Reputation: 860
I was written a code previous week and it deploys without any error on firebase server. but now I cannot deploy it again on another account in orders to I don't change my code!
one of my friends tell me this in about new update of firebase but I don't find any solution for this!
it shows these errors
Promises must be handled appropriately
and
block is empty
the first error pointed to my first line and the second one pointed to end 'catch' block :
import * as functions from 'firebase-functions';
import * as admin from 'firebase-admin';
admin.initializeApp();
// export const helloWorld = functions.https.onRequest((request, response) => {
// console.log("sadegh");
// response.send("Hello from Firebase1!");
// });
//
export const sendChatNotification = functions
.firestore.document('rooms/{roomId}/messages/{messageId}')
.onCreate((snap, context) => {
const roomId = context.params.roomId;
const messageId = context.params.messageId;
const newValue = snap.data();
const receiverId = newValue.receiverId;
const text = newValue.text;
const type = newValue.type;
const senderName = newValue.senderName;
var p = admin.firestore().collection("users").doc(receiverId).get();
p.then(snapshot2 => {
const data2 = snapshot2.data();
const firebaseNotificationToken = data2.firebaseNotificationToken;
// const name = data2.name;
if (type == 'voiceCall' || type == 'videoCall' || type == 'hangUp') {
const channelId = newValue.channelId;
const senderId = newValue.senderId;
const status = newValue.status;
console.log("type: " + type + " /status: " + status)
let message = {
data: {
type: type,
senderId: senderId,
senderName: senderName,
receiverId: receiverId,
status: status,
channelId: channelId,
roomId: roomId
},
token: firebaseNotificationToken
};
sendMessage(message)
if (status == "canceled") {
let message1 = {
notification: {
title: '☎ Missed voice call ',
body: senderName
},
token: firebaseNotificationToken
};
sendMessage(message1)
} else if ((type == 'voiceCall' || type == 'videoCall') && status = '') {
let message1 = {
notification: {
title: '☎ ' + senderName + ' is calling you',
body: 'tap to answer...'
},
token: firebaseNotificationToken
};
sendMessage(message1)
}
} else {
let message = {
notification: {
title: '📃 ' + senderName,
body: text
},
token: firebaseNotificationToken
};
sendMessage(message)
}
return "";
}).catch((e) => {
console.log('error: ' + e);
return null;
});
// return "";
// }).catch(e=>{console.log('error: '+e)});
return "sadegh";
});
function sendMessage(message) {
admin.messaging().send(message)
.then((response) => {
// Response is a message ID string.
console.log('Successfully sent message:', response);
})
.catch((error) => {
console.log('Error sending message:', error);
});
}
Upvotes: 0
Views: 1334
Reputation: 83103
Your code is a bit messy and it is not really easy to understand it without dedicating a long time.
However, here is below a piece of code that should work and that cover one case of your Business Logic. Note how the promises returned by the asynchronous tasks are returned.
export const sendChatNotification = functions.firestore
.document('rooms/{roomId}/messages/{messageId}')
.onCreate((snap, context) => {
const roomId = context.params.roomId;
const messageId = context.params.messageId;
const newValue = snap.data();
const receiverId = newValue.receiverId;
const text = newValue.text;
const type = newValue.type;
const senderName = newValue.senderName;
var p = admin
.firestore()
.collection('users')
.doc(receiverId)
.get();
return p.then(snapshot2 => { // <- HERE, the promise is returned
const data2 = snapshot2.data();
const firebaseNotificationToken = data2.firebaseNotificationToken;
if (type == 'voiceCall' || type == 'videoCall' || type == 'hangUp') {
const channelId = newValue.channelId;
const senderId = newValue.senderId;
const status = newValue.status;
console.log('type: ' + type + ' /status: ' + status);
let message = {
data: {
type: type,
senderId: senderId,
senderName: senderName,
receiverId: receiverId,
status: status,
channelId: channelId,
roomId: roomId
},
token: firebaseNotificationToken
};
return admin.messaging().send(message); // <- HERE, the promise is returned
}
});
});
I would suggest you watch the 3 videos about "JavaScript Promises" from the Firebase video series: https://firebase.google.com/docs/functions/video-series/
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 1660
The problem is you commented the return in your catch block As your Firebase .get() function must return a promise, in your code, if it fails, it won't return a promise and it will hang there.
either use return null
or return something to be handled by the calling app
Upvotes: 0