Cloud Firestore collection count - firebase

Is it possible to count how many items a collection has using the new Firebase database, Cloud Firestore?
If so, how do I do that?

2023 Update
Firestore now supports aggregation queries.
Node SDK
const collectionRef = db.collection('cities');
const snapshot = await collectionRef.count().get();
console.log(snapshot.data().count);
Web v9 SDK
const coll = collection(db, "cities");
const snapshot = await getCountFromServer(coll);
console.log('count: ', snapshot.data().count);
Notable Limitation - You cannot currently use count() queries with real-time listeners and offline queries. (See below for alternatives)
Pricing - Pricing depends on the number of matched index entries rather than the number of documents. One index entry contains multiple documents making this cheaper than counting documents individually.
Old Answer
As with many questions, the answer is - It depends.
You should be very careful when handling large amounts of data on the front end. On top of making your front end feel sluggish, Firestore also charges you $0.60 per million reads you make.
Small collection (less than 100 documents)
Use with care - Frontend user experience may take a hit
Handling this on the front end should be fine as long as you are not doing too much logic with this returned array.
db.collection('...').get().then(snap => {
size = snap.size // will return the collection size
});
Medium collection (100 to 1000 documents)
Use with care - Firestore read invocations may cost a lot
Handling this on the front end is not feasible as it has too much potential to slow down the users system. We should handle this logic server side and only return the size.
The drawback to this method is you are still invoking Firestore reads (equal to the size of your collection), which in the long run may end up costing you more than expected.
Cloud Function:
db.collection('...').get().then(snap => {
res.status(200).send({length: snap.size});
});
Front End:
yourHttpClient.post(yourCloudFunctionUrl).toPromise().then(snap => {
size = snap.length // will return the collection size
})
Large collection (1000+ documents)
Most scalable solution
FieldValue.increment()
As of April 2019 Firestore now allows incrementing counters, completely atomically, and without reading the data prior. This ensures we have correct counter values even when updating from multiple sources simultaneously (previously solved using transactions), while also reducing the number of database reads we perform.
By listening to any document deletes or creates we can add to or remove from a count field that is sitting in the database.
See the firestore docs - Distributed Counters
Or have a look at Data Aggregation by Jeff Delaney. His guides are truly fantastic for anyone using AngularFire but his lessons should carry over to other frameworks as well.
Cloud Function:
export const documentWriteListener = functions.firestore
.document('collection/{documentUid}')
.onWrite((change, context) => {
if (!change.before.exists) {
// New document Created : add one to count
db.doc(docRef).update({ numberOfDocs: FieldValue.increment(1) });
} else if (change.before.exists && change.after.exists) {
// Updating existing document : Do nothing
} else if (!change.after.exists) {
// Deleting document : subtract one from count
db.doc(docRef).update({ numberOfDocs: FieldValue.increment(-1) });
}
return;
});
Now on the frontend you can just query this numberOfDocs field to get the size of the collection.

Simplest way to do so is to read the size of a "querySnapshot".
db.collection("cities").get().then(function(querySnapshot) {
console.log(querySnapshot.size);
});
You can also read the length of the docs array inside "querySnapshot".
querySnapshot.docs.length;
Or if a "querySnapshot" is empty by reading the empty value, which will return a boolean value.
querySnapshot.empty;

As far as I know there is no build-in solution for this and it is only possible in the node sdk right now.
If you have a
db.collection('someCollection')
you can use
.select([fields])
to define which field you want to select. If you do an empty select() you will just get an array of document references.
example:
db.collection('someCollection').select().get().then(
(snapshot) => console.log(snapshot.docs.length)
);
This solution is only a optimization for the worst case of downloading all documents and does not scale on large collections!
Also have a look at this:
How to get a count of number of documents in a collection with Cloud Firestore

Aggregate count query just landed as a preview in Firestore.
Announced at the 2022 Firebase Summit: https://firebase.blog/posts/2022/10/whats-new-at-Firebase-Sumit-2022
Excerpt:
[Developer Preview] Count() function: With the new count function in
Firstore [sic], you can now get the count of the matching documents when you
run a query or read from a collection, without loading the actual
documents, which saves you a lot of time.
Code sample they showed at the summit:
During the Q&A, someone asked about pricing for aggregated queries, and the answer the Firebase team provided was that it'll cost 1 / 1000th of the price of a read (rounded up to the nearest read, see comments below for more details), but will count all records that are part of the aggregate.

Be careful counting number of documents for large collections. It is a little bit complex with firestore database if you want to have a precalculated counter for every collection.
Code like this doesn't work in this case:
export const customerCounterListener =
functions.firestore.document('customers/{customerId}')
.onWrite((change, context) => {
// on create
if (!change.before.exists && change.after.exists) {
return firestore
.collection('metadatas')
.doc('customers')
.get()
.then(docSnap =>
docSnap.ref.set({
count: docSnap.data().count + 1
}))
// on delete
} else if (change.before.exists && !change.after.exists) {
return firestore
.collection('metadatas')
.doc('customers')
.get()
.then(docSnap =>
docSnap.ref.set({
count: docSnap.data().count - 1
}))
}
return null;
});
The reason is because every cloud firestore trigger has to be idempotent, as firestore documentation say: https://firebase.google.com/docs/functions/firestore-events#limitations_and_guarantees
Solution
So, in order to prevent multiple executions of your code, you need to manage with events and transactions. This is my particular way to handle large collection counters:
const executeOnce = (change, context, task) => {
const eventRef = firestore.collection('events').doc(context.eventId);
return firestore.runTransaction(t =>
t
.get(eventRef)
.then(docSnap => (docSnap.exists ? null : task(t)))
.then(() => t.set(eventRef, { processed: true }))
);
};
const documentCounter = collectionName => (change, context) =>
executeOnce(change, context, t => {
// on create
if (!change.before.exists && change.after.exists) {
return t
.get(firestore.collection('metadatas')
.doc(collectionName))
.then(docSnap =>
t.set(docSnap.ref, {
count: ((docSnap.data() && docSnap.data().count) || 0) + 1
}));
// on delete
} else if (change.before.exists && !change.after.exists) {
return t
.get(firestore.collection('metadatas')
.doc(collectionName))
.then(docSnap =>
t.set(docSnap.ref, {
count: docSnap.data().count - 1
}));
}
return null;
});
Use cases here:
/**
* Count documents in articles collection.
*/
exports.articlesCounter = functions.firestore
.document('articles/{id}')
.onWrite(documentCounter('articles'));
/**
* Count documents in customers collection.
*/
exports.customersCounter = functions.firestore
.document('customers/{id}')
.onWrite(documentCounter('customers'));
As you can see, the key to prevent multiple execution is the property called eventId in the context object. If the function has been handled many times for the same event, the event id will be the same in all cases. Unfortunately, you must have "events" collection in your database.

In 2020 this is still not available in the Firebase SDK however it is available in Firebase Extensions (Beta) however it's pretty complex to setup and use...
A reasonable approach
Helpers... (create/delete seems redundant but is cheaper than onUpdate)
export const onCreateCounter = () => async (
change,
context
) => {
const collectionPath = change.ref.parent.path;
const statsDoc = db.doc("counters/" + collectionPath);
const countDoc = {};
countDoc["count"] = admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment(1);
await statsDoc.set(countDoc, { merge: true });
};
export const onDeleteCounter = () => async (
change,
context
) => {
const collectionPath = change.ref.parent.path;
const statsDoc = db.doc("counters/" + collectionPath);
const countDoc = {};
countDoc["count"] = admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment(-1);
await statsDoc.set(countDoc, { merge: true });
};
export interface CounterPath {
watch: string;
name: string;
}
Exported Firestore hooks
export const Counters: CounterPath[] = [
{
name: "count_buildings",
watch: "buildings/{id2}"
},
{
name: "count_buildings_subcollections",
watch: "buildings/{id2}/{id3}/{id4}"
}
];
Counters.forEach(item => {
exports[item.name + '_create'] = functions.firestore
.document(item.watch)
.onCreate(onCreateCounter());
exports[item.name + '_delete'] = functions.firestore
.document(item.watch)
.onDelete(onDeleteCounter());
});
In action
The building root collection and all sub collections will be tracked.
Here under the /counters/ root path
Now collection counts will update automatically and eventually! If you need a count, just use the collection path and prefix it with counters.
const collectionPath = 'buildings/138faicnjasjoa89/buildingContacts';
const collectionCount = await db
.doc('counters/' + collectionPath)
.get()
.then(snap => snap.get('count'));
Limitations
As this approach uses a single database and document, it is limited to the Firestore constraint of 1 Update per Second for each counter. It will be eventually consistent, but in cases where large amounts of documents are added/removed the counter will lag behind the actual collection count.

I agree with #Matthew, it will cost a lot if you perform such query.
[ADVICE FOR DEVELOPERS BEFORE STARTING THEIR PROJECTS]
Since we have foreseen this situation at the beginning, we can actually make a collection namely counters with a document to store all the counters in a field with type number.
For example:
For each CRUD operation on the collection, update the counter document:
When you create a new collection/subcollection: (+1 in the counter) [1 write operation]
When you delete a collection/subcollection: (-1 in the counter) [1 write operation]
When you update an existing collection/subcollection, do nothing on the counter document: (0)
When you read an existing collection/subcollection, do nothing on the counter document: (0)
Next time, when you want to get the number of collection, you just need to query/point to the document field. [1 read operation]
In addition, you can store the collections name in an array, but this will be tricky, the condition of array in firebase is shown as below:
// we send this
['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e']
// Firebase stores this
{0: 'a', 1: 'b', 2: 'c', 3: 'd', 4: 'e'}
// since the keys are numeric and sequential,
// if we query the data, we get this
['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e']
// however, if we then delete a, b, and d,
// they are no longer mostly sequential, so
// we do not get back an array
{2: 'c', 4: 'e'}
So, if you are not going to delete the collection , you can actually use array to store list of collections name instead of querying all the collection every time.
Hope it helps!

As of October 2022, Firestore has introduced a count() method on the client SDKs. Now you can count for a query without downloads.
For 1000 documents, it will charge you for 1 document read.
Web (v9)
Introduced in Firebase 9.11.0:
const collectionRef = collection(db, "cities");
const snapshot = await getCountFromServer(collectionRef);
console.log('count: ', snapshot.data().count);
Web V8
Not Available.
Node (Admin)
const collectionRef = db.collection('cities');
const snapshot = await collectionRef.count().get();
console.log(snapshot.data().count);
Android (Kotlin)
Introduced in firestore v24.4.0 (BoM 31.0.0):
val query = db.collection("cities")
val countQuery = query.count()
countQuery.get(AggregateSource.SERVER).addOnCompleteListener { task ->
if (task.isSuccessful) {
val snapshot = task.result
Log.d(TAG, "Count: ${snapshot.count}")
} else {
Log.d(TAG, "Count failed: ", task.getException())
}
}
Apple Platforms (Swift)
Introduced in Firestore v10.0.0:
do {
let query = db.collection("cities")
let countQuery = query.countAggregateQuery
let snapshot = try await countQuery.aggregation(source: AggregateSource.server)
print(snapshot.count)
} catch {
print(error)
}

Increment a counter using admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment:
exports.onInstanceCreate = functions.firestore.document('projects/{projectId}/instances/{instanceId}')
.onCreate((snap, context) =>
db.collection('projects').doc(context.params.projectId).update({
instanceCount: admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment(1),
})
);
exports.onInstanceDelete = functions.firestore.document('projects/{projectId}/instances/{instanceId}')
.onDelete((snap, context) =>
db.collection('projects').doc(context.params.projectId).update({
instanceCount: admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment(-1),
})
);
In this example we increment an instanceCount field in the project each time a document is added to the instances sub collection. If the field doesn't exist yet it will be created and incremented to 1.
The incrementation is transactional internally but you should use a distributed counter if you need to increment more frequently than every 1 second.
It's often preferable to implement onCreate and onDelete rather than onWrite as you will call onWrite for updates which means you are spending more money on unnecessary function invocations (if you update the docs in your collection).

No, there is no built-in support for aggregation queries right now. However there are a few things you could do.
The first is documented here. You can use transactions or cloud functions to maintain aggregate information:
This example shows how to use a function to keep track of the number of ratings in a subcollection, as well as the average rating.
exports.aggregateRatings = firestore
.document('restaurants/{restId}/ratings/{ratingId}')
.onWrite(event => {
// Get value of the newly added rating
var ratingVal = event.data.get('rating');
// Get a reference to the restaurant
var restRef = db.collection('restaurants').document(event.params.restId);
// Update aggregations in a transaction
return db.transaction(transaction => {
return transaction.get(restRef).then(restDoc => {
// Compute new number of ratings
var newNumRatings = restDoc.data('numRatings') + 1;
// Compute new average rating
var oldRatingTotal = restDoc.data('avgRating') * restDoc.data('numRatings');
var newAvgRating = (oldRatingTotal + ratingVal) / newNumRatings;
// Update restaurant info
return transaction.update(restRef, {
avgRating: newAvgRating,
numRatings: newNumRatings
});
});
});
});
The solution that jbb mentioned is also useful if you only want to count documents infrequently. Make sure to use the select() statement to avoid downloading all of each document (that's a lot of bandwidth when you only need a count). select() is only available in the server SDKs for now so that solution won't work in a mobile app.

