A month of Flutter: Sign in with Google

Building on the work configuring Firebase Auth for Android and iOS, it's time to go get a user's details. This will be leveraging the already installed google_sign_in and firebase_auth packages.

The big change is the addition of the Auth class.

class Auth { Auth ({ @required this . googleSignIn , @required this . firebaseAuth , }); final GoogleSignIn googleSignIn ; final FirebaseAuth firebaseAuth ; Future < FirebaseUser > signInWithGoogle () async { final GoogleSignInAccount googleAccount = await googleSignIn . signIn (); // TODO(abraham): Handle null googleAccount final GoogleSignInAuthentication googleAuth = await googleAccount . authentication ; return firebaseAuth . signInWithGoogle ( accessToken: googleAuth . accessToken , idToken: googleAuth . idToken , ); } }

This class gets passed a FirebaseAuth instance and a GoogleSignIn instance for interactions with the external authentication services. On GoogleSignIn the signIn method will trigger a user account selection prompt. When the user confirms their account selection a GoogleSignInAccount instance will be returned. On GoogleSignInAccount I'll call authentication to get the current user's tokens. Finally I'll exchange the GoogleSignInAuthentication for a FirebaseUser with signInWithGoogle .

I added a TODO to improve error handling so it doesn't get forgotten.

The app now has an authenticated FirebaseUser with all the accompanying details.

I'll now update SignInFab to leverage the new Auth service and print out the user's displayName in the Flutter logs.

void _handleSignIn ( ) { auth . signInWithGoogle () . then (( FirebaseUser user ) => print ( 'Hi ${user.displayName} ' )); }

I/flutter (29142): Hi Birb Dev

SignInFab will also need to be passed an Auth instance in _MyHomePageState .

SignInFab ( auth: Auth ( firebaseAuth: FirebaseAuth . instance , googleSignIn: GoogleSignIn (), ), )

This is what the account selector looks like on Android:

iOS prompts to allow access to google.com:

Most of the new code is actually tests and mocking the external Google and Firebase APIs. It's complected and deserves it's own article so come back tomorrow to learn more.

Code changes

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