firebase-auth-basics
Firebase Authenticationを複数のIDプロバイダーと安全なデータアクセスルールで設定します。メール/パスワード、電話番号、匿名、フェデレーションプロバイダー(Google、Facebook、Twitter、GitHub、Microsoft、Apple)、カスタム認証統合をサポートします。各認証ユーザーには一意のIDとJWTベースのトークン(短期間のIDトークンと長期間のリフレッシュトークン)が付与され、Firebaseサービスにアクセスできます。Googleサインイン、匿名、メール/パスワードのプロバイダーはCLI経由で有効化し、Firebase Consoleを使用します...
npx skills add https://github.com/firebase/agent-skills --skill firebase-auth-basicsPrerequisites
- Firebase Project: Created via
npx -y firebase-tools@latest projects:create(seefirebase-basics). - Firebase CLI: Installed and logged in (see
firebase-basics).
Core Concepts
Firebase Authentication provides backend services, easy-to-use SDKs, and ready-made UI libraries to authenticate users to your app.
Users
A user is an entity that can sign in to your app. Each user is identified by a
unique ID (uid) which is guaranteed to be unique across all providers. User
properties include:
uid: Unique identifier.email: User's email address (if available).displayName: User's display name (if available).photoURL: URL to user's photo (if available).emailVerified: Boolean indicating if the email is verified.
Identity Providers
Firebase Auth supports multiple ways to sign in:
- Email/Password: Basic email and password authentication.
- Federated Identity Providers: Google, Facebook, Twitter, GitHub, Microsoft, Apple, etc.
- Phone Number: SMS-based authentication.
- Anonymous: Temporary guest accounts that can be linked to permanent accounts later.
- Custom Auth: Integrate with your existing auth system.
Google Sign In is recommended as a good and secure default provider.
Tokens
When a user signs in, they receive an ID Token (JWT). This token is used to identify the user when making requests to Firebase services (Realtime Database, Cloud Storage, Firestore) or your own backend.
- ID Token: Short-lived (1 hour), verifies identity.
- Refresh Token: Long-lived, used to get new ID tokens.
Workflow
1. Provisioning
Option 1. Enabling Authentication via CLI
Only Google Sign In, anonymous auth, and email/password auth can be enabled via CLI. For other providers, use the Firebase Console.
Configure Firebase Authentication in firebase.json by adding an 'auth' block:
{
"auth": {
"providers": {
"anonymous": true,
"emailPassword": true,
"googleSignIn": {
"oAuthBrandDisplayName": "Your Brand Name",
"supportEmail": "[email protected]",
"authorizedRedirectUris": ["https://example.com", "http://localhost"]
}
}
}
}
[!NOTE] If the Google Sign-In popup opens and immediately closes with the error
[firebase_auth/unauthorized-domain], it means the domain is not authorized. For local development, ensurelocalhostis included in the Authorized Domains list in the Firebase Console or via theauthorizedDomainsfield infirebase.json. CRITICAL: Do NOT include the protocol or port number in the Authorized Domains list (e.g., uselocalhost, NOThttp://localhost:9090).
CRITICAL: After configuring firebase.json, you MUST deploy the auth
configuration to the Firebase backend for the changes to take effect. This is
essential for auth providers like Google Sign-In, email/password, etc. to
auto-generate the necessary OAuth clients for your app platforms. Run:
npx -y firebase-tools@latest deploy --only auth
Option 2. Enabling Authentication in Console
Enable other providers in the Firebase Console.
- Go to the https://console.firebase.google.com/project/_/authentication/providers
- Select your project.
- Enable the desired Sign-in providers (e.g., Email/Password, Google).
2. Client Setup & Usage
Web See references/client_sdk_web.md.
Flutter See references/flutter_setup.md. Android (Kotlin) See references/client_sdk_android.md.
3. Security Rules
Secure your data using request.auth in Firestore/Storage rules.