Before you begin
- Add Firebase to your iOS project.
- Include the following pods in your
Podfile:pod 'Firebase/Auth'
- Get your project's server keys:
- Go to the Service Accounts page in your project's settings.
- Click Generate New Private Key at the bottom of the Firebase Admin SDK section of the Service Accounts page.
- The new service account's public/private key pair is automatically saved on your computer. Copy this file to your authentication server.
Authenticate with Firebase
- Import the Firebase module in your
UIApplicationDelegatesubclass:Swift
import Firebase
Objective-C
@import Firebase;
- Configure a
FIRAppshared instance, typically in your application'sapplication:didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:method:Swift
// Use Firebase library to configure APIs FIRApp.configure()
Objective-C
// Use Firebase library to configure APIs [FIRApp configure];
- When users sign in to your app, send their sign-in credentials (for example, their username and password) to your authentication server. Your server checks the credentials and returns a custom token if they are valid.
- After you receive the custom token from your authentication server, pass it
to
signInWithCustomTokento sign in the user:Objective-C
[[FIRAuth auth] signInWithCustomToken:customToken completion:^(FIRUser *_Nullable user, NSError *_Nullable error) { // ... }];Swift
FIRAuth.auth()?.signIn(withCustomToken: customToken ?? "") { (user, error) in // ... }
Next steps
After a user signs in for the first time, a new user account is created and linked to the credentials—that is, the user name and password, or auth provider information—the user signed in with. This new account is stored as part of your Firebase project, and can be used to identify a user across every app in your project, regardless of how the user signs in.
-
In your apps, you can get the user's basic profile information from the
FIRUserobject. See Manage Users. In your Firebase Realtime Database and Firebase Storage Security Rules, you can get the signed-in user's unique user ID from the
authvariable, and use it to control what data a user can access.
You can allow users to sign in to your app using multiple authentication providers by linking auth provider credentials to an existing user account.
To sign out a user, call
signOut:.
Objective-C
NSError *signOutError;
BOOL status = [[FIRAuth auth] signOut:&signOutError];
if (!status) {
NSLog(@"Error signing out: %@", signOutError);
return;
}
Swift
let firebaseAuth = FIRAuth.auth()
do {
try firebaseAuth?.signOut()
} catch let signOutError as NSError {
print ("Error signing out: %@", signOutError)
}
You may also want to add error handling code for the full range of authentication errors. See Handle Errors.

