You can distribute builds to testers using
fastlane,
an open source platform that automates building and releasing iOS and Android
apps. It follows simple instructions defined in a Fastfile
. After you set up
fastlane and your Fastfile
, you can integrate App Distribution with your fastlane
configuration.
Step 1. Set up fastlane
To add App Distribution to your fastlane configuration, run the following command from the root of your iOS project:
fastlane add_plugin firebase_app_distribution
If the command prompts you with an option, select
Option 3: RubyGems.org
.
Step 2. Authenticate with Firebase
Before you can use the fastlane plugin, you must first authenticate with your Firebase project in one of the following ways. By default, the fastlane plugin looks for credentials from the Firebase CLI if no other authentication method is used.
Authenticating with a service account allows you to flexibly use the plugin with your continuous integration (CI) system. There are two ways to provide service account credentials:
- Pass your service account key file to the
firebase_app_distribution
action. You might find this method convenient if you already have your service account key file in your build environment. - Set the environment variable
GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS
to point to your service account key file. You might prefer this method if you already have Application Default Credentials (ADC) configured for another Google service (e.g., Google Cloud).
- On the Google Cloud console, select your project and create a new service account.
- Add the Firebase App Distribution Admin role.
- Create a private json key and move the key to a location accessible to your build environment. Be sure to keep this file somewhere safe, as it grants administrator access to App Distribution in your Firebase project.
- Skip this step if you created your app after September 20, 2019: In the Google APIs console, enable the Firebase App Distribution API. When prompted, select the project with the same name as your Firebase project.
Provide or locate your service account credentials:
- To pass your service account key to your lane's
firebase_app_distribution
action, set theservice_credentials_file
parameter with the path to your private key JSON file To locate your credentials with ADC, set the environment variable
GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS
to the path for the private key JSON file. For example:export GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS=/absolute/path/to/credentials/file.json
For more information on authenticating with ADC, read Providing credentials to your application.
- To pass your service account key to your lane's
See Log in with the Firebase CLI for instructions on how to authenticate your project.
Step 3. Set up your Fastfile and distribute your app
- In a
./fastlane/Fastfile
lane, add afirebase_app_distribution
block. Use the following parameters to configure the distribution:firebase_app_distribution parameters app
Required only if your app does not contain a Firebase config file (
GoogleService-Info.plist
): Your app's Firebase App ID. You can find the App ID in the Firebase console, on the General Settings page.app: "1:1234567890:ios:0a1b2c3d4e5f67890"
googleservice_info_plist_path
The path to your
GoogleService-Info.plist
file, relative to the archived product path. Set toGoogleService-Info.plist
by default.The file is used to get your app's Firebase App ID if the
app
parameter is unspecified.firebase_cli_token
A refresh token that's printed when you authenticate your CI environment with the Firebase CLI (read Use the CLI with CI systems for more information).
service_credentials_file
The path to your Google service account json file. See above for how to authenticate using service account credentials.
ipa_path
Replaces
apk_path
(deprecated). Absolute path to the IPA file you want to upload. If unspecified, fastlane determines the file's location from the lane in which the file was generated.release_notes
release_notes_file
Release notes for this build.
You can either specify the release notes directly:
release_notes: "Text of release notes"
Or, specify the path to a plain text file:
release_notes_file: "/path/to/release-notes.txt"
testers
testers_file
The email addresses of the testers you want to invite.
You can specify the testers as a comma-separated list of email addresses:
testers: "ali@example.com, bri@example.com, cal@example.com"
Or, you can specify the path to a plain text file containing a comma-separated list of email addresses:
testers_file: "/path/to/testers.txt"
groups
groups_file
The tester groups you want to invite (refer to Manage testers). Groups are specified using
group aliases , which you can look up in the Firebase console.You can specify the groups as a comma-separated list:
groups: "qa-team, trusted-testers"
Or, you can specify the path to a plain text file containing a comma-separated list of group names:
groups_file: "/path/to/groups.txt"
test_devices
test_devices_file
The following distribution types are part of the Automated tester beta feature.
The test devices you want to distribute builds to (refer to Automated tests).
You can specify the test devices as a semicolon-separated list of test devices:
test_devices: "model=shiba,version=34,locale=en,orientation=portrait;model=b0q,version=33,locale=en,orientation=portrait"
Or, you can specify the path to a plain text file containing a semicolon-separated list of test devices:
test_devices_file: "/path/to/test-devices.txt"
test_username
The username for automatic login to be used during automated tests.
test_password
test_password_file
The password for automatic login to be used during automated tests.
Or, you can specify the path to a plain text file containing a password:
test_password_file: "/path/to/test-password.txt"
test_username_resource
Resource name for the username field for automatic login to be used during automated tests.
test_password_resource
Resource name for the password field for automatic login to be used during automated tests.
test_non_blocking
Run automated tests asynchronously. Visit the Firebase console for the automatic test results.
debug
A boolean flag. You can set this to
true
to print verbose debug output.
