How can I know that a Firebase Cloud Messaging token is out of use? - firebase

A single user can have multiple devices connected to his account.
Because of that he can have multiple cloud messaging tokens.
Everytime the user opens the app the token from that device is send to the app server and saved there.
What happens if a user uninstalls the app from one of his devices? I have no chance to tell the server that the token is not longer in use.
Can it occure that I notify an other user instead since this other user has acquired the not longer used token from the original user?

What happens if a user uninstalls the app from one of his devices?
Usually, when your app is uninstalled, it is advisable for you (the developer) to automatically make sure that the corresponding registration token is deleted from your own App Server.
Can it occure that I notify an other user instead since this other user has acquired the not longer used token from the original user?
No. Each registration token is unique per each app instance. So rest assured that if a registration token is invalidated/expires for whatever reason, no other user will be able to use it. Sending a message to an invalid/expired registration token will result to a NotRegistered error.

Tokens are not re-used so there should be no risk of notifying another user. Tokens cannot be acquired by one user from another.

Related

What does firebase use to generate a registration token?

I have already created a push notification system using firebase. It generates and saves a token for a user, then upon login displays their subscription status. It works fine, unfortunately it’s only one device per user, the most recent device they logged in on. I’d like to allow for multiple devices per user.
I’m assuming firebase uses some ID unique to each device to generate a token. If I’m wrong in that assumption, please point me in the right direction.
As Doug commented, since FCM doesn't associate its tokens with users, this is probably some limitation in your implementation.
You'll want to allow multiple ID tokens per user in your database, and then send to all tokens for the current user. If the device/app install can be shared between users, you'll want to remove the association between the user and the token for that installation when the user signs out/a new user signs in.
On associating tokens with users, see:
Is FCM (firebase cloud messaging) Token for one device or for one account?
When to register an FCM token for a user
How to get Firebase user id from FCM token? (in admin code on server)
And then finally you'll also want to clean up any tokens that FCM flags as not valid anymore, as otherwise you'll keep adding more and more tokens, which may not be valid anymore.
On deleting expired tokens, see:
When device token expires, is it automatically removed from FCM device group?
How do I identify and delete the expired FCM token on server?

FCM Token - When should I store/save it on my DB?

I am not sure what a proper FCM token handling mechanism would be so I’m writing our process down here just to get some validation or suggestions for improvements:
Fetch FCM token on client Login (Flutter)
Save FCM token on our Database (Using our REST API)
Delete FCM token on Logout (Using our REST API)
Q1: Should we be getting the FCM token more often than just on login? AFAIK, FCM token only changes on app re-installs, clearing cache, etc. Does this also include app-updates from the PlayStore? In that case, should we save the FCM token on every app launch since the user will remain logged in after an app update and hence we wouldn't trigger the save FCM call.
Q2: Did I mention the right way to handle deleting FCM tokens from our DB? We don’t want the user to keep getting notifications once they have logged out.
Q3: An add-on idea is to send the device_id to the server along with the fcm_token so that server deletes all previously saved FCM tokens for that device_id. This is useful to not have useless tokens on the DB from cases where the user uninstalls the app without logging out (which means that the DELETE fcm_token call never went through.)
The FCM token is refreshed under conditions that you don't control, and those conditions have even changed over time. To handle token updates properly, you'll need to implement both initially getting the token and then monitoring for token updates.
Note that FCM tokens are not associated with a user. It is fine if you want to associate them with a user, but it's up to your application code in that case to maintain the association. So that for example includes deleting the token from your database when the user signs out, as you're doing in step 3. 👍
For keeping your token registry clean, you can indeed do this proactively as you intend, or reactively as shown here: https://github.com/firebase/functions-samples/blob/master/fcm-notifications/functions/index.js#L76-L88
Hi Rohan fundamentaly you should use below logic to save tokens on server.
Step1:
as soon as you get token in callback whether new or same try to save it localstorage.
Step2:
Call your REST API to save it to your server. it is upto you if you want to send unique user identifier along with the token.
Step3:
It is obvious you will recieve token callback a lot of time so you can check whether you have similar token in localstorage, it means you have the token on the server so no point calling REST API.
Step 4: Now your app can send events back to server and based on it trigger Push notifications to the users.
Step 5: You can Add/update user token based on uniqye user identifier. In some cases a user can be guest user, so your app should generate guest userId and link it with token.
Stay safe.

How a Firebase token is generated?

I'm doing analysis on Firebase Token and understood below points:-
-> A Firebase token is saved in database which will be used for sending notifications.
-> The token generally do not expire except in the following cases:
- The app deletes Instance ID
- The app is restored on a new device
- The user uninstalls/reinstall the app
- The user clears app data.
-> When we use a token which is expired we get errors like Not Registered from the response while sending messages.
-> To avoid the error, we should be deleting the token from database.
However I have found that If we login to a cloud application (which is my app currently), a new fcm token gets generated when i logged in to a new browser say FireFox, Edge etc.
So, the token is generated based on browser or System IP or what exactly the Fcm uses to generate a token ?
The method used to generate the token is an implementation detail, and you should not depend on that to build your app.
A token uniquely identifies a device. Each device receives messages independently of each other, and does not know anything about the user of that device. It's expected that if a user signed into an app on multiple devices, that each device would generate a unique token. If you want to send message to a user, you will have to map each of the user's device tokens in your own database, and send the message to each of them, or only the ones that the user chooses.
You can expect that device tokens might change over time. If you send a message to a device, and the API tells you that the token is not valid, you should simply delete it from your records.

Lazy registration with Auth0 and Firebase

In Firebase, it is possible to log in a user as anonymous with a token, and when the user decides to register, just update the credentials. I have a hard time understanding whether the same is possible with Auth0.
We are now using Auth0 as identity provider, the flow is the following:
The user is using the app anonymously with limited access.
User registers in the app with Auth0.
Auth0 issues a token
Firebase receives the token and lets the user use the restricted parts. All the data generated by the anonymous user is lost
What I want to achieve:
When the user starts using the app, Auth0 immediately creates a user token
The token is valid to access certain parts of Firebase database
If/when the user decides to register, their token remains valid but receives additional credentials
Firebase lets the user use the restricted parts
It's Konrad from Auth0 Community Team. Yep as Baskaro said unfortunately it's not supported from our side of stack. It will be great if you can submit it as a feature request to our product team using our feedback form (you will be contacted by one of our product managers within 10 business days):
https://auth0.com/feedback

Firebase (FCM) registration token

I am the new for FCM. Here are some questions about the registration token:
Is the registration token generated by the FCM connection server?
Does the token change periodically in the connection server?
When?
Will it force the onTokenRefresh() in the app to be called?
I have googled for a week but didn't get any details. Please help. Thanks.
1. Is the registration token generated by the FCM connection server?
No. It gets generated by the FirebaseInstanceID. The way I understand the flow of event on first time registration:
The app retrieves a unique Instance ID.
The registration token is generated by calling the InstanceId.getToken().
Developer (usually) sends the token to the App Server.
2. Does the token change periodically in the connection server?
I think the onTokenRefresh() docs pretty much answers this.
Called when the system determines that the tokens need to be refreshed. The application should call getToken() and send the tokens to all application servers.
This will not be called very frequently, it is needed for key rotation and to handle Instance ID changes due to:
App deletes Instance ID
App is restored on a new device
User uninstalls/reinstall the app
User clears app data
The system will throttle the refresh event across all devices to avoid overloading application servers with token updates.
See this part of the docs for more details.

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