UPDATE 11/20
I created an npm package for easy access to a counter function: https://code.build/p/9DicAmrnRoK4uk62Hw1bEV/firestore-counters
I created a universal function using all these ideas to handle all counter situations (except queries).
The only exception would be when doing so many writes a second, it
slows you down. An example would be likes on a trending post. It is
overkill on a blog post, for example, and will cost you more. I
suggest creating a separate function in that case using shards:
https://firebase.google.com/docs/firestore/solutions/counters
// trigger collections
exports.myFunction = functions.firestore
.document('{colId}/{docId}')
.onWrite(async (change: any, context: any) => {
return runCounter(change, context);
});
// trigger sub-collections
exports.mySubFunction = functions.firestore
.document('{colId}/{docId}/{subColId}/{subDocId}')
.onWrite(async (change: any, context: any) => {
return runCounter(change, context);
});
// add change the count
const runCounter = async function (change: any, context: any) {
const col = context.params.colId;
const eventsDoc = '_events';
const countersDoc = '_counters';
// ignore helper collections
if (col.startsWith('_')) {
return null;
}
// simplify event types
const createDoc = change.after.exists && !change.before.exists;
const updateDoc = change.before.exists && change.after.exists;
if (updateDoc) {
return null;
}
// check for sub collection
const isSubCol = context.params.subDocId;
const parentDoc = `${countersDoc}/${context.params.colId}`;
const countDoc = isSubCol
? `${parentDoc}/${context.params.docId}/${context.params.subColId}`
: `${parentDoc}`;
// collection references
const countRef = db.doc(countDoc);
const countSnap = await countRef.get();
// increment size if doc exists
if (countSnap.exists) {
// createDoc or deleteDoc
const n = createDoc ? 1 : -1;
const i = admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment(n);
// create event for accurate increment
const eventRef = db.doc(`${eventsDoc}/${context.eventId}`);
return db.runTransaction(async (t: any): Promise<any> => {
const eventSnap = await t.get(eventRef);
// do nothing if event exists
if (eventSnap.exists) {
return null;
}
// add event and update size
await t.update(countRef, { count: i });
return t.set(eventRef, {
completed: admin.firestore.FieldValue.serverTimestamp()
});
}).catch((e: any) => {
console.log(e);
});
// otherwise count all docs in the collection and add size
} else {
const colRef = db.collection(change.after.ref.parent.path);
return db.runTransaction(async (t: any): Promise<any> => {
// update size
const colSnap = await t.get(colRef);
return t.set(countRef, { count: colSnap.size });
}).catch((e: any) => {
console.log(e);
});;
}
}
This handles events, increments, and transactions. The beauty in this, is that if you are not sure about the accuracy of a document (probably while still in beta), you can delete the counter to have it automatically add them up on the next trigger. Yes, this costs, so don't delete it otherwise.
Same kind of thing to get the count:
const collectionPath = 'buildings/138faicnjasjoa89/buildingContacts';
const colSnap = await db.doc('_counters/' + collectionPath).get();
const count = colSnap.get('count');
Also, you may want to create a cron job (scheduled function) to remove old events to save money on database storage. You need at least a blaze plan, and there may be some more configuration. You could run it every sunday at 11pm, for example.
https://firebase.google.com/docs/functions/schedule-functions
This is untested, but should work with a few tweaks:
exports.scheduledFunctionCrontab = functions.pubsub.schedule('5 11 * * *')
.timeZone('America/New_York')
.onRun(async (context) => {
// get yesterday
const yesterday = new Date();
yesterday.setDate(yesterday.getDate() - 1);
const eventFilter = db.collection('_events').where('completed', '<=', yesterday);
const eventFilterSnap = await eventFilter.get();
eventFilterSnap.forEach(async (doc: any) => {
await doc.ref.delete();
});
return null;
});
And last, don't forget to protect the collections in firestore.rules:
match /_counters/{document} {
allow read;
allow write: if false;
}
match /_events/{document} {
allow read, write: if false;
}
Update: Queries
Adding to my other answer if you want to automate query counts as well, you can use this modified code in your cloud function:
if (col === 'posts') {
// counter reference - user doc ref
const userRef = after ? after.userDoc : before.userDoc;
// query reference
const postsQuery = db.collection('posts').where('userDoc', "==", userRef);
// add the count - postsCount on userDoc
await addCount(change, context, postsQuery, userRef, 'postsCount');
}
return delEvents();
Which will automatically update the postsCount in the userDocument. You could easily add other one to many counts this way. This just gives you ideas of how you can automate things. I also gave you another way to delete the events. You have to read each date to delete it, so it won't really save you to delete them later, just makes the function slower.
/**
* Adds a counter to a doc
* #param change - change ref
* #param context - context ref
* #param queryRef - the query ref to count
* #param countRef - the counter document ref
* #param countName - the name of the counter on the counter document
*/
const addCount = async function (change: any, context: any,
queryRef: any, countRef: any, countName: string) {
// events collection
const eventsDoc = '_events';
// simplify event type
const createDoc = change.after.exists && !change.before.exists;
// doc references
const countSnap = await countRef.get();
// increment size if field exists
if (countSnap.get(countName)) {
// createDoc or deleteDoc
const n = createDoc ? 1 : -1;
const i = admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment(n);
// create event for accurate increment
const eventRef = db.doc(`${eventsDoc}/${context.eventId}`);
return db.runTransaction(async (t: any): Promise<any> => {
const eventSnap = await t.get(eventRef);
// do nothing if event exists
if (eventSnap.exists) {
return null;
}
// add event and update size
await t.set(countRef, { [countName]: i }, { merge: true });
return t.set(eventRef, {
completed: admin.firestore.FieldValue.serverTimestamp()
});
}).catch((e: any) => {
console.log(e);
});
// otherwise count all docs in the collection and add size
} else {
return db.runTransaction(async (t: any): Promise<any> => {
// update size
const colSnap = await t.get(queryRef);
return t.set(countRef, { [countName]: colSnap.size }, { merge: true });
}).catch((e: any) => {
console.log(e);
});;
}
}
/**
* Deletes events over a day old
*/
const delEvents = async function () {
// get yesterday
const yesterday = new Date();
yesterday.setDate(yesterday.getDate() - 1);
const eventFilter = db.collection('_events').where('completed', '<=', yesterday);
const eventFilterSnap = await eventFilter.get();
eventFilterSnap.forEach(async (doc: any) => {
await doc.ref.delete();
});
return null;
}
I should also warn you that universal functions will run on every
onWrite call period. It may be cheaper to only run the function on
onCreate and on onDelete instances of your specific collections. Like
the noSQL database we are using, repeated code and data can save you
money.

There is no direct option available. You cant't do db.collection("CollectionName").count().
Below are the two ways by which you can find the count of number of documents within a collection.
1 :- Get all the documents in the collection and then get it's size.(Not the best Solution)
db.collection("CollectionName").get().subscribe(doc=>{
console.log(doc.size)
})
By using above code your document reads will be equal to the size of documents within a collection and that is the reason why one must avoid using above solution.
2:- Create a separate document with in your collection which will store the count of number of documents in the collection.(Best Solution)
db.collection("CollectionName").doc("counts")get().subscribe(doc=>{
console.log(doc.count)
})
Above we created a document with name counts to store all the count information.You can update the count document in the following way:-
Create a firestore triggers on the document counts
Increment the count property of counts document when a new document is created.
Decrement the count property of counts document when a document is deleted.
w.r.t price (Document Read = 1) and fast data retrieval the above solution is good.

A workaround is to:
write a counter in a firebase doc, which you increment within a transaction everytime you create a new entry
You store the count in a field of your new entry (i.e: position: 4).
Then you create an index on that field (position DESC).
You can do a skip+limit with a query.Where("position", "<" x).OrderBy("position", DESC)
Hope this helps!

I have try a lot with different approaches.
And finally, I improve one of the methods.
First you need to create a separate collection and save there all events.
Second you need to create a new lambda to be triggered by time. This lambda will Count events in event collection and clear event documents.
Code details in article.
https://medium.com/#ihor.malaniuk/how-to-count-documents-in-google-cloud-firestore-b0e65863aeca

one of the fast + money saver trick is that:-
make a doc and store a 'count' variable in firestore, when user add new doc in the collection, increase that variable, and when user delete a doc, decrease variable. e.g.
updateDoc(doc(db, "Count_collection", "Count_Doc"), {count: increment(1)});
note: use (-1) for decreasing, (1) for increasing count
How it save money and time:-
you(firebase) don't need to loop through the collection, nor browser needs to load whole collection to count number of docs.
all the counts are save in a doc of only one variable named "count" or whatever, so less than 1kb data is used, and it use only 1 reads in firebase firestore.

Solution using pagination with offset & limit:
public int collectionCount(String collection) {
Integer page = 0;
List<QueryDocumentSnapshot> snaps = new ArrayList<>();
findDocsByPage(collection, page, snaps);
return snaps.size();
}
public void findDocsByPage(String collection, Integer page,
List<QueryDocumentSnapshot> snaps) {
try {
Integer limit = 26000;
FieldPath[] selectedFields = new FieldPath[] { FieldPath.of("id") };
List<QueryDocumentSnapshot> snapshotPage;
snapshotPage = fireStore()
.collection(collection)
.select(selectedFields)
.offset(page * limit)
.limit(limit)
.get().get().getDocuments();
if (snapshotPage.size() > 0) {
snaps.addAll(snapshotPage);
page++;
findDocsByPage(collection, page, snaps);
}
} catch (InterruptedException | ExecutionException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
findDocsPage it's a recursive method to find all pages of collection
selectedFields for otimize query and get only id field instead full body of document
limit max size of each query page
page define inicial page for pagination
From the tests I did it worked well for collections with up to approximately 120k records!

Firestore is introducing a new Query.count() that fetches the count of a query without fetching the docs.
This would allow to simply query all collection items and get the count of that query.
Ref:
Firebase 10 iOS SDK
[JS SDK PR] (https://github.com/firebase/firebase-js-sdk/pull/6608)

There's a new build in function since version 9.11.0 called getCountFromServer(), which fetches the number of documents in the result set without actually downloading the documents.
https://firebase.google.com/docs/reference/js/firestore_#getcountfromserver

Took me a while to get this working based on some of the answers above, so I thought I'd share it for others to use. I hope it's useful.
'use strict';
const functions = require('firebase-functions');
const admin = require('firebase-admin');
admin.initializeApp();
const db = admin.firestore();
exports.countDocumentsChange = functions.firestore.document('library/{categoryId}/documents/{documentId}').onWrite((change, context) => {
const categoryId = context.params.categoryId;
const categoryRef = db.collection('library').doc(categoryId)
let FieldValue = require('firebase-admin').firestore.FieldValue;
if (!change.before.exists) {
// new document created : add one to count
categoryRef.update({numberOfDocs: FieldValue.increment(1)});
console.log("%s numberOfDocs incremented by 1", categoryId);
} else if (change.before.exists && change.after.exists) {
// updating existing document : Do nothing
} else if (!change.after.exists) {
// deleting document : subtract one from count
categoryRef.update({numberOfDocs: FieldValue.increment(-1)});
console.log("%s numberOfDocs decremented by 1", categoryId);
}
return 0;
});

This uses counting to create numeric unique ID. In my use, I will not be decrementing ever, even when the document that the ID is needed for is deleted.
Upon a collection creation that needs unique numeric value
Designate a collection appData with one document, set with .doc id only
Set uniqueNumericIDAmount to 0 in the firebase firestore console
Use doc.data().uniqueNumericIDAmount + 1 as the unique numeric id
Update appData collection uniqueNumericIDAmount with firebase.firestore.FieldValue.increment(1)
firebase
.firestore()
.collection("appData")
.doc("only")
.get()
.then(doc => {
var foo = doc.data();
foo.id = doc.id;
// your collection that needs a unique ID
firebase
.firestore()
.collection("uniqueNumericIDs")
.doc(user.uid)// user id in my case
.set({// I use this in login, so this document doesn't
// exist yet, otherwise use update instead of set
phone: this.state.phone,// whatever else you need
uniqueNumericID: foo.uniqueNumericIDAmount + 1
})
.then(() => {
// upon success of new ID, increment uniqueNumericIDAmount
firebase
.firestore()
.collection("appData")
.doc("only")
.update({
uniqueNumericIDAmount: firebase.firestore.FieldValue.increment(
1
)
})
.catch(err => {
console.log(err);
});
})
.catch(err => {
console.log(err);
});
});

var variable=0
variable=variable+querySnapshot.count
then if you are to use it on a String variable then
let stringVariable= String(variable)