For example:
platform :ios do desc "My awesome app" lane :distribute do build_ios_app(...) # build_ios_app is a built-in fastlane action. release = firebase_app_distribution( app: "1:123456789:ios:abcd1234", testers: "tester1@company.com, tester2@company.com", release_notes: "Lots of amazing new features to test out!" ) end end
To make the build available to testers, run your lane:
fastlane <lane>
The return value of the action is a hash representing the uploaded release.
This hash is also available using lane_context[SharedValues::FIREBASE_APP_DISTRO_RELEASE]
.
For more information about the available fields in this hash, see the
REST API documentation.
The fastlane plugin outputs the following links after the release upload. These links help you manage binaries and ensure that testers and other developers have the right release:
- A link to the Firebase console displaying a single release. You can share this link with other developers in your org.
- A link to the release in the tester experience (iOS web clip) that lets testers view release notes and install the app onto their device. The tester needs access to the release in order to use the link.
- A signed link that directly downloads and installs the app binary (IPA file). The link expires after one hour.
After you distribute your build, it is available in the App Distribution dashboard of the Firebase console for 150 days. When the build is 30 days from expiring, an expiration notice appears in the console and in the tester's list of builds on their test device.
Testers who weren't previously invited to test the app receive email invitations to get started. Existing testers receive email notifications that a new build is ready to test. To learn how to install the test app, see Get set up as a tester. You can monitor the status of each tester to determine whether they accepted the invitation and whether they downloaded the app in the Firebase console.
(Optional) To automatically increment your build number every time you create
a new release in App Distribution, you can use the
firebase_app_distribution_get_latest_release
action and the
increment_build_number
action.
The following code provides an example of how to automatically increment your
build number:
lane :increment_version do
latest_release = firebase_app_distribution_get_latest_release(
app: "<your Firebase app ID>"
)
increment_build_number({ build_number: latest_release[:buildVersion].to_i + 1 })
end
To learn more about this fastlane plugin feature, see Get information about your app's latest release.
Step 4 (Optional). Manage testers for the distribution
You can add and remove testers from your project or group using your Fastfile
file or by directly running fastlane actions. Running actions directly
overrides the values set in your Fastfile
.
Once a tester is added to your Firebase project, you can add them to individual releases. Testers who are removed from your Firebase project no longer have access to releases in your project, but they might retain access to your releases for a window of time.
If you have a large number of testers you should consider using groups.
Use Fastfile
# Use lanes to add or remove testers from a project. lane(:add_testers) do firebase_app_distribution_add_testers( emails: "foo@google.com,bar@google.com" # or file: "/path/to/testers.txt" group_alias: "qa-team" # (Optional) add testers to this group ) end lane(:remove_testers) do firebase_app_distribution_remove_testers( emails: "foo@google.com,bar@google.com" # or file: "/path/to/testers.txt" group_alias: "qa-team" # (Optional) remove testers from this group only ) end
# Add or remove testers with the terminal $ fastlane add_testers $ fastlane remove_testers
Run fastlane actions
fastlane run firebase_app_distribution_create_group display_name:"QA Team" alias:"qa-team"
fastlane run firebase_app_distribution_add_testers group_alias:"qa-team" emails:"foo@google.com,bar@google.com"
fastlane run firebase_app_distribution_remove_testers group_alias:"qa-team" emails:"foo@google.com,bar@google.com"
fastlane run firebase_app_distribution_delete_group alias:"qa-team"
You can also specify testers using --file="/path/to/testers.txt
instead of
--emails
.
The firebase_app_distribution_add_testers
and
firebase_app_distribution_remove_testers
tasks also accept the following
arguments:
project_name
: Your Firebase project number.group_alias
(optional): If specified, the testers are added to (or removed from) specified group.service_credentials_file
: The path to your Google service credentials file.firebase_cli_token
: Auth token for Firebase CLI.
The service_credentials_file
and the firebase_cli_token
are the same
arguments used by the upload action.
Step 5 (Optional). Get information about your app's latest release
You can use the firebase_app_distribution_get_latest_release
action
to fetch information about your app's latest release in App Distribution,
including app version information, release notes, and creation time. Use cases
include automatically increasing the version and carrying over the release
notes from the previous release.
The return value of the action is a hash representing the latest release.
This hash is also available using lane_context[SharedValues::FIREBASE_APP_DISTRO_LATEST_RELEASE]
.
For more information about the available fields in this hash, see the
REST API documentation.
Parameters
firebase_app_distribution_get_latest_release parameters | |
---|---|
app
|
Required only if your app does not contain a Firebase config file ( app: "1:1234567890:ios:0a1b2c3d4e5f67890" |
googleservice_info_plist_path
|
The path to your
The file is used to get your app's Firebase App ID if the |
firebase_cli_token
|
A refresh token that's printed when you authenticate your CI environment with the Firebase CLI (read Use the CLI with CI systems for more information). |
service_credentials_file
|
The path to your Google service account json file. See earlier documentation for how to authenticate using service account credentials. |
service_credentials_json_data
|
Google service account json file content. See earlier documentation for how to authenticate using service account credentials. |
debug
|
A boolean flag. You can set this to |
Next steps
To register more devices manually or programmatically, see Register additional iOS devices.
Learn best practices for distributing Apple apps to QA testers using CI/CD and fastlane.