Deploy to your site using the Hosting REST API

The Firebase Hosting REST API enables programmatic and customizable deployments to your Firebase-hosted sites. Use this REST API to deploy new or updated Hosting content and configuration.

As an alternative to using the Firebase CLI for deployments, you can use the Firebase Hosting REST API to programmatically create a new version of assets for your site, upload files to the version, then deploy the version to your site.

For example, with the Firebase Hosting REST API, you can:

  • Schedule deploys. By using the REST API in conjunction with a cron job, you can change Firebase-hosted content on a regular schedule (for example, to deploy a special holiday or event-related version of your content).

  • Integrate with developer tools. You can create an option in your tool to deploy your web app projects to Firebase Hosting using just one click (for example, clicking a deploy button within an IDE).

  • Automate deploys when static content is generated. When a process generates static content programmatically (for example, user-generated content such as a wiki or a news article), you can deploy the generated content as static files rather than serving them dynamically. This saves you expensive compute power and serves your files in a more scalable way.

This guide first describes how to enable, authenticate, and authorize the API. Then this guide walks through an example to create a Firebase Hosting version, to upload required files to the version, then finally to deploy the version.

You can also learn more about this REST API in the full Hosting REST API reference documentation.

Before you begin: Enable the REST API

You must enable the Firebase Hosting REST API in the Google APIs console:

  1. Open the Firebase Hosting API page in the Google APIs console.

  2. When prompted, select your Firebase project.

  3. Click Enable on the Firebase Hosting API page.

Step 1: Get an access token to authenticate and authorize API requests

Firebase projects support Google service accounts, which you can use to call Firebase server APIs from your app server or trusted environment. If you're developing code locally or deploying your application on-premises, you can use credentials obtained via this service account to authorize server requests.

To authenticate a service account and authorize it to access Firebase services, you must generate a private key file in JSON format.

To generate a private key file for your service account:

  1. In the Firebase console, open Settings > Service Accounts.

  2. Click Generate New Private Key, then confirm by clicking Generate Key.

  3. Securely store the JSON file containing the key.

Use your Firebase credentials together with the Google Auth Library for your preferred language to retrieve a short-lived OAuth 2.0 access token:

node.js

const {google} = require('googleapis');
function getAccessToken() {
  return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
    var key = require('./service-account.json');
    var jwtClient = new google.auth.JWT(
      key.client_email,
      null,
      key.private_key,
      SCOPES,
      null
    );
    jwtClient.authorize(function(err, tokens) {
      if (err) {
        reject(err);
        return;
      }
      resolve(tokens.access_token);
    });
  });
}

In this example, the Google API client library authenticates the request with a JSON web token, or JWT. For more information, see JSON web tokens.

Python

def _get_access_token():
  """Retrieve a valid access token that can be used to authorize requests.

  :return: Access token.
  """
  credentials = ServiceAccountCredentials.from_json_keyfile_name(
      'service-account.json', SCOPES)
  access_token_info = credentials.get_access_token()
  return access_token_info.access_token

Java

private static String getAccessToken() throws IOException {
  GoogleCredential googleCredential = GoogleCredential
      .fromStream(new FileInputStream("service-account.json"))
      .createScoped(Arrays.asList(SCOPES));
  googleCredential.refreshToken();
  return googleCredential.getAccessToken();
}

After your access token expires, the token refresh method is called automatically to retrieve an updated access token.

Step 2: Ensure that your project has a default Hosting site

Before your first deployment to Firebase Hosting, your Firebase project must have a default Hosting SITE.

  1. Check if your project already has a default Hosting site by calling the sites.list endpoint.

    For example:

    cURL command

    curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
           -H "Authorization: Bearer ACCESS_TOKEN" \
    
    https://firebasehosting.googleapis.com/v1beta1/projects/PROJECT_ID/sites
    

    Raw HTTPS request

    Host: firebasehosting.googleapis.com
    
    POST /v1beta1/projects/PROJECT_ID/sites HTTP/1.1
    Authorization: Bearer ACCESS_TOKEN
    Content-Type: application/json
    
    • If one of the sites has "type": "DEFAULT_SITE", then your project already has a default Hosting site. Skip the remainder of this step, and move onto the next step: Create a new version for your site.