Along with my npm package adv-firestore-functions above, you can also just use firestore rules to force a good counter:
Firestore Rules
function counter() {
let docPath = /databases/$(database)/documents/_counters/$(request.path[3]);
let afterCount = getAfter(docPath).data.count;
let beforeCount = get(docPath).data.count;
let addCount = afterCount == beforeCount + 1;
let subCount = afterCount == beforeCount - 1;
let newId = getAfter(docPath).data.docId == request.path[4];
let deleteDoc = request.method == 'delete';
let createDoc = request.method == 'create';
return (newId && subCount && deleteDoc) || (newId && addCount && createDoc);
}
function counterDoc() {
let doc = request.path[4];
let docId = request.resource.data.docId;
let afterCount = request.resource.data.count;
let beforeCount = resource.data.count;
let docPath = /databases/$(database)/documents/$(doc)/$(docId);
let createIdDoc = existsAfter(docPath) && !exists(docPath);
let deleteIdDoc = !existsAfter(docPath) && exists(docPath);
let addCount = afterCount == beforeCount + 1;
let subCount = afterCount == beforeCount - 1;
return (createIdDoc && addCount) || (deleteIdDoc && subCount);
}
and use them like so:
match /posts/{document} {
allow read;
allow update;
allow create: if counter();
allow delete: if counter();
}
match /_counters/{document} {
allow read;
allow write: if counterDoc();
}
Frontend
Replace your set and delete functions with these:
set
async setDocWithCounter(
ref: DocumentReference<DocumentData>,
data: {
[x: string]: any;
},
options: SetOptions): Promise<void> {
// counter collection
const counterCol = '_counters';
const col = ref.path.split('/').slice(0, -1).join('/');
const countRef = doc(this.afs, counterCol, col);
const countSnap = await getDoc(countRef);
const refSnap = await getDoc(ref);
// don't increase count if edit
if (refSnap.exists()) {
await setDoc(ref, data, options);
// increase count
} else {
const batch = writeBatch(this.afs);
batch.set(ref, data, options);
// if count exists
if (countSnap.exists()) {
batch.update(countRef, {
count: increment(1),
docId: ref.id
});
// create count
} else {
// will only run once, should not use
// for mature apps
const colRef = collection(this.afs, col);
const colSnap = await getDocs(colRef);
batch.set(countRef, {
count: colSnap.size + 1,
docId: ref.id
});
}
batch.commit();
}
}
delete
async delWithCounter(
ref: DocumentReference<DocumentData>
): Promise<void> {
// counter collection
const counterCol = '_counters';
const col = ref.path.split('/').slice(0, -1).join('/');
const countRef = doc(this.afs, counterCol, col);
const countSnap = await getDoc(countRef);
const batch = writeBatch(this.afs);
// if count exists
batch.delete(ref);
if (countSnap.exists()) {
batch.update(countRef, {
count: increment(-1),
docId: ref.id
});
}
/*
if ((countSnap.data() as any).count == 1) {
batch.delete(countRef);
}*/
batch.commit();
}
see here for more info...
J

This feature is now supported in FireStore, albeit in Beta.
Here are the official Firebase docs

With the new version of Firebase, you can now run aggregated queries!
Simply write
.count().get();
after your query.

As it stands, firebase only allows server-side count, like this
const collectionRef = db.collection('cities');
const snapshot = await collectionRef.count().get();
console.log(snapshot.data().count);
Please not this is for nodeJS

New feature available in Firebase/Firestore provides a count of documents in a collection:
See this thread to see how to achieve it, with an example.
How To Count Number of Documents in a Collection in Firebase Firestore With a WHERE query in react.js

According to this documentation Cloud Firestore supports the count() aggregation query and is available in preview.
The Flutter/Dart code was missing (at the time of writing this) so I played around with it and the following function seems to work:
Future<int> getCount(String path) async {
var collection = _fireStore.collection(path);
var countQuery = collection.count();
var snapShot = await countQuery.get(source: AggregateSource.server);
return snapShot.count;
}

firebaseFirestore.collection("...").addSnapshotListener(new EventListener<QuerySnapshot>() {
#Override
public void onEvent(QuerySnapshot documentSnapshots, FirebaseFirestoreException e) {
int Counter = documentSnapshots.size();
}
});

So my solution for this problem is a bit non-technical, not super precise, but good enough for me.
Those are my documents. As I have a lot of them (100k+) there are 'laws of big numbers' happening. I can assume that there is less-or-more equal number of items having id starting with 0, 1, 2, etc.
So what I do is I scroll my list till I get into id's starting with 1, or with 01, depending on how long you have to scroll
👆 here we are.
Now, having scrolled so far, I open the inspector and see how much did I scroll and divide it by height of single element
Had to scroll 82000px to get items with id starting with 1. Height of single element is 32px.
It means I have 2500 with id starting with 0, so now I multiply it by number of possible 'starting char'. In firebase it can be A-Z, a-z, 0-9 which means it's 24 + 24 + 10 = 58.
It means I have ~~2500*58 so it gives roughly 145000 items in my collection.
Summarizing: What is wrong with you firebase?

Related

How to count the number of documents in a firebase collection using dart [duplicate]

