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stripe-fire
Advanced tools
A Node.js module that handles Stripe API calls for Firebase references.
StripeFire uses the following APIs:
Install the module: npm install stripe-fire
Require in Node.js file:
var stripeFire = require("stripe-fire")("your Stripe private key");
A StripeFire
object is used to store Firebase references for Stripe API objects for a specific Stripe account. The Stripe account is identified by the private key.
Each object accepts ref
, callback
, accessToken
, and alterRequest
parameters.
ref
(required): an instance of a Firebase object or a string that points to a Firebase referencecallback
(optional): a function which is called after a child is added to the specified reference and the API request is sent to Stripe; the function accepts two parameters: an error object and the Stripe object if the request is successfulaccessToken
(optional): a string or function which returns an access token to be sent with the Stripe API request (used for Stripe Connect); the function accepts one parameter: the data set in the Firebase childalterRequest
(optional): a function which is called before a request is sent to Stripe; the function accepts one parameter: the data set in the Firebase childThe reference should contain children which are all similar Stripe objects. Note the children names can be anything so long as they exist in parent objects.
For example, a refund child named order1234
should have a corresponding charge child named order1234
. This allows StripeFire to be agnostic about Stripe object ids.
After the API request is sent to Stripe the full Stripe object is stored at the same location where it was created (or an error object if an error occured). For child objects i.e. refunds, cards, subscriptions, etc., the reference is deleted after a successful response from Stripe and the parent object i.e. charges, customers, etc. is updated.
The callback
, accessToken
, and alterRequest
functions may be called with the this
variable set with the following properties:
accessToken
: the access token used in the requestaction
: create/delete/update as appropriatechildSnapshot
: the Firebase DataSnapshot used to generate the requestCreates a StripeFire
object which can be used to store references.
Example:
//sk_test_BQokikJOvBiI2HlWgH4olfQ2 is the example Stripe private key
var stripeFire = require("stripe-fire")("sk_test_BQokikJOvBiI2HlWgH4olfQ2");
Initializes and returns a Charges
object.
Example:
var charges = stripeFire.charges("https://stripe-fire.firebaseio.com/charges", function(err, charge) {
// Called after a create/update charge request is sent to Stripe
}, "ACCESS_TOKEN", function(chargeData) {
// Called before a create/update charge request is sent to Stripe
return chargeData;
});
Sample Client-Side Usage:
var chargesRef = new Firebase("https://stripe-fire.firebaseio.com/charges");
// Create a charge
chargesRef.push({
amount: 400,
currency: "usd",
card: "token"
});
// Update a charge
chargesRef.child("ChargeName").update({
description: "Updating description"
});
Initializes a Refunds
object which is a descendant of the Charges
object. The charge with the same name as the refund will be retrieved from Stripe and saved under the Charges
object reference.
Example:
charges.refunds("https://stripe-fire.firebaseio.com/refunds", function(err, refund) {
// Called after a create/update refund request is sent to Stripe
}, "ACCESS_TOKEN", function(refundData) {
// Called before a create/update refund request is sent to Stripe
return refundData;
});
Sample Client-Side Usage:
var refundsRef = new Firebase("https://stripe-fire.firebaseio.com/refunds");
//"ChargeName" should exist as a child in the charges reference
refundsRef.child("ChargeName").set({
amount: 400
});
Initializes a Coupons
object.
Example:
stripeFire.coupons("https://stripe-fire.firebaseio.com/coupons", function(err, coupon) {
// Called after a create/delete/update coupon request is sent to Stripe
}, "ACCESS_TOKEN", function(couponData) {
// Called before a create/update coupon request is sent to Stripe
return couponData;
});
Sample Client-Side Usage:
var couponsRef = new Firebase("https://stripe-fire.firebaseio.com/coupons");
// Create a coupon
couponsRef.push({
percent_off: 25,
duration: "repeating",
duration_in_months: 3
});
// Update a coupon
couponsRef.child("CouponName").update({
metadata: {
key: "value"
}
});
Initializes and returns a Customers
object.
Example:
var customers = stripeFire.customers("https://stripe-fire.firebaseio.com/customers", function(err, customer) {
// Called after a create/delete/update customer request is sent to Stripe
}, "ACCESS_TOKEN", function(customerData) {
// Called before a create/update customer request is sent to Stripe
return customerData;
});
Sample Client-Side Usage:
var customersRef = new Firebase("https://stripe-fire.firebaseio.com/customers");
// Create a customer
customersRef.push({
card: "token"
});
// Update a customer
customersRef.child("CustomerName").update({
description: "Updating description"
});
Initializes a Cards
object which is a descendant of the Customers
object. The customer with the same name as the card's parent will be retrieved from Stripe and saved under the Customers
object reference.
Example:
customers.cards("https://stripe-fire.firebaseio.com/cards", function(err, card) {
// Called after a create/update card request is sent to Stripe
}, "ACCESS_TOKEN", function(cardData) {
// Called before a create/update card request is sent to Stripe
return cardData;
});
Sample Client-Side Usage:
var cardsRef = new Firebase("https://stripe-fire.firebaseio.com/cards");
//"CustomerName" should exist as a child in the customers reference
cardsRef.child("CustomerName").set({
card: "token"
});
Initializes a Subscriptions
object which is a descendant of the Customers
object. The customer with the same name as the subscription's parent will be retrieved from Stripe and saved under the Customers
object reference.
Example:
customers.subscriptions("https://stripe-fire.firebaseio.com/subscriptions", function(err, subscription) {
// Called after a create/update subscription request is sent to Stripe
}, "ACCESS_TOKEN", function(subscriptionData) {
// Called before a create/update subscription request is sent to Stripe
return subscriptionData;
});
Sample Client-Side Usage:
var subscriptionsRef = new Firebase("https://stripe-fire.firebaseio.com/subscriptions");
//"CustomerName" should exist as a child in the customers reference
subscriptionsRef.child("CustomerName").set({
plan: "plan"
});
Initializes a Plans
object.
Example:
stripeFire.plans("https://stripe-fire.firebaseio.com/plans", function(err, plan) {
// Called after a create/delete/update plan request is sent to Stripe
}, "ACCESS_TOKEN", function(planData) {
// Called before a create/update plan request is sent to Stripe
// IMPORTANT: since id is reserved for retrieving objects this cannot be set in Firebase before being sent to Stripe
planData.id = planData.name;
return planData;
});
Sample Client-Side Usage:
var plansRef = new Firebase("https://stripe-fire.firebaseio.com/plans");
// Create a plan
plansRef.push({
amount: 2000,
interval: "month",
name: "name",
currency: "usd"
});
// Update a plan
plansRef.child("PlanName").update({
metadata: {
key: "value"
}
});
Make sure to secure Firebase with the proper rules to protect the Stripe data. Checkout the Firebase Security API for more details.
To easily get started building Firebase rules you can use the Blaze Security Compiler.
Install the Blaze Security Compiler with: npm install -g blaze_compiler
A sample rules.yml file has been provided as a boilerplate.
In lieu of a formal style guide, take care to maintain the existing coding style. Add unit tests for any new or changed functionality. Lint and test your code using Grunt.
Copyright (c) 2014 David Caseria Licensed under the MIT license.
FAQs
A Node.js module that handles Stripe API calls for Firebase references.
The npm package stripe-fire receives a total of 0 weekly downloads. As such, stripe-fire popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that stripe-fire demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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