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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing | Firebase Admin Java SDK

Thank you for contributing to the Firebase community!

Have a usage question?

We get lots of those and we love helping you, but GitHub is not the best place for them. Issues which just ask about usage will be closed. Here are some resources to get help:

If the official documentation doesn't help, try asking a question on the Firebase Google Group or one of our other official support channels.

Please avoid double posting across multiple channels!

Think you found a bug?

Yeah, we're definitely not perfect!

Search through old issues before submitting a new issue as your question may have already been answered.

If your issue appears to be a bug, and hasn't been reported, open a new issue. Please use the provided bug report template and include a minimal repro.

If you are up to the challenge, submit a pull request with a fix!

Have a feature request?

Great, we love hearing how we can improve our products! Share you idea through our feature request support channel.

Want to submit a pull request?

Sweet, we'd love to accept your contribution! Open a new pull request and fill out the provided template.

If you want to implement a new feature, please open an issue with a proposal first so that we can figure out if the feature makes sense and how it will work.

Make sure your changes pass our linter and the tests all pass on your local machine. Most non-trivial changes should include some extra test coverage. If you aren't sure how to add tests, feel free to submit regardless and ask us for some advice.

Finally, you will need to sign our Contributor License Agreement, and go through our code review process before we can accept your pull request.

Contributor License Agreement

Contributions to this project must be accompanied by a Contributor License Agreement. You (or your employer) retain the copyright to your contribution. This simply gives us permission to use and redistribute your contributions as part of the project. Head over to https://cla.developers.google.com/ to see your current agreements on file or to sign a new one.

You generally only need to submit a CLA once, so if you've already submitted one (even if it was for a different project), you probably don't need to do it again.

Code reviews

All submissions, including submissions by project members, require review. We use GitHub pull requests for this purpose. Consult GitHub Help for more information on using pull requests.

Need to get set up locally?

Initial Setup

Install Java 8 or higher.

We use Apache Maven for building, testing and releasing the Admin Java SDK code. Follow the installation guide, and install Maven 3.3 or higher.

Running Linters

Maven Checkstyle plugin is configured to run everytime the build is invoked. This plugin verifies source code format, and enforces a number of other Java programming best practices. Any style violations will cause the build to break.

Configuration for the Checkstyle plugin can be found in the checkstyle.xml file at the root of the repository. To execute only the linter without rest of the build pipeline, execute the following command:

mvn validate

If you are using Eclipse for development, you can install the Eclipse Checkstyle plugin, and import the checkstyle.xml file into the IDE. This enables you to have the linter constantly checking your code as you develop. A similar plugin is available for IntelliJ IDEA as well.

Unit Testing

Tests are implemented using the Junit4 framework, and are housed under the src/test subdirectory. They get executed as part of the build, and test failures will cause the build to break. To run the unit tests without the rest of the build pipeline, execute the following command:

mvn test

Integration Testing

Integration tests are also written using Junit4. They coexist with the unit tests in the src/test subdirectory. Integration tests follow the naming convention *IT.java (e.g. DataTestIT.java), which enables the Maven Surefire and Failsafe plugins to differentiate between the two types of tests.

Integration tests are executed against a real life Firebase project. If you do not already have one suitable for running the tests against, you can create a new project in the Firebase Console following the setup guide below. If you already have a Firebase project, you'll need to obtain credentials to communicate and authorize access to your Firebase project:

  1. Service account certificate: This allows access to your Firebase project through a service account which is required for all integration tests. This can be downloaded as a JSON file from the Settings > Service Accounts tab of the Firebase console when you click the Generate new private key button. Copy the file into the repo so it's available at integration_cert.json.

    Note: Service accounts should be carefully managed and their keys should never be stored in publicly accessible source code or repositories.

  2. Web API key: This allows for Auth sign-in needed for some Authentication and Tenant Management integration tests. This is displayed in the Settings > General tab of the Firebase console after enabling Authentication as described in the steps below. Copy it and save to a new text file at integration_apikey.txt.

Set up your Firebase project as follows:

  1. Enable Authentication:

    1. Go to the Firebase Console, and select Authentication from the Build menu.
    2. Click on Get Started.
    3. Select Sign-in method > Add new provider > Email/Password then enable both the Email/Password and Email link (passwordless sign-in) options.
  2. Enable Firestore:

    1. Go to the Firebase Console, and select Firestore Database from the Build menu.
    2. Click on the Create database button. You can choose to set up Firestore either in the production mode or in the test mode.
  3. Enable Realtime Database:

    1. Go to the Firebase Console, and select Realtime Database from the Build menu.
    2. Click on the Create Database button. You can choose to set up the Realtime Database either in the locked mode or in the test mode.

    Note: Integration tests are not run against the default Realtime Database reference and are instead run against a database created at https://{PROJECT_ID}.firebaseio.com. This second Realtime Database reference is created in the following steps.

    1. In the Data tab click on the kebab menu (3 dots) and select Create Database.
    2. Enter your Project ID (Found in the General tab in Account Settings) as the Realtime Database reference. Again, you can choose to set up the Realtime Database either in the locked mode or in the test mode.
  4. Enable Storage:

    1. Go to the Firebase Console, and select Storage from the Build menu.
    2. Click on the Get started button. You can choose to set up Cloud Storage either in the production mode or in the test mode.
  5. Enable the IAM API:

    1. Go to the Google Cloud console and make sure your Firebase project is selected.
    2. Select APIs & Services from the main menu, and click the ENABLE APIS AND SERVICES button.
    3. Search for and enable Identity and Access Management (IAM) API by Google Enterprise API.
  6. Enable Tenant Management:

    1. Go to Google Cloud console | Identity Platform and if it is not already enabled, click Enable.
    2. Then enable multi-tenancy for your project.
  7. Ensure your service account has the Firebase Authentication Admin role. This is required to ensure that exported user records contain the password hashes of the user accounts:

    1. Go to Google Cloud console | IAM & admin.
    2. Find your service account in the list. If not added click the pencil icon to edit its permissions.
    3. Click ADD ANOTHER ROLE and choose Firebase Authentication Admin.
    4. Click SAVE.

Now run the following command to invoke the integration test suite:

mvn verify

The above command invokes both unit and integration test suites. To execute only the integration tests, specify the -DskipUTs flag.

Generating API Docs

Invoke the Maven Javadoc plugin as follows to generate API docs for all packages in the codebase:

mvn javadoc:javadoc

This will generate the API docs, and place them in the target/site/apidocs directory.

To generate API docs for only the public APIs (i.e. ones that are not marked with @hide tags), you need to trigger the devsite-apidocs Maven profile. This profile uses Maven Javadoc plugin with Doclava, which honors the @hide tags in source code. Dovlava also accepts a set of Clearsilver templates as a parameter. You can trigger this Maven profile by running the following command:

mvn site -Ddevsite.template=path/to/templates/directory/

This command will place the generated API docs in the target/apidocs directory.