Is it possible to count how many items a collection has using the new Firebase database, Cloud Firestore?
If so, how do I do that?
2023 Update
Firestore now supports aggregation queries.
Node SDK
const collectionRef = db.collection('cities');
const snapshot = await collectionRef.count().get();
console.log(snapshot.data().count);
Web v9 SDK
const coll = collection(db, "cities");
const snapshot = await getCountFromServer(coll);
console.log('count: ', snapshot.data().count);
Notable Limitation - You cannot currently use count() queries with real-time listeners and offline queries. (See below for alternatives)
Pricing - Pricing depends on the number of matched index entries rather than the number of documents. One index entry contains multiple documents making this cheaper than counting documents individually.
Old Answer
As with many questions, the answer is - It depends.
You should be very careful when handling large amounts of data on the front end. On top of making your front end feel sluggish, Firestore also charges you $0.60 per million reads you make.
Small collection (less than 100 documents)
Use with care - Frontend user experience may take a hit
Handling this on the front end should be fine as long as you are not doing too much logic with this returned array.
db.collection('...').get().then(snap => {
size = snap.size // will return the collection size
});
Medium collection (100 to 1000 documents)
Use with care - Firestore read invocations may cost a lot
Handling this on the front end is not feasible as it has too much potential to slow down the users system. We should handle this logic server side and only return the size.
The drawback to this method is you are still invoking Firestore reads (equal to the size of your collection), which in the long run may end up costing you more than expected.
Cloud Function:
db.collection('...').get().then(snap => {
res.status(200).send({length: snap.size});
});
Front End:
yourHttpClient.post(yourCloudFunctionUrl).toPromise().then(snap => {
size = snap.length // will return the collection size
})
Large collection (1000+ documents)
Most scalable solution
FieldValue.increment()
As of April 2019 Firestore now allows incrementing counters, completely atomically, and without reading the data prior. This ensures we have correct counter values even when updating from multiple sources simultaneously (previously solved using transactions), while also reducing the number of database reads we perform.
By listening to any document deletes or creates we can add to or remove from a count field that is sitting in the database.
See the firestore docs - Distributed Counters
Or have a look at Data Aggregation by Jeff Delaney. His guides are truly fantastic for anyone using AngularFire but his lessons should carry over to other frameworks as well.
Cloud Function:
export const documentWriteListener = functions.firestore
.document('collection/{documentUid}')
.onWrite((change, context) => {
if (!change.before.exists) {
// New document Created : add one to count
db.doc(docRef).update({ numberOfDocs: FieldValue.increment(1) });
} else if (change.before.exists && change.after.exists) {
// Updating existing document : Do nothing
} else if (!change.after.exists) {
// Deleting document : subtract one from count
db.doc(docRef).update({ numberOfDocs: FieldValue.increment(-1) });
}
return;
});
Now on the frontend you can just query this numberOfDocs field to get the size of the collection.
Simplest way to do so is to read the size of a "querySnapshot".
db.collection("cities").get().then(function(querySnapshot) {
console.log(querySnapshot.size);
});
You can also read the length of the docs array inside "querySnapshot".
querySnapshot.docs.length;
Or if a "querySnapshot" is empty by reading the empty value, which will return a boolean value.
querySnapshot.empty;
As far as I know there is no build-in solution for this and it is only possible in the node sdk right now.
If you have a
db.collection('someCollection')
you can use
.select([fields])
to define which field you want to select. If you do an empty select() you will just get an array of document references.
example:
db.collection('someCollection').select().get().then(
(snapshot) => console.log(snapshot.docs.length)
);
This solution is only a optimization for the worst case of downloading all documents and does not scale on large collections!
Also have a look at this:
How to get a count of number of documents in a collection with Cloud Firestore
Aggregate count query just landed as a preview in Firestore.
Announced at the 2022 Firebase Summit: https://firebase.blog/posts/2022/10/whats-new-at-Firebase-Sumit-2022
Excerpt:
[Developer Preview] Count() function: With the new count function in
Firstore [sic], you can now get the count of the matching documents when you
run a query or read from a collection, without loading the actual
documents, which saves you a lot of time.
Code sample they showed at the summit:
During the Q&A, someone asked about pricing for aggregated queries, and the answer the Firebase team provided was that it'll cost 1 / 1000th of the price of a read (rounded up to the nearest read, see comments below for more details), but will count all records that are part of the aggregate.
Be careful counting number of documents for large collections. It is a little bit complex with firestore database if you want to have a precalculated counter for every collection.
Code like this doesn't work in this case:
export const customerCounterListener =
functions.firestore.document('customers/{customerId}')
.onWrite((change, context) => {
// on create
if (!change.before.exists && change.after.exists) {
return firestore
.collection('metadatas')
.doc('customers')
.get()
.then(docSnap =>
docSnap.ref.set({
count: docSnap.data().count + 1
}))
// on delete
} else if (change.before.exists && !change.after.exists) {
return firestore
.collection('metadatas')
.doc('customers')
.get()
.then(docSnap =>
docSnap.ref.set({
count: docSnap.data().count - 1
}))
}
return null;
});
The reason is because every cloud firestore trigger has to be idempotent, as firestore documentation say: https://firebase.google.com/docs/functions/firestore-events#limitations_and_guarantees
Solution
So, in order to prevent multiple executions of your code, you need to manage with events and transactions. This is my particular way to handle large collection counters:
const executeOnce = (change, context, task) => {
const eventRef = firestore.collection('events').doc(context.eventId);
return firestore.runTransaction(t =>
t
.get(eventRef)
.then(docSnap => (docSnap.exists ? null : task(t)))
.then(() => t.set(eventRef, { processed: true }))
);
};
const documentCounter = collectionName => (change, context) =>
executeOnce(change, context, t => {
// on create
if (!change.before.exists && change.after.exists) {
return t
.get(firestore.collection('metadatas')
.doc(collectionName))
.then(docSnap =>
t.set(docSnap.ref, {
count: ((docSnap.data() && docSnap.data().count) || 0) + 1
}));
// on delete
} else if (change.before.exists && !change.after.exists) {
return t
.get(firestore.collection('metadatas')
.doc(collectionName))
.then(docSnap =>
t.set(docSnap.ref, {
count: docSnap.data().count - 1
}));
}
return null;
});
Use cases here:
/**
* Count documents in articles collection.
*/
exports.articlesCounter = functions.firestore
.document('articles/{id}')
.onWrite(documentCounter('articles'));
/**
* Count documents in customers collection.
*/
exports.customersCounter = functions.firestore
.document('customers/{id}')
.onWrite(documentCounter('customers'));
As you can see, the key to prevent multiple execution is the property called eventId in the context object. If the function has been handled many times for the same event, the event id will be the same in all cases. Unfortunately, you must have "events" collection in your database.
In 2020 this is still not available in the Firebase SDK however it is available in Firebase Extensions (Beta) however it's pretty complex to setup and use...
A reasonable approach
Helpers... (create/delete seems redundant but is cheaper than onUpdate)
export const onCreateCounter = () => async (
change,
context
) => {
const collectionPath = change.ref.parent.path;
const statsDoc = db.doc("counters/" + collectionPath);
const countDoc = {};
countDoc["count"] = admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment(1);
await statsDoc.set(countDoc, { merge: true });
};
export const onDeleteCounter = () => async (
change,
context
) => {
const collectionPath = change.ref.parent.path;
const statsDoc = db.doc("counters/" + collectionPath);
const countDoc = {};
countDoc["count"] = admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment(-1);
await statsDoc.set(countDoc, { merge: true });
};
export interface CounterPath {
watch: string;
name: string;
}
Exported Firestore hooks
export const Counters: CounterPath[] = [
{
name: "count_buildings",
watch: "buildings/{id2}"
},
{
name: "count_buildings_subcollections",
watch: "buildings/{id2}/{id3}/{id4}"
}
];
Counters.forEach(item => {
exports[item.name + '_create'] = functions.firestore
.document(item.watch)
.onCreate(onCreateCounter());
exports[item.name + '_delete'] = functions.firestore
.document(item.watch)
.onDelete(onDeleteCounter());
});
In action
The building root collection and all sub collections will be tracked.
Here under the /counters/ root path
Now collection counts will update automatically and eventually! If you need a count, just use the collection path and prefix it with counters.
const collectionPath = 'buildings/138faicnjasjoa89/buildingContacts';
const collectionCount = await db
.doc('counters/' + collectionPath)
.get()
.then(snap => snap.get('count'));
Limitations
As this approach uses a single database and document, it is limited to the Firestore constraint of 1 Update per Second for each counter. It will be eventually consistent, but in cases where large amounts of documents are added/removed the counter will lag behind the actual collection count.
I agree with #Matthew, it will cost a lot if you perform such query.
[ADVICE FOR DEVELOPERS BEFORE STARTING THEIR PROJECTS]
Since we have foreseen this situation at the beginning, we can actually make a collection namely counters with a document to store all the counters in a field with type number.
For example:
For each CRUD operation on the collection, update the counter document:
When you create a new collection/subcollection: (+1 in the counter) [1 write operation]
When you delete a collection/subcollection: (-1 in the counter) [1 write operation]
When you update an existing collection/subcollection, do nothing on the counter document: (0)
When you read an existing collection/subcollection, do nothing on the counter document: (0)
Next time, when you want to get the number of collection, you just need to query/point to the document field. [1 read operation]
In addition, you can store the collections name in an array, but this will be tricky, the condition of array in firebase is shown as below:
// we send this
['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e']
// Firebase stores this
{0: 'a', 1: 'b', 2: 'c', 3: 'd', 4: 'e'}
// since the keys are numeric and sequential,
// if we query the data, we get this
['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e']
// however, if we then delete a, b, and d,
// they are no longer mostly sequential, so
// we do not get back an array
{2: 'c', 4: 'e'}
So, if you are not going to delete the collection , you can actually use array to store list of collections name instead of querying all the collection every time.
Hope it helps!
As of October 2022, Firestore has introduced a count() method on the client SDKs. Now you can count for a query without downloads.
For 1000 documents, it will charge you for 1 document read.
Web (v9)
Introduced in Firebase 9.11.0:
const collectionRef = collection(db, "cities");
const snapshot = await getCountFromServer(collectionRef);
console.log('count: ', snapshot.data().count);
Web V8
Not Available.
Node (Admin)
const collectionRef = db.collection('cities');
const snapshot = await collectionRef.count().get();
console.log(snapshot.data().count);
Android (Kotlin)
Introduced in firestore v24.4.0 (BoM 31.0.0):
val query = db.collection("cities")
val countQuery = query.count()
countQuery.get(AggregateSource.SERVER).addOnCompleteListener { task ->
if (task.isSuccessful) {
val snapshot = task.result
Log.d(TAG, "Count: ${snapshot.count}")
} else {
Log.d(TAG, "Count failed: ", task.getException())
}
}
Apple Platforms (Swift)
Introduced in Firestore v10.0.0:
do {
let query = db.collection("cities")
let countQuery = query.countAggregateQuery
let snapshot = try await countQuery.aggregation(source: AggregateSource.server)
print(snapshot.count)
} catch {
print(error)
}
Increment a counter using admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment:
exports.onInstanceCreate = functions.firestore.document('projects/{projectId}/instances/{instanceId}')
.onCreate((snap, context) =>
db.collection('projects').doc(context.params.projectId).update({
instanceCount: admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment(1),
})
);
exports.onInstanceDelete = functions.firestore.document('projects/{projectId}/instances/{instanceId}')
.onDelete((snap, context) =>
db.collection('projects').doc(context.params.projectId).update({
instanceCount: admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment(-1),
})
);
In this example we increment an instanceCount field in the project each time a document is added to the instances sub collection. If the field doesn't exist yet it will be created and incremented to 1.
The incrementation is transactional internally but you should use a distributed counter if you need to increment more frequently than every 1 second.
It's often preferable to implement onCreate and onDelete rather than onWrite as you will call onWrite for updates which means you are spending more money on unnecessary function invocations (if you update the docs in your collection).
No, there is no built-in support for aggregation queries right now. However there are a few things you could do.
The first is documented here. You can use transactions or cloud functions to maintain aggregate information:
This example shows how to use a function to keep track of the number of ratings in a subcollection, as well as the average rating.
exports.aggregateRatings = firestore
.document('restaurants/{restId}/ratings/{ratingId}')
.onWrite(event => {
// Get value of the newly added rating
var ratingVal = event.data.get('rating');
// Get a reference to the restaurant
var restRef = db.collection('restaurants').document(event.params.restId);
// Update aggregations in a transaction
return db.transaction(transaction => {
return transaction.get(restRef).then(restDoc => {
// Compute new number of ratings
var newNumRatings = restDoc.data('numRatings') + 1;
// Compute new average rating
var oldRatingTotal = restDoc.data('avgRating') * restDoc.data('numRatings');
var newAvgRating = (oldRatingTotal + ratingVal) / newNumRatings;
// Update restaurant info
return transaction.update(restRef, {
avgRating: newAvgRating,
numRatings: newNumRatings
});
});
});
});
The solution that jbb mentioned is also useful if you only want to count documents infrequently. Make sure to use the select() statement to avoid downloading all of each document (that's a lot of bandwidth when you only need a count). select() is only available in the server SDKs for now so that solution won't work in a mobile app.
UPDATE 11/20
I created an npm package for easy access to a counter function: https://code.build/p/9DicAmrnRoK4uk62Hw1bEV/firestore-counters
I created a universal function using all these ideas to handle all counter situations (except queries).
The only exception would be when doing so many writes a second, it
slows you down. An example would be likes on a trending post. It is
overkill on a blog post, for example, and will cost you more. I
suggest creating a separate function in that case using shards:
https://firebase.google.com/docs/firestore/solutions/counters
// trigger collections
exports.myFunction = functions.firestore
.document('{colId}/{docId}')
.onWrite(async (change: any, context: any) => {
return runCounter(change, context);
});
// trigger sub-collections
exports.mySubFunction = functions.firestore
.document('{colId}/{docId}/{subColId}/{subDocId}')
.onWrite(async (change: any, context: any) => {
return runCounter(change, context);
});
// add change the count
const runCounter = async function (change: any, context: any) {
const col = context.params.colId;
const eventsDoc = '_events';
const countersDoc = '_counters';
// ignore helper collections
if (col.startsWith('_')) {
return null;
}
// simplify event types
const createDoc = change.after.exists && !change.before.exists;
const updateDoc = change.before.exists && change.after.exists;
if (updateDoc) {
return null;
}
// check for sub collection
const isSubCol = context.params.subDocId;
const parentDoc = `${countersDoc}/${context.params.colId}`;
const countDoc = isSubCol
? `${parentDoc}/${context.params.docId}/${context.params.subColId}`
: `${parentDoc}`;
// collection references
const countRef = db.doc(countDoc);
const countSnap = await countRef.get();
// increment size if doc exists
if (countSnap.exists) {
// createDoc or deleteDoc
const n = createDoc ? 1 : -1;
const i = admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment(n);
// create event for accurate increment
const eventRef = db.doc(`${eventsDoc}/${context.eventId}`);
return db.runTransaction(async (t: any): Promise<any> => {
const eventSnap = await t.get(eventRef);
// do nothing if event exists
if (eventSnap.exists) {
return null;
}
// add event and update size
await t.update(countRef, { count: i });
return t.set(eventRef, {
completed: admin.firestore.FieldValue.serverTimestamp()
});
}).catch((e: any) => {
console.log(e);
});
// otherwise count all docs in the collection and add size
} else {
const colRef = db.collection(change.after.ref.parent.path);
return db.runTransaction(async (t: any): Promise<any> => {
// update size
const colSnap = await t.get(colRef);
return t.set(countRef, { count: colSnap.size });
}).catch((e: any) => {
console.log(e);
});;
}
}
This handles events, increments, and transactions. The beauty in this, is that if you are not sure about the accuracy of a document (probably while still in beta), you can delete the counter to have it automatically add them up on the next trigger. Yes, this costs, so don't delete it otherwise.
Same kind of thing to get the count:
const collectionPath = 'buildings/138faicnjasjoa89/buildingContacts';
const colSnap = await db.doc('_counters/' + collectionPath).get();
const count = colSnap.get('count');
Also, you may want to create a cron job (scheduled function) to remove old events to save money on database storage. You need at least a blaze plan, and there may be some more configuration. You could run it every sunday at 11pm, for example.
https://firebase.google.com/docs/functions/schedule-functions
This is untested, but should work with a few tweaks:
exports.scheduledFunctionCrontab = functions.pubsub.schedule('5 11 * * *')
.timeZone('America/New_York')
.onRun(async (context) => {
// get yesterday
const yesterday = new Date();
yesterday.setDate(yesterday.getDate() - 1);
const eventFilter = db.collection('_events').where('completed', '<=', yesterday);
const eventFilterSnap = await eventFilter.get();
eventFilterSnap.forEach(async (doc: any) => {
await doc.ref.delete();
});
return null;
});
And last, don't forget to protect the collections in firestore.rules:
match /_counters/{document} {
allow read;
allow write: if false;
}
match /_events/{document} {
allow read, write: if false;
}
Update: Queries
Adding to my other answer if you want to automate query counts as well, you can use this modified code in your cloud function:
if (col === 'posts') {
// counter reference - user doc ref
const userRef = after ? after.userDoc : before.userDoc;
// query reference
const postsQuery = db.collection('posts').where('userDoc', "==", userRef);
// add the count - postsCount on userDoc
await addCount(change, context, postsQuery, userRef, 'postsCount');
}
return delEvents();
Which will automatically update the postsCount in the userDocument. You could easily add other one to many counts this way. This just gives you ideas of how you can automate things. I also gave you another way to delete the events. You have to read each date to delete it, so it won't really save you to delete them later, just makes the function slower.
/**
* Adds a counter to a doc
* #param change - change ref
* #param context - context ref
* #param queryRef - the query ref to count
* #param countRef - the counter document ref
* #param countName - the name of the counter on the counter document
*/
const addCount = async function (change: any, context: any,
queryRef: any, countRef: any, countName: string) {
// events collection
const eventsDoc = '_events';
// simplify event type
const createDoc = change.after.exists && !change.before.exists;
// doc references
const countSnap = await countRef.get();
// increment size if field exists
if (countSnap.get(countName)) {
// createDoc or deleteDoc
const n = createDoc ? 1 : -1;
const i = admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment(n);
// create event for accurate increment
const eventRef = db.doc(`${eventsDoc}/${context.eventId}`);
return db.runTransaction(async (t: any): Promise<any> => {
const eventSnap = await t.get(eventRef);
// do nothing if event exists
if (eventSnap.exists) {
return null;
}
// add event and update size
await t.set(countRef, { [countName]: i }, { merge: true });
return t.set(eventRef, {
completed: admin.firestore.FieldValue.serverTimestamp()
});
}).catch((e: any) => {
console.log(e);
});
// otherwise count all docs in the collection and add size
} else {
return db.runTransaction(async (t: any): Promise<any> => {
// update size
const colSnap = await t.get(queryRef);
return t.set(countRef, { [countName]: colSnap.size }, { merge: true });
}).catch((e: any) => {
console.log(e);
});;
}
}
/**
* Deletes events over a day old
*/
const delEvents = async function () {
// get yesterday
const yesterday = new Date();
yesterday.setDate(yesterday.getDate() - 1);
const eventFilter = db.collection('_events').where('completed', '<=', yesterday);
const eventFilterSnap = await eventFilter.get();
eventFilterSnap.forEach(async (doc: any) => {
await doc.ref.delete();
});
return null;
}
I should also warn you that universal functions will run on every
onWrite call period. It may be cheaper to only run the function on
onCreate and on onDelete instances of your specific collections. Like
the noSQL database we are using, repeated code and data can save you
money.
There is no direct option available. You cant't do db.collection("CollectionName").count().
Below are the two ways by which you can find the count of number of documents within a collection.
1 :- Get all the documents in the collection and then get it's size.(Not the best Solution)
db.collection("CollectionName").get().subscribe(doc=>{
console.log(doc.size)
})
By using above code your document reads will be equal to the size of documents within a collection and that is the reason why one must avoid using above solution.
2:- Create a separate document with in your collection which will store the count of number of documents in the collection.(Best Solution)
db.collection("CollectionName").doc("counts")get().subscribe(doc=>{
console.log(doc.count)
})
Above we created a document with name counts to store all the count information.You can update the count document in the following way:-
Create a firestore triggers on the document counts
Increment the count property of counts document when a new document is created.
Decrement the count property of counts document when a document is deleted.
w.r.t price (Document Read = 1) and fast data retrieval the above solution is good.
A workaround is to:
write a counter in a firebase doc, which you increment within a transaction everytime you create a new entry
You store the count in a field of your new entry (i.e: position: 4).
Then you create an index on that field (position DESC).
You can do a skip+limit with a query.Where("position", "<" x).OrderBy("position", DESC)
Hope this helps!
I have try a lot with different approaches.
And finally, I improve one of the methods.
First you need to create a separate collection and save there all events.
Second you need to create a new lambda to be triggered by time. This lambda will Count events in event collection and clear event documents.
Code details in article.
https://medium.com/#ihor.malaniuk/how-to-count-documents-in-google-cloud-firestore-b0e65863aeca
one of the fast + money saver trick is that:-
make a doc and store a 'count' variable in firestore, when user add new doc in the collection, increase that variable, and when user delete a doc, decrease variable. e.g.
updateDoc(doc(db, "Count_collection", "Count_Doc"), {count: increment(1)});
note: use (-1) for decreasing, (1) for increasing count
How it save money and time:-
you(firebase) don't need to loop through the collection, nor browser needs to load whole collection to count number of docs.
all the counts are save in a doc of only one variable named "count" or whatever, so less than 1kb data is used, and it use only 1 reads in firebase firestore.
Solution using pagination with offset & limit:
public int collectionCount(String collection) {
Integer page = 0;
List<QueryDocumentSnapshot> snaps = new ArrayList<>();
findDocsByPage(collection, page, snaps);
return snaps.size();
}
public void findDocsByPage(String collection, Integer page,
List<QueryDocumentSnapshot> snaps) {
try {
Integer limit = 26000;
FieldPath[] selectedFields = new FieldPath[] { FieldPath.of("id") };
List<QueryDocumentSnapshot> snapshotPage;
snapshotPage = fireStore()
.collection(collection)
.select(selectedFields)
.offset(page * limit)
.limit(limit)
.get().get().getDocuments();
if (snapshotPage.size() > 0) {
snaps.addAll(snapshotPage);
page++;
findDocsByPage(collection, page, snaps);
}
} catch (InterruptedException | ExecutionException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
findDocsPage it's a recursive method to find all pages of collection
selectedFields for otimize query and get only id field instead full body of document
limit max size of each query page
page define inicial page for pagination
From the tests I did it worked well for collections with up to approximately 120k records!
Firestore is introducing a new Query.count() that fetches the count of a query without fetching the docs.
This would allow to simply query all collection items and get the count of that query.
Ref:
Firebase 10 iOS SDK
[JS SDK PR] (https://github.com/firebase/firebase-js-sdk/pull/6608)
There's a new build in function since version 9.11.0 called getCountFromServer(), which fetches the number of documents in the result set without actually downloading the documents.
https://firebase.google.com/docs/reference/js/firestore_#getcountfromserver
Took me a while to get this working based on some of the answers above, so I thought I'd share it for others to use. I hope it's useful.
'use strict';
const functions = require('firebase-functions');
const admin = require('firebase-admin');
admin.initializeApp();
const db = admin.firestore();
exports.countDocumentsChange = functions.firestore.document('library/{categoryId}/documents/{documentId}').onWrite((change, context) => {
const categoryId = context.params.categoryId;
const categoryRef = db.collection('library').doc(categoryId)
let FieldValue = require('firebase-admin').firestore.FieldValue;
if (!change.before.exists) {
// new document created : add one to count
categoryRef.update({numberOfDocs: FieldValue.increment(1)});
console.log("%s numberOfDocs incremented by 1", categoryId);
} else if (change.before.exists && change.after.exists) {
// updating existing document : Do nothing
} else if (!change.after.exists) {
// deleting document : subtract one from count
categoryRef.update({numberOfDocs: FieldValue.increment(-1)});
console.log("%s numberOfDocs decremented by 1", categoryId);
}
return 0;
});
This uses counting to create numeric unique ID. In my use, I will not be decrementing ever, even when the document that the ID is needed for is deleted.
Upon a collection creation that needs unique numeric value
Designate a collection appData with one document, set with .doc id only
Set uniqueNumericIDAmount to 0 in the firebase firestore console
Use doc.data().uniqueNumericIDAmount + 1 as the unique numeric id
Update appData collection uniqueNumericIDAmount with firebase.firestore.FieldValue.increment(1)
firebase
.firestore()
.collection("appData")
.doc("only")
.get()
.then(doc => {
var foo = doc.data();
foo.id = doc.id;
// your collection that needs a unique ID
firebase
.firestore()
.collection("uniqueNumericIDs")
.doc(user.uid)// user id in my case
.set({// I use this in login, so this document doesn't
// exist yet, otherwise use update instead of set
phone: this.state.phone,// whatever else you need
uniqueNumericID: foo.uniqueNumericIDAmount + 1
})
.then(() => {
// upon success of new ID, increment uniqueNumericIDAmount
firebase
.firestore()
.collection("appData")
.doc("only")
.update({
uniqueNumericIDAmount: firebase.firestore.FieldValue.increment(
1
)
})
.catch(err => {
console.log(err);
});
})
.catch(err => {
console.log(err);
});
});
var variable=0
variable=variable+querySnapshot.count
then if you are to use it on a String variable then
let stringVariable= String(variable)
Along with my npm package adv-firestore-functions above, you can also just use firestore rules to force a good counter:
Firestore Rules
function counter() {
let docPath = /databases/$(database)/documents/_counters/$(request.path[3]);
let afterCount = getAfter(docPath).data.count;
let beforeCount = get(docPath).data.count;
let addCount = afterCount == beforeCount + 1;
let subCount = afterCount == beforeCount - 1;
let newId = getAfter(docPath).data.docId == request.path[4];
let deleteDoc = request.method == 'delete';
let createDoc = request.method == 'create';
return (newId && subCount && deleteDoc) || (newId && addCount && createDoc);
}
function counterDoc() {
let doc = request.path[4];
let docId = request.resource.data.docId;
let afterCount = request.resource.data.count;
let beforeCount = resource.data.count;
let docPath = /databases/$(database)/documents/$(doc)/$(docId);
let createIdDoc = existsAfter(docPath) && !exists(docPath);
let deleteIdDoc = !existsAfter(docPath) && exists(docPath);
let addCount = afterCount == beforeCount + 1;
let subCount = afterCount == beforeCount - 1;
return (createIdDoc && addCount) || (deleteIdDoc && subCount);
}
and use them like so:
match /posts/{document} {
allow read;
allow update;
allow create: if counter();
allow delete: if counter();
}
match /_counters/{document} {
allow read;
allow write: if counterDoc();
}
Frontend
Replace your set and delete functions with these:
set
async setDocWithCounter(
ref: DocumentReference<DocumentData>,
data: {
[x: string]: any;
},
options: SetOptions): Promise<void> {
// counter collection
const counterCol = '_counters';
const col = ref.path.split('/').slice(0, -1).join('/');
const countRef = doc(this.afs, counterCol, col);
const countSnap = await getDoc(countRef);
const refSnap = await getDoc(ref);
// don't increase count if edit
if (refSnap.exists()) {
await setDoc(ref, data, options);
// increase count
} else {
const batch = writeBatch(this.afs);
batch.set(ref, data, options);
// if count exists
if (countSnap.exists()) {
batch.update(countRef, {
count: increment(1),
docId: ref.id
});
// create count
} else {
// will only run once, should not use
// for mature apps
const colRef = collection(this.afs, col);
const colSnap = await getDocs(colRef);
batch.set(countRef, {
count: colSnap.size + 1,
docId: ref.id
});
}
batch.commit();
}
}
delete
async delWithCounter(
ref: DocumentReference<DocumentData>
): Promise<void> {
// counter collection
const counterCol = '_counters';
const col = ref.path.split('/').slice(0, -1).join('/');
const countRef = doc(this.afs, counterCol, col);
const countSnap = await getDoc(countRef);
const batch = writeBatch(this.afs);
// if count exists
batch.delete(ref);
if (countSnap.exists()) {
batch.update(countRef, {
count: increment(-1),
docId: ref.id
});
}
/*
if ((countSnap.data() as any).count == 1) {
batch.delete(countRef);
}*/
batch.commit();
}
see here for more info...
J
This feature is now supported in FireStore, albeit in Beta.
Here are the official Firebase docs
With the new version of Firebase, you can now run aggregated queries!
Simply write
.count().get();
after your query.
As it stands, firebase only allows server-side count, like this
const collectionRef = db.collection('cities');
const snapshot = await collectionRef.count().get();
console.log(snapshot.data().count);
Please not this is for nodeJS
New feature available in Firebase/Firestore provides a count of documents in a collection:
See this thread to see how to achieve it, with an example.
How To Count Number of Documents in a Collection in Firebase Firestore With a WHERE query in react.js
According to this documentation Cloud Firestore supports the count() aggregation query and is available in preview.
The Flutter/Dart code was missing (at the time of writing this) so I played around with it and the following function seems to work:
Future<int> getCount(String path) async {
var collection = _fireStore.collection(path);
var countQuery = collection.count();
var snapShot = await countQuery.get(source: AggregateSource.server);
return snapShot.count;
}
firebaseFirestore.collection("...").addSnapshotListener(new EventListener<QuerySnapshot>() {
#Override
public void onEvent(QuerySnapshot documentSnapshots, FirebaseFirestoreException e) {
int Counter = documentSnapshots.size();
}
});
So my solution for this problem is a bit non-technical, not super precise, but good enough for me.
Those are my documents. As I have a lot of them (100k+) there are 'laws of big numbers' happening. I can assume that there is less-or-more equal number of items having id starting with 0, 1, 2, etc.
So what I do is I scroll my list till I get into id's starting with 1, or with 01, depending on how long you have to scroll
👆 here we are.
Now, having scrolled so far, I open the inspector and see how much did I scroll and divide it by height of single element
Had to scroll 82000px to get items with id starting with 1. Height of single element is 32px.
It means I have 2500 with id starting with 0, so now I multiply it by number of possible 'starting char'. In firebase it can be A-Z, a-z, 0-9 which means it's 24 + 24 + 10 = 58.
It means I have ~~2500*58 so it gives roughly 145000 items in my collection.
Summarizing: What is wrong with you firebase?

