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Aether Firebase Consumer

The FB Consumer takes messages from Aether's Kafka topics and forward them to a specified location within Firebase. In the future, you will be able to couple this with Cloud Functions like those found in the (Aether Cloud Triggers Repo)[https://github.com/eHealthAfrica/aether-firebase-cloud-triggers] to keep Aether and Firebase in sync.

As with all consumer built on the (Aether Consumer SDK)[https://github.com/eHealthAfrica/aether-consumer-sdk] We control the sending of messages from Aether -> Target system via an API. We describe the resources via a JSON document and send the document to the API, where it creates a live Resource or Job and drives behavior. Additionally there may be ad-hoc actions you can perform against resources you've created.

In this consumer there are two resources:

  • Firebase (A firebase instance)
  • Subscription (A set of aether topics and rules, and their destination in Firebase)

And a Job

  • Job (Take one or more Subscriptions, and sends their contents to a Firebase)

The easiest way to get started is to create a Firebase Resource on the consumer.

To do so, you need to POST a document describing it to http://{consumer_url}/firebase/add. The document will be validated against a schema and it will complain if yours is malformed.

A Firebase Resource requires the following. The important bits are name, url, and credential.

{
  "id": "default",
  "name": {your-firebase-app-name},
  "rtdb_project": "test-project",
  "cfs_project": "cfsproject",
  "url": "https://{your-firebase-app-name}.firebaseio.com",
  "credential": {A json document from Firebase that is a Service Account Credential},
  "aether_server_alias": "test-server",
  "firebase_config_path": "_aether/rules",
  "hash_path": "_aether/hashes"
}

The API is self documenting. So if you want to know what you can do with your Firebase Resource now that it exists, you can ask the describe endpoint. GETting from /firebase/describe will yield the following:

[
  {
    "doc": "Described the available methods exposed by this resource type", 
    "method": "describe", 
    "signature": "(*args, **kwargs)"
  }, 
  {
    "doc": "Returns the schema for instances of this resource", 
    "method": "get_schema", 
    "signature": "(*args, **kwargs)"
  }, 
  {
    "doc": "Return a lengthy validations.\n{'valid': True} on success\n{'valid': False, 'validation_errors': [errors...]} on failure", 
    "method": "validate_pretty", 
    "signature": "(definition, *args, **kwargs)"
  }, 
  {
    "doc": null, 
    "method": "test_connection", 
    "signature": "(self, *args, **kwargs)"
  }
]

We think we've input a valid definition, but we want to test_connection to make sure. Whenever you're asking a specific resource to do something, in this case the Firebase instance with ID == default, you need to include that in your call. So to test if our Firebase is working, we'll GET /firebase/test_connection?id=default. If you get an error, you may have the wrong, name, url or malformed credentials (they should be a service account credential in the form of JSON). If you get a 2xx, then the Firebase is hooked up!

Next we need to add a Subscription. These resources look like this:

{
  "id": "sub-test",
  "name": "Test Subscription",
  "topic_pattern": "Building",
  "topic_options": {
    "masking_annotation": "@aether_masking",
    "masking_levels": [
      "public",
      "private"
    ],
    "masking_emit_level": "public",
    "filter_required": false,
    "filter_field_path": "operational_status",
    "filter_pass_values": [
      "operational"
    ]
  },
  "fb_options": {
    "sync_mode": "forward",
    "target_path": "_aether/entities/{topic}"
  }
}

The important parts are topic_pattern and target_path. The topic pattern is the source topic or topics from Aether. The target path is the destination in Firebase. If you leave the {topic} substitution in the target path, the consumer will use this as part of the path in Firebase. For example, you have topics Person, and Place in Aether.

If you set in the document:

topic_pattern -> P*
target_path -> some/path/{topic}

In Firebase, Person messages will goto some/path/Person while Place messages will goto some/path/Place. If you had set:

target_path == some/path/All

Then messages of both types would be placed at that hard coded path.

You can also ask /subscription to describe itself, and it will give you the following:

[
  {
    "doc": "Described the available methods exposed by this resource type", 
    "method": "describe", 
    "signature": "(*args, **kwargs)"
  }, 
  {
    "doc": "Returns the schema for instances of this resource", 
    "method": "get_schema", 
    "signature": "(*args, **kwargs)"
  }, 
  {
    "doc": "Return a lengthy validations.\n{'valid': True} on success\n{'valid': False, 'validation_errors': [errors...]} on failure", 
    "method": "validate_pretty", 
    "signature": "(definition, *args, **kwargs)"
  }
]

Now that we have both Resources registered, we can create a Job to execute the subscription. The job has a very simple definition:

{
  "id": "default",
  "name": "Default Firebase Consumer Job",
  "firebase": "default",
  "subscription": [
    "sub-test"
  ]
}

It's important here that you point the firebase field to a Firebase resource by it's id, and the same for including a subscription by it's id. You'll POST that document to /job/add

And that should be it! You can ask many things of the Job. From it's description, it handles the following actions.

Job

[
  {
    "doc": "Described the available methods exposed by this resource type", 
    "method": "describe", 
    "signature": "(*args, **kwargs)"
  }, 
  {
    "doc": "Returns the schema for instances of this resource", 
    "method": "get_schema", 
    "signature": "(*args, **kwargs)"
  }, 
  {
    "doc": "Return a lengthy validations.\n{'valid': True} on success\n{'valid': False, 'validation_errors': [errors...]} on failure", 
    "method": "validate_pretty", 
    "signature": "(definition, *args, **kwargs)"
  }, 
  {
    "doc": "Temporarily Pause a job execution.\nWill restart if the system resets. For a longer pause, remove the job via DELETE", 
    "method": "pause", 
    "signature": "(self, *args, **kwargs)"
  }, 
  {
    "doc": "Resume the job after pausing it.", 
    "method": "resume", 
    "signature": "(self, *args, **kwargs)"
  }, 
  {
    "doc": null, 
    "method": "get_status", 
    "signature": "(self, *args, **kwargs) -> Union[Dict[str, Any], str]"
  }, 
  {
    "doc": "A list of the last 100 log entries from this job in format\n[\n    (timestamp, log_level, message),\n    (timestamp, log_level, message),\n    ...\n]", 
    "method": "get_logs", 
    "signature": "(self, *arg, **kwargs)"
  }, 
  {
    "doc": "Get a list of topics to which the job can subscribe.\nYou can also use a wildcard at the end of names like:\nName* which would capture both Name1 && Name2, etc", 
    "method": "list_topics", 
    "signature": "(self, *args, **kwargs)"
  }, 
  {
    "doc": "A List of topics currently subscribed to by this job", 
    "method": "list_subscribed_topics", 
    "signature": "(self, *arg, **kwargs)"
  }
]

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An Aether consumer to consumer data from Firebase Realtime Database and Cloud Firestore

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