    • If you get an empty array, then you don't have a default Hosting site. Complete the remainder of this step.

  2. Decide on the SITE_ID for your default Hosting site. Keep the following in mind when deciding this SITE_ID:

    • This SITE_ID is used to create your default Firebase subdomains:
      SITE_ID.web.app and SITE_ID.firebaseapp.com.

    • A SITE_ID has the following requirements:

      • Must be a valid hostname label, meaning it cannot contain ., _, etc.
      • Must be 30 characters or fewer
      • Must be globally unique within Firebase

    Note that we often recommend using your project ID as the SITE_ID for your default Hosting site. Learn how to find this ID in Understand Firebase projects.

  3. Create your default Hosting site by calling the sites.create endpoint using your desired SITE_ID as the siteId parameter.

    For example:

    cURL command

    curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
           -H "Authorization: Bearer ACCESS_TOKEN" \
    
    https://firebasehosting.googleapis.com/v1beta1/projects/PROJECT_ID/sites?siteId=SITE_ID
    

    Raw HTTPS request

    Host: firebasehosting.googleapis.com
    
    POST /v1beta1/projects/PROJECT_ID/sites?siteId=SITE_ID
    Authorization: Bearer ACCESS_TOKEN
    Content-Type: application/json
    

    This API call to sites.create returns the following JSON:

    {
      "name": "projects/PROJECT_ID/sites/SITE_ID",
      "defaultUrl": "https://SITE_ID.web.app",
      "type": "DEFAULT_SITE"
    }
    

Step 3: Create a new version for your site

Your first API call is to create a new Version for your site. Later in this guide, you’ll upload files to this version, then deploy it to your site.

  1. Determine the SITE_ID for the site to which you want to deploy.

  2. Call the versions.create endpoint using your SITE_ID in the call.

    (Optional) You can also pass a Firebase Hosting configuration object in the call, including setting a header that caches all files for a specified length of time.

    For example:

    cURL command

    curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
           -H "Authorization: Bearer ACCESS_TOKEN" \
           -d '{
                 "config": {
                   "headers": [{
                     "glob": "**",
                     "headers": {
                       "Cache-Control": "max-age=1800"
                     }
                   }]
                 }
               }' \
    https://firebasehosting.googleapis.com/v1beta1/sites/SITE_ID/versions
    

    Raw HTTPS request

    Host: firebasehosting.googleapis.com
    
    POST /v1beta1/sites/SITE_ID/versions HTTP/1.1
    Authorization: Bearer ACCESS_TOKEN
    Content-Type: application/json
    Content-Length: 134
    
    {
      "config": {
        "headers": [{
          "glob": "**",
          "headers": {
            "Cache-Control": "max-age=1800"
          }
        }]
      }
    }
    

This API call to versions.create returns the following JSON:

{
  "name": "sites/SITE_ID/versions/VERSION_ID",
  "status": "CREATED",
  "config": {
    "headers": [{
      "glob": "**",
      "headers": {
        "Cache-Control": "max-age=1800"
      }
    }]
  }
}

This response contains a unique identifier for the new version, in the format: sites/SITE_ID/versions/VERSION_ID. You’ll need this unique identifier throughout this guide to reference this specific version.

Step 4: Specify the list of files you want to deploy

Now that you have your new version identifier, you need to tell Firebase Hosting which files you want to eventually deploy in this new version.

Note that Hosting has a maximum size limit of 2 GB for individual files.

This API requires that you identify files by a SHA256 hash. So, before you can make the API call, you’ll first need to calculate a hash for each static file by Gzipping the files then taking the SHA256 hash of each newly compressed file.