Is this the best way to update all documents in a Firestore collection?

There are similar questions and answers out there, but none that seem concerned about concurrency or using transactions when iterating over the entire collection.
To ensure that I'm not reading one version of a document, updating it, then clobbering some change that happened since the read, I'd like to use transactions.
Firestore transactions are limited to 500 updates.
My approach is to use pagination, getting 500 document references at a time.
Then use those refs with getAll within a transaction to guarantee no concurrent modification can happen.
Is it OK/wise to pass 500 refs to getAll like this?
Is this approach efficient, from a performance and cost perspective?
Pseudo-code (TypeScript-like)
const pageSize = 500;
let lastSnapshot = null;
let count = 0;
do {
// Get up to 500 (pageSize) document references
let query = firestore.collection('myCollection').limit(pageSize);
if (lastSnapshot) {
myDataQuery = myDataQuery.startAfter(lastSnapshot);
}
const snapshots = await playerPlotQuery.get();
const refs = snapshots.docs.map(d => d.ref);
// Start a transaction
await firestore.runTransaction(async transaction => {
// Get all the documents again, this time in a transaction
const snapshots = await transaction.getAll(...refs);
for (const snapshot of snapshots) {
// Perform some update on each document
transaction.update(snapshot.ref,{someField: 0, anotherField: "foo"});
}
});
} while (refs.length === pageSize);
Because you are making use of Transaction#getAll(), I'm going to assume you are using the Node client for Firestore. This means you have access to Transaction#get() and can execute the query directly inside the transaction. This change alone cuts your document reads in half because you are no longer checking them twice.
const pageSize = 500;
const baseQuery = db.collection('myCollection').limit(pageSize); // highly recommend using orderBy here on something like a 'creationTime' property
let totalCount = 0, pageCount = 0;
do {
const pageQuery = lastSnapshot ? baseQuery.startAfter(lastSnapshot) : baseQuery;
totalCount += pageCount = await db.runTransaction(async (transaction) => {
const querySnapshot = await transaction.get(pageQuery);
querySnapshot.forEach(docSnap => {
transaction.update(docSnap.ref, { someField: 0, anotherField: "foo" });
lastSnapshot = docSnap;
});
return querySnapshot.size; // return the page count inside the runTransaction's Promise
});
} while (pageCount === pageSize);

Is there a way to know the total number of documents in the Firestore db? [duplicate]

