using a Custom Authentication System (original) (raw)

You can integrate Firebase Authentication with a custom authentication system by modifying your authentication server to produce custom signed tokens when a user successfully signs in. Your app receives this token and uses it to authenticate with Firebase.

Before you begin

  1. If you haven't already,add Firebase to your Android project.
  2. In your module (app-level) Gradle file(usually <project>/<app-module>/build.gradle.kts or<project>/<app-module>/build.gradle), add the dependency for the Firebase Authentication library for Android. We recommend using theFirebase Android BoMto control library versioning.
    dependencies {
    // Import the BoM for the Firebase platform
    implementation(platform("com.google.firebase:firebase-bom:34.6.0"))
    // Add the dependency for the Firebase Authentication library
    // When using the BoM, you don't specify versions in Firebase library dependencies
    implementation("com.google.firebase:firebase-auth")
    }
    By using the Firebase Android BoM, your app will always use compatible versions of Firebase Android libraries.
    (Alternative) Add Firebase library dependencies without using the BoM
    If you choose not to use the Firebase BoM, you must specify each Firebase library version in its dependency line.
    Note that if you use multiple Firebase libraries in your app, we strongly recommend using the BoM to manage library versions, which ensures that all versions are compatible.
    dependencies {
    // Add the dependency for the Firebase Authentication library
    // When NOT using the BoM, you must specify versions in Firebase library dependencies
    implementation("com.google.firebase:firebase-auth:24.0.1")
    }
  3. Get your project's server keys:
    1. Go to the Service Accounts page in your project's settings.
    2. Click Generate New Private Key at the bottom of the_Firebase Admin SDK_ section of the Service Accounts page.
    3. The new service account's public/private key pair is automatically saved on your computer. Copy this file to your authentication server.
  4. In your sign-in activity's onCreate method, get the shared instance of the FirebaseAuth object:

Kotlin

private lateinit var auth: FirebaseAuth
// ...
// Initialize Firebase Auth
auth = Firebase.auth

Java

private FirebaseAuth mAuth;
// ...
// Initialize Firebase Auth
mAuth = FirebaseAuth.getInstance(); 2. When initializing your Activity, check to see if the user is currently signed in:

Kotlin

public override fun onStart() {
super.onStart()
// Check if user is signed in (non-null) and update UI accordingly.
val currentUser = auth.currentUser
updateUI(currentUser)
}

Java

@Override
public void onStart() {
super.onStart();
// Check if user is signed in (non-null) and update UI accordingly.
FirebaseUser currentUser = mAuth.getCurrentUser();
updateUI(currentUser);
} 3. When users sign in to your app, send their sign-in credentials (for example, their username and password) to your authentication server. Your server checks the credentials and returns acustom token if they are valid. 4. After you receive the custom token from your authentication server, pass it to signInWithCustomToken to sign in the user:

Kotlin

customToken?.let {
auth.signInWithCustomToken(it)
.addOnCompleteListener(this) { task ->
if (task.isSuccessful) {
// Sign in success, update UI with the signed-in user's information
Log.d(TAG, "signInWithCustomToken:success")
val user = auth.currentUser
updateUI(user)
} else {
// If sign in fails, display a message to the user.
Log.w(TAG, "signInWithCustomToken:failure", task.exception)
Toast.makeText(
baseContext,
"Authentication failed.",
Toast.LENGTH_SHORT,
).show()
updateUI(null)
}
}
}

Java

mAuth.signInWithCustomToken(mCustomToken)
.addOnCompleteListener(this, new OnCompleteListener() {
@Override
public void onComplete(@NonNull Task task) {
if (task.isSuccessful()) {
// Sign in success, update UI with the signed-in user's information
Log.d(TAG, "signInWithCustomToken:success");
FirebaseUser user = mAuth.getCurrentUser();
updateUI(user);
} else {
// If sign in fails, display a message to the user.
Log.w(TAG, "signInWithCustomToken:failure", task.getException());
Toast.makeText(CustomAuthActivity.this, "Authentication failed.",
Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
updateUI(null);
}
}
});
If sign-in succeeds, the AuthStateListener you can use thegetCurrentUser method to get the user's account data.

Next steps

After a user signs in for the first time, a new user account is created and linked to the credentials—that is, the user name and password, phone number, or auth provider information—the user signed in with. This new account is stored as part of your Firebase project, and can be used to identify a user across every app in your project, regardless of how the user signs in.

You can allow users to sign in to your app using multiple authentication providers by linking auth provider credentials to an existing user account.

To sign out a user, call signOut:

Kotlin

Firebase.auth.signOut()

Java

FirebaseAuth.getInstance().signOut();