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EmberFire is an officially supported adapter for using Firebase with Ember Data.
The DS.FirebaseAdapter
provides all of the standard DS.Adapter
methods and will automatically synchronize the store with Firebase.
If you would like to use Firebase without Ember Data, we recommend the third-party ember-firebase binding.
Join the Firebase + Ember Google Group to ask technical questions, share apps you've built, and chat with other developers in the community
<!-- Don't forget to include Ember and its dependencies -->
<script src="http://builds.emberjs.com/canary/ember-data.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdn.firebase.com/js/client/1.0.6/firebase.js"></script>
<script src="emberfire.js"></script>
If you load EmberFire with Bower, it will include ember-data automatically.
To get started, simply create an instance of the
DS.FirebaseAdapter
in your app:
App.ApplicationAdapter = DS.FirebaseAdapter.extend({
firebase: new Firebase('https://<my-firebase>.firebaseio.com')
});
Your Firebase data will now be synced with the Ember Data store
You can now interact with the data store as you normally would. For example,
calling find()
with a specific ID will retrieve that record from Firebase.
Additionally, from that point on, every time that record is updated in Firebase,
it will automatically be updated in the local data store.
See the Ember documentation for a full list of methods, including ways to create, find, delete and query records.
Run the following to add emberfire.js
to your project:
bower install --save-dev emberfire
Add the following to your Brocfile.js
(after importing Ember Data):
app.import('vendor/firebase/firebase.js');
app.import('vendor/emberfire/dist/emberfire.js');
Create an "app/adapters/application.js" with the following content:
/* globals Firebase */
export default DS.FirebaseAdapter.extend({
firebase: new Firebase('https://<my-firebase>.firebaseio.com')
});
By default, EmberFire will try to determine the correct Firebase reference based on the model name
// Define a Post model
App.Post = DS.Model.extend();
// Records will be fetched from to https://<my-firebase>.firebaseio.com/posts
var posts = store.findAll('post');
// The new record will be saved to https://<my-firebase>.firebaseio.com/posts/post_id
var newPost = store.createRecord('post').save();
If you would like to customize where a model will be fetched/saved, simply create a model-specific adapter:
// Define a Post model
App.Post = DS.Model.extend();
// Define a Post adapter
App.PostAdapter = App.ApplicationAdapter.extend({
pathForType: function(type) {
return 'custom-posts';
}
});
Overriding the pathForType
method will allow you to tell the adapter where it should fetch/save records of the specified type
// Records will now be fetched from to https://<my-firebase>.firebaseio.com/custom-posts
var posts = store.findAll('post');
// The new record will now be saved to https://<my-firebase>.firebaseio.com/custom-posts/post_id
var newPost = store.createRecord('post').save();
EmberFire can handle relationships in two different ways
Any relationship that is flagged as async: true
tells the adapter to fetch
the record if it hasn't already been loaded
App.Post = DS.Model.extend({
comments: DS.hasMany('comment', { async: true })
});
App.Comment = DS.Model.extend({
post: DS.belongsTo('post', { async: true })
});
In the App.Post
example, comments will be fetched from
https://<my-firebase>.firebaseio.com/comments
Here is what the data structure would look in Firebase:
{
"posts": {
"post_id_1": {
"comments": {
"comment_id_1": true
}
}
},
"comments": {
"comment_id_1": {
"body": "This is a comment",
"post": "post_id_1"
}
}
}
NOTE: If your async data isn't autoloading, make sure you've defined your relationships in both directions.
Any relationship that is flagged as embedded: true
tells the adapter
that the related records have been included in the payload.
Generally, this approach is more complicated and not as widely used, but it has been included to support existing data structures.
App.Post = DS.Model.extend({
comments: DS.hasMany('comment', { embedded: true })
});
Here is what the data structure would look like in Firebase:
{
"posts": {
"post_id_1": {
"comments": {
"comment_id_1": {
"body": "This is a comment"
}
}
}
}
}
NOTE: When a model has embedded relationships, the related model should not be saved on its own.
var comment = store.createRecord('comment');
// This WILL NOT save the comment inside of the post because the adapter doesn't know
// where to save the comment without the context of the post
comment.save();
Instead, the comment needs to be added to the post and then the post can be saved
// Add the new comment to the post and save it
post.get('comments').addObject(comment);
// Saving the post will save the embedded comments
post.save()
If you would like to build EmberFire from the source, use grunt to build and lint the code:
# Install Grunt and development dependencies
npm install
# Default task - validates with jshint, minifies source, and runs tests
grunt
# Watch for changes and run unit test after each change
grunt watch
# Minify source
grunt build
MIT.
FAQs
The officially supported Ember binding for Firebase
The npm package emberfire receives a total of 30 weekly downloads. As such, emberfire popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that emberfire demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 3 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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