Is it possible to count how many items a collection has using the new Firebase database, Cloud Firestore?
If so, how do I do that?
2023 Update
Firestore now supports aggregation queries.
Node SDK
const collectionRef = db.collection('cities');
const snapshot = await collectionRef.count().get();
console.log(snapshot.data().count);
Web v9 SDK
const coll = collection(db, "cities");
const snapshot = await getCountFromServer(coll);
console.log('count: ', snapshot.data().count);
Notable Limitation - You cannot currently use count() queries with real-time listeners and offline queries. (See below for alternatives)
Pricing - Pricing depends on the number of matched index entries rather than the number of documents. One index entry contains multiple documents making this cheaper than counting documents individually.
Old Answer
As with many questions, the answer is - It depends.
You should be very careful when handling large amounts of data on the front end. On top of making your front end feel sluggish, Firestore also charges you $0.60 per million reads you make.
Small collection (less than 100 documents)
Use with care - Frontend user experience may take a hit
Handling this on the front end should be fine as long as you are not doing too much logic with this returned array.
db.collection('...').get().then(snap => {
size = snap.size // will return the collection size
});
Medium collection (100 to 1000 documents)
Use with care - Firestore read invocations may cost a lot
Handling this on the front end is not feasible as it has too much potential to slow down the users system. We should handle this logic server side and only return the size.
The drawback to this method is you are still invoking Firestore reads (equal to the size of your collection), which in the long run may end up costing you more than expected.
Cloud Function:
db.collection('...').get().then(snap => {
res.status(200).send({length: snap.size});
});
Front End:
yourHttpClient.post(yourCloudFunctionUrl).toPromise().then(snap => {
size = snap.length // will return the collection size
})
Large collection (1000+ documents)
Most scalable solution
FieldValue.increment()
As of April 2019 Firestore now allows incrementing counters, completely atomically, and without reading the data prior. This ensures we have correct counter values even when updating from multiple sources simultaneously (previously solved using transactions), while also reducing the number of database reads we perform.
By listening to any document deletes or creates we can add to or remove from a count field that is sitting in the database.
See the firestore docs - Distributed Counters
Or have a look at Data Aggregation by Jeff Delaney. His guides are truly fantastic for anyone using AngularFire but his lessons should carry over to other frameworks as well.
Cloud Function:
export const documentWriteListener = functions.firestore
.document('collection/{documentUid}')
.onWrite((change, context) => {
if (!change.before.exists) {
// New document Created : add one to count
db.doc(docRef).update({ numberOfDocs: FieldValue.increment(1) });
} else if (change.before.exists && change.after.exists) {
// Updating existing document : Do nothing
} else if (!change.after.exists) {
// Deleting document : subtract one from count
db.doc(docRef).update({ numberOfDocs: FieldValue.increment(-1) });
}
return;
});
Now on the frontend you can just query this numberOfDocs field to get the size of the collection.
Simplest way to do so is to read the size of a "querySnapshot".
db.collection("cities").get().then(function(querySnapshot) {
console.log(querySnapshot.size);
});
You can also read the length of the docs array inside "querySnapshot".
querySnapshot.docs.length;
Or if a "querySnapshot" is empty by reading the empty value, which will return a boolean value.
querySnapshot.empty;
As far as I know there is no build-in solution for this and it is only possible in the node sdk right now.
If you have a
db.collection('someCollection')
you can use
.select([fields])
to define which field you want to select. If you do an empty select() you will just get an array of document references.
example:
db.collection('someCollection').select().get().then(
(snapshot) => console.log(snapshot.docs.length)
);
This solution is only a optimization for the worst case of downloading all documents and does not scale on large collections!
Also have a look at this:
How to get a count of number of documents in a collection with Cloud Firestore
Aggregate count query just landed as a preview in Firestore.
Announced at the 2022 Firebase Summit: https://firebase.blog/posts/2022/10/whats-new-at-Firebase-Sumit-2022
Excerpt:
[Developer Preview] Count() function: With the new count function in
Firstore [sic], you can now get the count of the matching documents when you
run a query or read from a collection, without loading the actual
documents, which saves you a lot of time.
Code sample they showed at the summit:
During the Q&A, someone asked about pricing for aggregated queries, and the answer the Firebase team provided was that it'll cost 1 / 1000th of the price of a read (rounded up to the nearest read, see comments below for more details), but will count all records that are part of the aggregate.
Be careful counting number of documents for large collections. It is a little bit complex with firestore database if you want to have a precalculated counter for every collection.
Code like this doesn't work in this case:
export const customerCounterListener =
functions.firestore.document('customers/{customerId}')
.onWrite((change, context) => {
// on create
if (!change.before.exists && change.after.exists) {
return firestore
.collection('metadatas')
.doc('customers')
.get()
.then(docSnap =>
docSnap.ref.set({
count: docSnap.data().count + 1
}))
// on delete
} else if (change.before.exists && !change.after.exists) {
return firestore
.collection('metadatas')
.doc('customers')
.get()
.then(docSnap =>
docSnap.ref.set({
count: docSnap.data().count - 1
}))
}
return null;
});
The reason is because every cloud firestore trigger has to be idempotent, as firestore documentation say: https://firebase.google.com/docs/functions/firestore-events#limitations_and_guarantees
Solution
So, in order to prevent multiple executions of your code, you need to manage with events and transactions. This is my particular way to handle large collection counters:
const executeOnce = (change, context, task) => {
const eventRef = firestore.collection('events').doc(context.eventId);
return firestore.runTransaction(t =>
t
.get(eventRef)
.then(docSnap => (docSnap.exists ? null : task(t)))
.then(() => t.set(eventRef, { processed: true }))
);
};
const documentCounter = collectionName => (change, context) =>
executeOnce(change, context, t => {
// on create
if (!change.before.exists && change.after.exists) {
return t
.get(firestore.collection('metadatas')
.doc(collectionName))
.then(docSnap =>
t.set(docSnap.ref, {
count: ((docSnap.data() && docSnap.data().count) || 0) + 1
}));
// on delete
} else if (change.before.exists && !change.after.exists) {
return t
.get(firestore.collection('metadatas')
.doc(collectionName))
.then(docSnap =>
t.set(docSnap.ref, {
count: docSnap.data().count - 1
}));
}
return null;
});
Use cases here:
/**
* Count documents in articles collection.
*/
exports.articlesCounter = functions.firestore
.document('articles/{id}')
.onWrite(documentCounter('articles'));
/**
* Count documents in customers collection.
*/
exports.customersCounter = functions.firestore
.document('customers/{id}')
.onWrite(documentCounter('customers'));
As you can see, the key to prevent multiple execution is the property called eventId in the context object. If the function has been handled many times for the same event, the event id will be the same in all cases. Unfortunately, you must have "events" collection in your database.
In 2020 this is still not available in the Firebase SDK however it is available in Firebase Extensions (Beta) however it's pretty complex to setup and use...
A reasonable approach
Helpers... (create/delete seems redundant but is cheaper than onUpdate)
export const onCreateCounter = () => async (
change,
context
) => {
const collectionPath = change.ref.parent.path;
const statsDoc = db.doc("counters/" + collectionPath);
const countDoc = {};
countDoc["count"] = admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment(1);
await statsDoc.set(countDoc, { merge: true });
};
export const onDeleteCounter = () => async (
change,
context
) => {
const collectionPath = change.ref.parent.path;
const statsDoc = db.doc("counters/" + collectionPath);
const countDoc = {};
countDoc["count"] = admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment(-1);
await statsDoc.set(countDoc, { merge: true });
};
export interface CounterPath {
watch: string;
name: string;
}
Exported Firestore hooks
export const Counters: CounterPath[] = [
{
name: "count_buildings",
watch: "buildings/{id2}"
},
{
name: "count_buildings_subcollections",
watch: "buildings/{id2}/{id3}/{id4}"
}
];
Counters.forEach(item => {
exports[item.name + '_create'] = functions.firestore
.document(item.watch)
.onCreate(onCreateCounter());
exports[item.name + '_delete'] = functions.firestore
.document(item.watch)
.onDelete(onDeleteCounter());
});
In action
The building root collection and all sub collections will be tracked.
Here under the /counters/ root path
Now collection counts will update automatically and eventually! If you need a count, just use the collection path and prefix it with counters.
const collectionPath = 'buildings/138faicnjasjoa89/buildingContacts';
const collectionCount = await db
.doc('counters/' + collectionPath)
.get()
.then(snap => snap.get('count'));
Limitations
As this approach uses a single database and document, it is limited to the Firestore constraint of 1 Update per Second for each counter. It will be eventually consistent, but in cases where large amounts of documents are added/removed the counter will lag behind the actual collection count.
I agree with #Matthew, it will cost a lot if you perform such query.
[ADVICE FOR DEVELOPERS BEFORE STARTING THEIR PROJECTS]
Since we have foreseen this situation at the beginning, we can actually make a collection namely counters with a document to store all the counters in a field with type number.
For example:
For each CRUD operation on the collection, update the counter document:
When you create a new collection/subcollection: (+1 in the counter) [1 write operation]
When you delete a collection/subcollection: (-1 in the counter) [1 write operation]
When you update an existing collection/subcollection, do nothing on the counter document: (0)
When you read an existing collection/subcollection, do nothing on the counter document: (0)
Next time, when you want to get the number of collection, you just need to query/point to the document field. [1 read operation]
In addition, you can store the collections name in an array, but this will be tricky, the condition of array in firebase is shown as below:
// we send this
['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e']
// Firebase stores this
{0: 'a', 1: 'b', 2: 'c', 3: 'd', 4: 'e'}
// since the keys are numeric and sequential,
// if we query the data, we get this
['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e']
// however, if we then delete a, b, and d,
// they are no longer mostly sequential, so
// we do not get back an array
{2: 'c', 4: 'e'}
So, if you are not going to delete the collection , you can actually use array to store list of collections name instead of querying all the collection every time.
Hope it helps!
As of October 2022, Firestore has introduced a count() method on the client SDKs. Now you can count for a query without downloads.
For 1000 documents, it will charge you for 1 document read.
Web (v9)
Introduced in Firebase 9.11.0:
const collectionRef = collection(db, "cities");
const snapshot = await getCountFromServer(collectionRef);
console.log('count: ', snapshot.data().count);
Web V8
Not Available.
Node (Admin)
const collectionRef = db.collection('cities');
const snapshot = await collectionRef.count().get();
console.log(snapshot.data().count);
Android (Kotlin)
Introduced in firestore v24.4.0 (BoM 31.0.0):
val query = db.collection("cities")
val countQuery = query.count()
countQuery.get(AggregateSource.SERVER).addOnCompleteListener { task ->
if (task.isSuccessful) {
val snapshot = task.result
Log.d(TAG, "Count: ${snapshot.count}")
} else {
Log.d(TAG, "Count failed: ", task.getException())
}
}
Apple Platforms (Swift)
Introduced in Firestore v10.0.0:
do {
let query = db.collection("cities")
let countQuery = query.countAggregateQuery
let snapshot = try await countQuery.aggregation(source: AggregateSource.server)
print(snapshot.count)
} catch {
print(error)
}
Increment a counter using admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment:
exports.onInstanceCreate = functions.firestore.document('projects/{projectId}/instances/{instanceId}')
.onCreate((snap, context) =>
db.collection('projects').doc(context.params.projectId).update({
instanceCount: admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment(1),
})
);
exports.onInstanceDelete = functions.firestore.document('projects/{projectId}/instances/{instanceId}')
.onDelete((snap, context) =>
db.collection('projects').doc(context.params.projectId).update({
instanceCount: admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment(-1),
})
);
In this example we increment an instanceCount field in the project each time a document is added to the instances sub collection. If the field doesn't exist yet it will be created and incremented to 1.
The incrementation is transactional internally but you should use a distributed counter if you need to increment more frequently than every 1 second.
It's often preferable to implement onCreate and onDelete rather than onWrite as you will call onWrite for updates which means you are spending more money on unnecessary function invocations (if you update the docs in your collection).
No, there is no built-in support for aggregation queries right now. However there are a few things you could do.
The first is documented here. You can use transactions or cloud functions to maintain aggregate information:
This example shows how to use a function to keep track of the number of ratings in a subcollection, as well as the average rating.
exports.aggregateRatings = firestore
.document('restaurants/{restId}/ratings/{ratingId}')
.onWrite(event => {
// Get value of the newly added rating
var ratingVal = event.data.get('rating');
// Get a reference to the restaurant
var restRef = db.collection('restaurants').document(event.params.restId);
// Update aggregations in a transaction
return db.transaction(transaction => {
return transaction.get(restRef).then(restDoc => {
// Compute new number of ratings
var newNumRatings = restDoc.data('numRatings') + 1;
// Compute new average rating
var oldRatingTotal = restDoc.data('avgRating') * restDoc.data('numRatings');
var newAvgRating = (oldRatingTotal + ratingVal) / newNumRatings;
// Update restaurant info
return transaction.update(restRef, {
avgRating: newAvgRating,
numRatings: newNumRatings
});
});
});
});
The solution that jbb mentioned is also useful if you only want to count documents infrequently. Make sure to use the select() statement to avoid downloading all of each document (that's a lot of bandwidth when you only need a count). select() is only available in the server SDKs for now so that solution won't work in a mobile app.
UPDATE 11/20
I created an npm package for easy access to a counter function: https://code.build/p/9DicAmrnRoK4uk62Hw1bEV/firestore-counters
I created a universal function using all these ideas to handle all counter situations (except queries).
The only exception would be when doing so many writes a second, it
slows you down. An example would be likes on a trending post. It is
overkill on a blog post, for example, and will cost you more. I
suggest creating a separate function in that case using shards:
https://firebase.google.com/docs/firestore/solutions/counters
// trigger collections
exports.myFunction = functions.firestore
.document('{colId}/{docId}')
.onWrite(async (change: any, context: any) => {
return runCounter(change, context);
});
// trigger sub-collections
exports.mySubFunction = functions.firestore
.document('{colId}/{docId}/{subColId}/{subDocId}')
.onWrite(async (change: any, context: any) => {
return runCounter(change, context);
});
// add change the count
const runCounter = async function (change: any, context: any) {
const col = context.params.colId;
const eventsDoc = '_events';
const countersDoc = '_counters';
// ignore helper collections
if (col.startsWith('_')) {
return null;
}
// simplify event types
const createDoc = change.after.exists && !change.before.exists;
const updateDoc = change.before.exists && change.after.exists;
if (updateDoc) {
return null;
}
// check for sub collection
const isSubCol = context.params.subDocId;
const parentDoc = `${countersDoc}/${context.params.colId}`;
const countDoc = isSubCol
? `${parentDoc}/${context.params.docId}/${context.params.subColId}`
: `${parentDoc}`;
// collection references
const countRef = db.doc(countDoc);
const countSnap = await countRef.get();
// increment size if doc exists
if (countSnap.exists) {
// createDoc or deleteDoc
const n = createDoc ? 1 : -1;
const i = admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment(n);