Continuing our example, let's say that you want to deploy three files in the new version: file1, file2, and file3.

  1. Gzip the files:

    gzip file1 && gzip file2 && gzip file3

    You now have three compressed files file1.gz, file2.gz, and file3.gz.

  2. Get the SHA256 hash of each compressed file:

    cat file1.gz | openssl dgst -sha256
    
    66d61f86bb684d0e35f94461c1f9cf4f07a4bb3407bfbd80e518bd44368ff8f4
    
    cat file2.gz | openssl dgst -sha256
    
    490423ebae5dcd6c2df695aea79f1f80555c62e535a2808c8115a6714863d083
    
    cat file3.gz | openssl dgst -sha256
    
    59cae17473d7dd339fe714f4c6c514ab4470757a4fe616dfdb4d81400addf315
    

    You now have the three SHA256 hashes of the three compressed files.

  3. Send these three hashes in an API request to the versions.populateFiles endpoint. List each hash by the desired path for the uploaded file (in this example, /file1, /file2, and /file3).

    For example:

    cURL command

    $ curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
             -H "Authorization: Bearer ACCESS_TOKEN" \
             -d '{
                   "files": {
                     "/file1": "66d61f86bb684d0e35f94461c1f9cf4f07a4bb3407bfbd80e518bd44368ff8f4",
                     "/file2": "490423ebae5dcd6c2df695aea79f1f80555c62e535a2808c8115a6714863d083",
                     "/file3": "59cae17473d7dd339fe714f4c6c514ab4470757a4fe616dfdb4d81400addf315"
                   }
                 }' \
    https://firebasehosting.googleapis.com/v1beta1/sites/SITE_ID/versions/VERSION_ID:populateFiles
    

    Raw HTTPS Request

    Host: firebasehosting.googleapis.com
    
    POST /v1beta1/sites/SITE_ID/versions/VERSION_ID:populateFiles HTTP/1.1
    Authorization: Bearer ACCESS_TOKEN
    Content-Type: application/json
    Content-Length: 181
    
    {
      "files": {
        "/file1": "66d61f86bb684d0e35f94461c1f9cf4f07a4bb3407bfbd80e518bd44368ff8f4",
        "/file2": "490423ebae5dcd6c2df695aea79f1f80555c62e535a2808c8115a6714863d083",
        "/file3": "59cae17473d7dd339fe714f4c6c514ab4470757a4fe616dfdb4d81400addf315"
      }
    }
    

This API call to versions.populateFiles returns the following JSON:

{
  "uploadRequiredHashes": [
    "490423ebae5dcd6c2df695aea79f1f80555c62e535a2808c8115a6714863d083",
    "59cae17473d7dd339fe714f4c6c514ab4470757a4fe616dfdb4d81400addf315"
  ],
  "uploadUrl": "https://upload-firebasehosting.googleapis.com/upload/sites/SITE_ID/versions/VERSION_ID/files"
}

This response includes:

  • The hash of each file that needs to be uploaded. For instance, in this example file1 had already been uploaded in a previous version, so its hash is not included in the uploadRequiredHashes list.

  • The uploadUrl which is specific to the new version.

In the next step to upload the two new files, you’ll need the hashes and the uploadURL from the versions.populateFiles response.

Step 5: Upload required files

You need to individually upload each required file (those files which are listed in uploadRequiredHashes from the versions.populateFiles response in the previous step). For these file uploads, you’ll need the file hashes and the uploadUrl from the previous step.

  1. Append a forward slash and the hash of the file to the uploadUrl to create a file-specific URL in the format: https://upload-firebasehosting.googleapis.com/upload/sites/SITE_ID/versions/VERSION_ID/files/FILE_HASH.

  2. Upload all the required files one-by-one (in this example, only file2.gz and file3.gz) to the file-specific URL using a series of requests.

