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Firebase PUT - Writing Data
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Demonstrates how to PUT new data to a Firebase JSON database. The data used in this example is at Chilkat Firebase Pigs Database, and is shown here:
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Add-Type -Path "C:\chilkat\ChilkatDotNet47-x64\ChilkatDotNet47.dll"
$success = $false
# Demonstrates how to PUT new data to a Firebase JSON database.
# This example requires the Chilkat API to have been previously unlocked.
# See Global Unlock Sample for sample code.
# This example assumes a JWT authentication token, if required, has been previously obtained.
# See Get Firebase Access Token from JSON Service Account Private Key for sample code.
# Load the previously obtained Firebase access token into a string.
$fac = New-Object Chilkat.FileAccess
$accessToken = $fac.ReadEntireTextFile("qa_data/tokens/firebaseToken.txt","utf-8")
if ($fac.LastMethodSuccess -ne $true) {
$($fac.LastErrorText)
exit
}
$rest = New-Object Chilkat.Rest
# Make the initial connection (without sending a request yet).
# Once connected, any number of requests may be sent. It is not necessary to explicitly
# call Connect before each request.
$success = $rest.Connect("chilkat.firebaseio.com",443,$true,$true)
if ($success -ne $true) {
$($rest.LastErrorText)
exit
}
$authGoogle = New-Object Chilkat.AuthGoogle
$authGoogle.AccessToken = $accessToken
$rest.SetAuthGoogle($authGoogle)
# Chilkat's sample data (pig-rescue data) is publicly readable at: https://chilkat.firebaseio.com/.json
# This data is publicly readable, but not writable. You'll need to
# run against your own database..
# Generate a new push ID.
$prng = New-Object Chilkat.Prng
$pushId = $prng.FirebasePushId()
# We're going to add a new pig with just the name.
$pigRecord = New-Object Chilkat.JsonObject
$pigRecord.AppendString("name","William")
$path = New-Object Chilkat.StringBuilder
$path.Append("/pig-rescue/animal/")
$path.Append($pushId)
$path.Append(".json")
# The string content of the last arg passed is {"name":"William"}
$jsonResponse = $rest.FullRequestString("PUT",$path.GetAsString(),$pigRecord.Emit())
if ($rest.LastMethodSuccess -ne $true) {
# Something happened in the communications (either no request was sent, or no response was received.
# (The Chilkat REST API also has lower-level methods where an app can send the request in one call,
# and then receive the response in another call.)
$($rest.LastErrorText)
exit
}
# Check the response status code. A 200 response status indicates success.
if ($rest.ResponseStatusCode -ne 200) {
$($rest.ResponseStatusText)
$($jsonResponse)
$("Failed.")
exit
}
$($jsonResponse)
$("Success.")
# Note: In many of the Chilkat examples, you may notice strange ways
# of doing something that should be simpler and shorter. For example,
# building the path (above) could've been written differently,
# with some simple string concatenation.
#
# The reason is that the Chilkat examples are written in a
# proprietary "example code" scripting language,
# and then automatically generated to each of the different programming
# languages you see on example-code.com. The code generation is
# limited in what it can do. For example, string concatentation
# is not yet a feature of the "example code" scripting language (as of May 2016),
# and therefore you won't see the use of a programming language's string
# concatentation operators in any example.
#