// create event for accurate increment
const eventRef = db.doc(`${eventsDoc}/${context.eventId}`);
return db.runTransaction(async (t: any): Promise<any> => {
const eventSnap = await t.get(eventRef);
// do nothing if event exists
if (eventSnap.exists) {
return null;
}
// add event and update size
await t.update(countRef, { count: i });
return t.set(eventRef, {
completed: admin.firestore.FieldValue.serverTimestamp()
});
}).catch((e: any) => {
console.log(e);
});
// otherwise count all docs in the collection and add size
} else {
const colRef = db.collection(change.after.ref.parent.path);
return db.runTransaction(async (t: any): Promise<any> => {
// update size
const colSnap = await t.get(colRef);
return t.set(countRef, { count: colSnap.size });
}).catch((e: any) => {
console.log(e);
});;
}
}
This handles events, increments, and transactions. The beauty in this, is that if you are not sure about the accuracy of a document (probably while still in beta), you can delete the counter to have it automatically add them up on the next trigger. Yes, this costs, so don't delete it otherwise.
Same kind of thing to get the count:
const collectionPath = 'buildings/138faicnjasjoa89/buildingContacts';
const colSnap = await db.doc('_counters/' + collectionPath).get();
const count = colSnap.get('count');
Also, you may want to create a cron job (scheduled function) to remove old events to save money on database storage. You need at least a blaze plan, and there may be some more configuration. You could run it every sunday at 11pm, for example.
https://firebase.google.com/docs/functions/schedule-functions
This is untested, but should work with a few tweaks:
exports.scheduledFunctionCrontab = functions.pubsub.schedule('5 11 * * *')
.timeZone('America/New_York')
.onRun(async (context) => {
// get yesterday
const yesterday = new Date();
yesterday.setDate(yesterday.getDate() - 1);
const eventFilter = db.collection('_events').where('completed', '<=', yesterday);
const eventFilterSnap = await eventFilter.get();
eventFilterSnap.forEach(async (doc: any) => {
await doc.ref.delete();
});
return null;
});
And last, don't forget to protect the collections in firestore.rules:
match /_counters/{document} {
allow read;
allow write: if false;
}
match /_events/{document} {
allow read, write: if false;
}
Update: Queries
Adding to my other answer if you want to automate query counts as well, you can use this modified code in your cloud function:
if (col === 'posts') {
// counter reference - user doc ref
const userRef = after ? after.userDoc : before.userDoc;
// query reference
const postsQuery = db.collection('posts').where('userDoc', "==", userRef);
// add the count - postsCount on userDoc
await addCount(change, context, postsQuery, userRef, 'postsCount');
}
return delEvents();
Which will automatically update the postsCount in the userDocument. You could easily add other one to many counts this way. This just gives you ideas of how you can automate things. I also gave you another way to delete the events. You have to read each date to delete it, so it won't really save you to delete them later, just makes the function slower.
/**
* Adds a counter to a doc
* #param change - change ref
* #param context - context ref
* #param queryRef - the query ref to count
* #param countRef - the counter document ref
* #param countName - the name of the counter on the counter document
*/
const addCount = async function (change: any, context: any,
queryRef: any, countRef: any, countName: string) {
// events collection
const eventsDoc = '_events';
// simplify event type
const createDoc = change.after.exists && !change.before.exists;
// doc references
const countSnap = await countRef.get();
// increment size if field exists
if (countSnap.get(countName)) {
// createDoc or deleteDoc
const n = createDoc ? 1 : -1;
const i = admin.firestore.FieldValue.increment(n);
// create event for accurate increment
const eventRef = db.doc(`${eventsDoc}/${context.eventId}`);
return db.runTransaction(async (t: any): Promise<any> => {
const eventSnap = await t.get(eventRef);
// do nothing if event exists
if (eventSnap.exists) {
return null;
}
// add event and update size
await t.set(countRef, { [countName]: i }, { merge: true });
return t.set(eventRef, {
completed: admin.firestore.FieldValue.serverTimestamp()
});
}).catch((e: any) => {
console.log(e);
});
// otherwise count all docs in the collection and add size
} else {
return db.runTransaction(async (t: any): Promise<any> => {
// update size
const colSnap = await t.get(queryRef);
return t.set(countRef, { [countName]: colSnap.size }, { merge: true });
}).catch((e: any) => {
console.log(e);
});;
}
}
/**
* Deletes events over a day old
*/
const delEvents = async function () {
// get yesterday
const yesterday = new Date();
yesterday.setDate(yesterday.getDate() - 1);
const eventFilter = db.collection('_events').where('completed', '<=', yesterday);
const eventFilterSnap = await eventFilter.get();
eventFilterSnap.forEach(async (doc: any) => {
await doc.ref.delete();
});
return null;
}
I should also warn you that universal functions will run on every
onWrite call period. It may be cheaper to only run the function on
onCreate and on onDelete instances of your specific collections. Like
the noSQL database we are using, repeated code and data can save you
money.
There is no direct option available. You cant't do db.collection("CollectionName").count().
Below are the two ways by which you can find the count of number of documents within a collection.
1 :- Get all the documents in the collection and then get it's size.(Not the best Solution)
db.collection("CollectionName").get().subscribe(doc=>{
console.log(doc.size)
})
By using above code your document reads will be equal to the size of documents within a collection and that is the reason why one must avoid using above solution.
2:- Create a separate document with in your collection which will store the count of number of documents in the collection.(Best Solution)
db.collection("CollectionName").doc("counts")get().subscribe(doc=>{
console.log(doc.count)
})
Above we created a document with name counts to store all the count information.You can update the count document in the following way:-
Create a firestore triggers on the document counts
Increment the count property of counts document when a new document is created.
Decrement the count property of counts document when a document is deleted.
w.r.t price (Document Read = 1) and fast data retrieval the above solution is good.
A workaround is to:
write a counter in a firebase doc, which you increment within a transaction everytime you create a new entry
You store the count in a field of your new entry (i.e: position: 4).
Then you create an index on that field (position DESC).
You can do a skip+limit with a query.Where("position", "<" x).OrderBy("position", DESC)
Hope this helps!
I have try a lot with different approaches.
And finally, I improve one of the methods.
First you need to create a separate collection and save there all events.
Second you need to create a new lambda to be triggered by time. This lambda will Count events in event collection and clear event documents.
Code details in article.
https://medium.com/#ihor.malaniuk/how-to-count-documents-in-google-cloud-firestore-b0e65863aeca
one of the fast + money saver trick is that:-
make a doc and store a 'count' variable in firestore, when user add new doc in the collection, increase that variable, and when user delete a doc, decrease variable. e.g.
updateDoc(doc(db, "Count_collection", "Count_Doc"), {count: increment(1)});
note: use (-1) for decreasing, (1) for increasing count
How it save money and time:-
you(firebase) don't need to loop through the collection, nor browser needs to load whole collection to count number of docs.
all the counts are save in a doc of only one variable named "count" or whatever, so less than 1kb data is used, and it use only 1 reads in firebase firestore.
Solution using pagination with offset & limit:
public int collectionCount(String collection) {
Integer page = 0;
List<QueryDocumentSnapshot> snaps = new ArrayList<>();
findDocsByPage(collection, page, snaps);
return snaps.size();
}
public void findDocsByPage(String collection, Integer page,
List<QueryDocumentSnapshot> snaps) {
try {
Integer limit = 26000;
FieldPath[] selectedFields = new FieldPath[] { FieldPath.of("id") };
List<QueryDocumentSnapshot> snapshotPage;
snapshotPage = fireStore()
.collection(collection)
.select(selectedFields)
.offset(page * limit)
.limit(limit)
.get().get().getDocuments();
if (snapshotPage.size() > 0) {
snaps.addAll(snapshotPage);
page++;
findDocsByPage(collection, page, snaps);
}
} catch (InterruptedException | ExecutionException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
findDocsPage it's a recursive method to find all pages of collection
selectedFields for otimize query and get only id field instead full body of document
limit max size of each query page
page define inicial page for pagination
From the tests I did it worked well for collections with up to approximately 120k records!
Firestore is introducing a new Query.count() that fetches the count of a query without fetching the docs.
This would allow to simply query all collection items and get the count of that query.
Ref:
Firebase 10 iOS SDK
[JS SDK PR] (https://github.com/firebase/firebase-js-sdk/pull/6608)
There's a new build in function since version 9.11.0 called getCountFromServer(), which fetches the number of documents in the result set without actually downloading the documents.
https://firebase.google.com/docs/reference/js/firestore_#getcountfromserver
Took me a while to get this working based on some of the answers above, so I thought I'd share it for others to use. I hope it's useful.
'use strict';
const functions = require('firebase-functions');
const admin = require('firebase-admin');
admin.initializeApp();
const db = admin.firestore();
exports.countDocumentsChange = functions.firestore.document('library/{categoryId}/documents/{documentId}').onWrite((change, context) => {
const categoryId = context.params.categoryId;
const categoryRef = db.collection('library').doc(categoryId)
let FieldValue = require('firebase-admin').firestore.FieldValue;
if (!change.before.exists) {
// new document created : add one to count
categoryRef.update({numberOfDocs: FieldValue.increment(1)});
console.log("%s numberOfDocs incremented by 1", categoryId);
} else if (change.before.exists && change.after.exists) {
// updating existing document : Do nothing
} else if (!change.after.exists) {
// deleting document : subtract one from count
categoryRef.update({numberOfDocs: FieldValue.increment(-1)});
console.log("%s numberOfDocs decremented by 1", categoryId);
}
return 0;
});
This uses counting to create numeric unique ID. In my use, I will not be decrementing ever, even when the document that the ID is needed for is deleted.
Upon a collection creation that needs unique numeric value
Designate a collection appData with one document, set with .doc id only
Set uniqueNumericIDAmount to 0 in the firebase firestore console
Use doc.data().uniqueNumericIDAmount + 1 as the unique numeric id
Update appData collection uniqueNumericIDAmount with firebase.firestore.FieldValue.increment(1)
firebase
.firestore()
.collection("appData")
.doc("only")
.get()
.then(doc => {
var foo = doc.data();
foo.id = doc.id;
// your collection that needs a unique ID
firebase
.firestore()
.collection("uniqueNumericIDs")
.doc(user.uid)// user id in my case
.set({// I use this in login, so this document doesn't
// exist yet, otherwise use update instead of set
phone: this.state.phone,// whatever else you need
uniqueNumericID: foo.uniqueNumericIDAmount + 1
})
.then(() => {
// upon success of new ID, increment uniqueNumericIDAmount
firebase
.firestore()
.collection("appData")
.doc("only")
.update({
uniqueNumericIDAmount: firebase.firestore.FieldValue.increment(
1
)
})
.catch(err => {
console.log(err);
});
})
.catch(err => {
console.log(err);
});
});
var variable=0
variable=variable+querySnapshot.count
then if you are to use it on a String variable then
let stringVariable= String(variable)
Along with my npm package adv-firestore-functions above, you can also just use firestore rules to force a good counter:
Firestore Rules
function counter() {
let docPath = /databases/$(database)/documents/_counters/$(request.path[3]);
let afterCount = getAfter(docPath).data.count;
let beforeCount = get(docPath).data.count;
let addCount = afterCount == beforeCount + 1;
let subCount = afterCount == beforeCount - 1;
let newId = getAfter(docPath).data.docId == request.path[4];
let deleteDoc = request.method == 'delete';
let createDoc = request.method == 'create';
return (newId && subCount && deleteDoc) || (newId && addCount && createDoc);
}
function counterDoc() {
let doc = request.path[4];
let docId = request.resource.data.docId;
let afterCount = request.resource.data.count;
let beforeCount = resource.data.count;
let docPath = /databases/$(database)/documents/$(doc)/$(docId);
let createIdDoc = existsAfter(docPath) && !exists(docPath);
let deleteIdDoc = !existsAfter(docPath) && exists(docPath);
let addCount = afterCount == beforeCount + 1;
let subCount = afterCount == beforeCount - 1;
return (createIdDoc && addCount) || (deleteIdDoc && subCount);
}
and use them like so:
match /posts/{document} {
allow read;
allow update;
allow create: if counter();
allow delete: if counter();
}
match /_counters/{document} {
allow read;
allow write: if counterDoc();
}
Frontend
Replace your set and delete functions with these:
set
async setDocWithCounter(
ref: DocumentReference<DocumentData>,
data: {
[x: string]: any;
},
options: SetOptions): Promise<void> {
// counter collection
const counterCol = '_counters';
const col = ref.path.split('/').slice(0, -1).join('/');
const countRef = doc(this.afs, counterCol, col);
const countSnap = await getDoc(countRef);
const refSnap = await getDoc(ref);
// don't increase count if edit
if (refSnap.exists()) {
await setDoc(ref, data, options);
// increase count
} else {
const batch = writeBatch(this.afs);
batch.set(ref, data, options);
// if count exists
if (countSnap.exists()) {
batch.update(countRef, {
count: increment(1),
docId: ref.id
});
// create count
} else {
// will only run once, should not use
// for mature apps
const colRef = collection(this.afs, col);
const colSnap = await getDocs(colRef);
batch.set(countRef, {
count: colSnap.size + 1,
docId: ref.id
});
}
batch.commit();
}
}
delete
async delWithCounter(
ref: DocumentReference<DocumentData>
): Promise<void> {
// counter collection
const counterCol = '_counters';
const col = ref.path.split('/').slice(0, -1).join('/');
const countRef = doc(this.afs, counterCol, col);
const countSnap = await getDoc(countRef);
const batch = writeBatch(this.afs);
// if count exists
batch.delete(ref);
if (countSnap.exists()) {
batch.update(countRef, {
count: increment(-1),
docId: ref.id
});
}
/*
if ((countSnap.data() as any).count == 1) {
batch.delete(countRef);
}*/
batch.commit();
}
see here for more info...
J
This feature is now supported in FireStore, albeit in Beta.
Here are the official Firebase docs
With the new version of Firebase, you can now run aggregated queries!
Simply write
.count().get();
after your query.
As it stands, firebase only allows server-side count, like this
const collectionRef = db.collection('cities');
const snapshot = await collectionRef.count().get();
console.log(snapshot.data().count);
Please not this is for nodeJS
New feature available in Firebase/Firestore provides a count of documents in a collection:
See this thread to see how to achieve it, with an example.
How To Count Number of Documents in a Collection in Firebase Firestore With a WHERE query in react.js
According to this documentation Cloud Firestore supports the count() aggregation query and is available in preview.
The Flutter/Dart code was missing (at the time of writing this) so I played around with it and the following function seems to work:
Future<int> getCount(String path) async {
var collection = _fireStore.collection(path);
var countQuery = collection.count();
var snapShot = await countQuery.get(source: AggregateSource.server);
return snapShot.count;
}
firebaseFirestore.collection("...").addSnapshotListener(new EventListener<QuerySnapshot>() {
#Override
public void onEvent(QuerySnapshot documentSnapshots, FirebaseFirestoreException e) {
int Counter = documentSnapshots.size();
}
});
So my solution for this problem is a bit non-technical, not super precise, but good enough for me.
Those are my documents. As I have a lot of them (100k+) there are 'laws of big numbers' happening. I can assume that there is less-or-more equal number of items having id starting with 0, 1, 2, etc.
So what I do is I scroll my list till I get into id's starting with 1, or with 01, depending on how long you have to scroll
👆 here we are.
Now, having scrolled so far, I open the inspector and see how much did I scroll and divide it by height of single element
Had to scroll 82000px to get items with id starting with 1. Height of single element is 32px.
It means I have 2500 with id starting with 0, so now I multiply it by number of possible 'starting char'. In firebase it can be A-Z, a-z, 0-9 which means it's 24 + 24 + 10 = 58.
It means I have ~~2500*58 so it gives roughly 145000 items in my collection.
Summarizing: What is wrong with you firebase?