    For example, to upload the compressed file2.gz:

    cURL command

    curl -H "Authorization: Bearer ACCESS_TOKEN" \
           -H "Content-Type: application/octet-stream" \
           --data-binary @./file2.gz \
    https://upload-firebasehosting.googleapis.com/upload/sites/SITE_ID/versions/VERSION_ID/files/FILE_HASH
    

    Raw HTTPS Request

    Host: upload-firebasehosting.googleapis.com
    
    POST /upload/sites/SITE_ID/versions/VERSION_ID/files/FILE_HASH HTTP/1.1
    Authorization: Bearer ACCESS_TOKEN
    Content-Type: application/octet-stream
    Content-Length: 500
    
    content-of-file2.gz
    

Successful uploads return a 200 OK HTTPS response.

Step 6: Update the status of the version to FINALIZED

After you’ve uploaded all the files which are listed in the versions.populateFiles response, you can update the status of your version to FINALIZED.

Call the versions.patch endpoint with the status field in your API request set to FINALIZED.

For example:

cURL command

curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
       -H "Authorization: Bearer ACCESS_TOKEN" \
       -X PATCH \
       -d '{"status": "FINALIZED"}' \
https://firebasehosting.googleapis.com/v1beta1/sites/SITE_ID/versions/VERSION_ID?update_mask=status

Raw HTTPS Request

Host: firebasehosting.googleapis.com

PATCH /v1beta1/sites/SITE_ID/versions/VERSION_ID?update_mask=status HTTP/1.1
Authorization: Bearer ACCESS_TOKEN
Content-Type: application/json
Content-Length: 23

{"status": "FINALIZED"}

This API call to versions.patch returns the following JSON. Check that status has been updated to FINALIZED.

{
  "name": "sites/SITE_ID/versions/VERSION_ID",
  "status": "FINALIZED",
  "config": {
    "headers": [{
      "glob": "**",
      "headers": {"Cache-Control": "max-age=1800"}
    }]
  },
  "createTime": "2018-12-02T13:41:56.905743Z",
  "createUser": {
    "email": "SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL@SITE_ID.iam.gserviceaccount.com"
  },
  "finalizeTime": "2018-12-02T14:56:13.047423Z",
  "finalizeUser": {
    "email": "USER_EMAIL@DOMAIN.tld"
  },
  "fileCount": "5",
  "versionBytes": "114951"
}

Step 7: Release the version for deployment

Now that you have a finalized version, release it for deployment. For this step, you need to create a Release of your version that contains the hosting configuration and all the content files for your new version.

Call the releases.create endpoint to create your release.

For example:

cURL command

curl -H "Authorization: Bearer ACCESS_TOKEN" \
       -X POST
https://firebasehosting.googleapis.com/v1beta1/sites/SITE_ID/releases?versionName=sites/SITE_ID/versions/VERSION_ID

Raw HTTPS Request

Host: firebasehosting.googleapis.com

POST /v1beta1/sites/SITE_ID/releases?versionName=sites/SITE_ID/versions/VERSION_ID HTTP/1.1
Authorization: Bearer ACCESS_TOKEN

This API call to releases.create returns the following JSON:

{
  "name": "sites/SITE_ID/releases/RELEASE_ID",
  "version": {
    "name": "sites/SITE_ID/versions/VERSION_ID",
    "status": "FINALIZED",
    "config": {
    "headers": [{
      "glob": "**",
      "headers": {"Cache-Control": "max-age=1800"}
    }]
  }
  },
  "type": "DEPLOY",
  "releaseTime": "2018-12-02T15:14:37Z"
}

The hosting configuration and all the files for the new version should now be deployed to your site, and you can access your files using the URLs:

  • https://SITE_ID.web.app/file1
  • https://SITE_ID.web.app/file2
  • https://SITE_ID.web.app/file3

These files are also accessible on URLs associated with your SITE_ID.firebaseapp.com domain.

You can also see your new release listed in the Hosting dashboard of the Firebase console.