/fireproof

Use promises with Firebase.

Primary LanguageJavaScriptISC LicenseISC

fireproof

Firebase runs hot! Don't burn yourself with callbacks. Use promises instead. Fireproof wraps Firebase objects with lightweight promise support.

Installation

npm install --save fireproof

Usage

See the API documentation here.

The bottom line is this: all Firebase methods are reproduced on a Fireproof object.

You can choose to "bless" Fireproof with a promise library that follows the deferral model, or any spec-compliant promise constructor. Q.js, Kew, and Angular $q are some examples. Just call Fireproof.bless(Q). If you don't, Fireproof tries to use the native Promise constructor, if available.

  • If the corresponding Firebase method has no return value but does something asynchronously, Fireproof returns a promise that fulfills if the interaction succeeds and rejects if an error occurs. This is true of, e.g., transaction(), auth(), set(), update(), remove(), and once().

  • For on(), Firebase returns the callback method that you passed in. Fireproof returns your wrapped callback method with an extra method, then(), attached. So the callback is effectively a promise!

  • For push(), Firebase returns the reference to the new child. Fireproof does the same, but the reference is also a promise that resolves if the push succeeds and rejects if the push fails.

  • All Fireproof objects are themselves promises. Except for the case of push() mentioned above, their then() is a shortcut for fp.once('value'). This means you can get the value of any Fireproof object at any time just by treating it as a promise!

var Fireproof = require('fireproof'),
  Firebase = require('firebase');

var firebase = new Firebase('https://test.firebaseio.com/thing'),
  fireproof = new Fireproof(firebase);

fireproof.auth('my_auth_token').then(function() {
  console.log('Successfully authenticated.')
}, function(err) {
  console.error('Error authenticating to Firebase!');
})

Support

IE back to 9.