Authenticate with Firebase Using a Custom Authentication System and C++ (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. Add Firebase to your C++ project.
  2. 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.

The Auth class is the gateway for all API calls.

  1. Add the Auth and App header files:

#include "firebase/app.h"
#include "firebase/auth.h" 2. In your initialization code, create afirebase::App class.
#if defined(ANDROID)
firebase::App* app =
firebase::App::Create(firebase::AppOptions(), my_jni_env, my_activity);
#else
firebase::App* app = firebase::App::Create(firebase::AppOptions());
#endif // defined(ANDROID) 3. Acquire the firebase::auth::Auth class for your firebase::App. There is a one-to-one mapping between App and Auth.
firebase::auth::Auth* auth = firebase::auth::Auth::GetAuth(app);

Call Auth::SignInWithCustomToken with the token from your authentication server.

  1. 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.
  2. After you receive the custom token from your authentication server, pass it to Auth::SignInWithCustomToken to sign in the user:
    firebase::Futurefirebase::auth::AuthResult result =
    auth->SignInWithCustomToken(custom_token);
  3. If your program has an update loop that runs regularly (say at 30 or 60 times per second), you can check the results once per update withAuth::SignInWithCustomTokenLastResult:
    firebase::Futurefirebase::auth::AuthResult result =
    auth->SignInWithCustomTokenLastResult();
    if (result.status() == firebase::kFutureStatusComplete) {
    if (result.error() == firebase::auth::kAuthErrorNone) {
    firebase::auth::AuthResult auth_result = *result.result();
    printf("Sign in succeeded for %s\n",
    auth_result.user.display_name().c_str());

} else {
printf("Sign in failed with error '%s'\n", result.error_message());
}
}
Or, if your program is event driven, you may prefer toregister a callback on the Future.

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():

auth->SignOut();