Firestore how to get last document of collection and add new with incremented id?

I have probably made a mistake with autogenerated id's for documents inside my events collection. I have added eventId for generated events and assigned eventId manually to each event.
Can I somehow get last document with its eventId and add new document with eventId of last document incremented by one.
Or should I delete autogenerated Id - based events and create new ones with non-autogenrated ids?
GitHub: https://github.com/Verthon/event-app
I have posted working React.js app on netlify: https://eventooo.netlify.com/
How it works:
I added unique eventId to each dummy events inside of events collection,
Based on that unique eventId I create link to specific single Event.js,
User can create event providing information in /create-event,
Once someone is creating an event I would like to add event to events collection with increment id, I have added 7 events created inside of console, so next should have id=7, something maybe like event1, event2 ... with autoincrement
Inside of users collection I store currentUser.uid from auth and host name provided by user
Event Creator
submitEvent = (e) => {
e.preventDefault();
const eventRef = this.props.firebase.db.collection("events").doc();
eventRef.set({
title: this.state.title,
host: this.state.host,
localization: this.state.localization,
description: this.state.description,
category: this.state.category,
day: this.state.day,
hour: this.state.hour,
featuredImage: this.state.imageUrl,
uid: this.props.firebase.auth.currentUser.uid
});
const citiesRef = this.props.firebase.db.collection("cities").where("city", "==", this.state.localization);
const cityRef = this.props.firebase.db.collection("cities").doc();
citiesRef.get()
.then(querySnapshot => {
if(querySnapshot.exists){
console.log("exist");
return
}else{
cityRef.set({
city: this.state.localization,
})
}
});
const userRef = this.props.firebase.db.collection("users").doc();
userRef.set({
user: this.state.host,
uid: this.props.firebase.auth.currentUser.uid
});
Thank you
I understand that you want your eventId value to come from a number sequence. The best approach for such need is to use a distributed counter, as explained in the doc: https://firebase.google.com/docs/firestore/solutions/counters
I don't know which language you are using, but I paste below the JavaScript code of the three functions from this documentation and I write the code that will generate the sequential number that you can use to create the documents.
var db = firebase.firestore();
//From the Firebase documentation
function createCounter(ref, num_shards) {
var batch = db.batch();
// Initialize the counter document
batch.set(ref, { num_shards: num_shards });
// Initialize each shard with count=0
for (let i = 0; i < num_shards; i++) {
let shardRef = ref.collection('shards').doc(i.toString());
batch.set(shardRef, { count: 0 });
}
// Commit the write batch
return batch.commit();
}
function incrementCounter(db, ref, num_shards) {
// Select a shard of the counter at random
const shard_id = Math.floor(Math.random() * num_shards).toString();
const shard_ref = ref.collection('shards').doc(shard_id);
// Update count
return shard_ref.update(
'count',
firebase.firestore.FieldValue.increment(1)
);
}
function getCount(ref) {
// Sum the count of each shard in the subcollection
return ref
.collection('shards')
.get()
.then(snapshot => {
let total_count = 0;
snapshot.forEach(doc => {
total_count += doc.data().count;
});
return total_count;
});
}
//Your code
var ref = firebase
.firestore()
.collection('counters')
.doc('1');
var num_shards = 2 //Adapt as required, read the doc
//Initialize the counter bay calling ONCE the createCounter() method
createCounter(ref, num_shards);
//Then, when you want to create a new number and a new doc you do
incrementCounter(db, ref, num_shards)
.then(() => {
return getCount(ref);
})
.then(count => {
console.log(count);
//Here you get the new number form the sequence
//And you use it to create a doc
db.collection("events").doc(count.toString()).set({
category: "education",
//....
})
});
Without much details on the Functional Requirements it is difficult to say if there is a difference between using the number form the sequence as the uid of the doc or as a field value in the document. It depends on the queries you may do on this collection.

Can Firestore update multiple documents matching a condition, using one query?

In other words, I'm trying to figure out what is the Firestore equivalent to this in SQL:
UPDATE table SET field = 'foo' WHERE <condition>`
Yes, I am asking how to update multiple documents, at once, but unlike the linked questions, I'm specifically asking how to do this in one shot, without reading anything into memory, because there's no need to do so when all you want is to set a flag on all documents matching a condition.
db.collection('table')
.where(...condition...)
.update({
field: 'foo',
});
is what I expected to work, CollectionReference doesn't have an .update method.
The
Transactions and Batched Writes documentation mentions transactions and batched writes. Transactions are out because "A transaction consists of any number of get() operations followed by any number of write operations" Batched writes are also not a solution because they work document-by-document.
With MongoDB, this would be
db.table.update(
{ /* where clause */ },
{ $set: { field: 'foo' } }
)
So, can Firestore update multiple documents with one query, the way SQL database or MongoDB work, i.e. without requiring a round-trip to the client for each document? If not, how can this be done efficiently?
Updating a document in Cloud Firestore requires knowings its ID. Cloud Firestore does not support the equivalent of SQL's update queries.
You will always have to do this in two steps:
Run a query with your conditions to determine the document IDs
Update the documents with individual updates, or with one or more batched writes.
Note that you only need the document ID from step 1. So you could run a query that only returns the IDs. This is not possible in the client-side SDKs, but can be done through the REST API and Admin SDKs as shown here: How to get a list of document IDs in a collection Cloud Firestore?
Frank's answer is actually a great one and does solve the issue.
But for those in a hurry maybe this snippet might help you:
const updateAllFromCollection = async (collectionName) => {
const firebase = require('firebase-admin')
const collection = firebase.firestore().collection(collectionName)
const newDocumentBody = {
message: 'hello world'
}
collection.where('message', '==', 'goodbye world').get().then(response => {
let batch = firebase.firestore().batch()
response.docs.forEach((doc) => {
const docRef = firebase.firestore().collection(collectionName).doc(doc.id)
batch.update(docRef, newDocumentBody)
})
batch.commit().then(() => {
console.log(`updated all documents inside ${collectionName}`)
})
})
}
Just change what's inside the where function that queries the data and the newDocumentBody which is what's getting changed on every document.
Also don't forget to call the function with the collection's name.
The simplest approach is this
const ORDER_ITEMS = firebase.firestore().collection('OrderItems')
ORDER_ITEMS.where('order', '==', 2)
.get()
.then(snapshots => {
if (snapshots.size > 0) {
snapshots.forEach(orderItem => {
ORDER_ITEMS.doc(orderItem.id).update({ status: 1 })
})
}
})
For Dart / Flutter user (editted from Renato Trombini Neto)
// CollectionReference collection = FirebaseFirestore.instance.collection('something');
// This collection can be a subcollection.
_updateAllFromCollection(CollectionReference collection) async {
var newDocumentBody = {"username": ''};
User firebaseUser = FirebaseAuth.instance.currentUser;
DocumentReference docRef;
var response = await collection.where('uid', isEqualTo: firebaseUser.uid).get();
var batch = FirebaseFirestore.instance.batch();
response.docs.forEach((doc) {
docRef = collection.doc(doc.id);
batch.update(docRef, newDocumentBody);
});
batch.commit().then((a) {
print('updated all documents inside Collection');
});
}
If anyone's looking for a Java solution:
public boolean bulkUpdate() {
try {
// see https://firebase.google.com/docs/firestore/quotas#writes_and_transactions
int writeBatchLimit = 500;
int totalUpdates = 0;
while (totalUpdates % writeBatchLimit == 0) {
WriteBatch writeBatch = this.firestoreDB.batch();
// the query goes here
List<QueryDocumentSnapshot> documentsInBatch =
this.firestoreDB.collection("student")
.whereEqualTo("graduated", false)
.limit(writeBatchLimit)
.get()
.get()
.getDocuments();
if (documentsInBatch.isEmpty()) {
break;
}
// what I want to change goes here
documentsInBatch.forEach(
document -> writeBatch.update(document.getReference(), "graduated", true));
writeBatch.commit().get();
totalUpdates += documentsInBatch.size();
}
System.out.println("Number of updates: " + totalUpdates);
} catch (Exception e) {
return false;
}
return true;
}
Combining the answers from Renato and David, plus async/await syntax for batch part. Also enclosing them a try/catch in case any promise fails:
const updateAllFromCollection = async (collectionName) => {
const firebase = require('firebase-admin');
const collection = firebase.firestore().collection(collectionName);
const newDocumentBody = { message: 'hello world' };
try {
const response = await collection.where('message', '==', 'goodbye world').get();
const batch = firebase.firestore().batch();
response.docs.forEach((doc) => {
batch.update(doc.ref, newDocumentBody);
});
await batch.commit(); //Done
console.log(`updated all documents inside ${collectionName}`);
} catch (err) {
console.error(err);
}
return;
}
I like some of the answers but I feel this is cleaner:
import * as admin from "firebase-admin";
const db = admin.firestore();
const updates = { status: "pending" }
await db
.collection("COLLECTION_NAME")
.where("status", "==", "open")
.get()
.then((snap) => {
let batch = db.batch();
snap.docs.forEach((doc) => {
const ref = doc.ref;
batch.update(ref, updates);
});
return batch.commit();
});
It uses batched updates and the "ref" from the doc.
If you have already gathered uids for updating collections, simply do these steps.
if(uids.length) {
for(let i = 0; i < uids.length; i++) {
await (db.collection("collectionName")
.doc(uids[i]))
.update({"fieldName": false});
};
};

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