To target a message to multiple devices, use Topic messaging. This feature allows you to send a message to multiple devices that have opted in to a particular topic.
This tutorial focuses on sending topic messages from your app server using the Admin SDK or REST API for FCM, and receiving and handling them in an Apple app. This page lists all the steps to achieve this, from setup to verification — so it may cover steps you already completed if you have set up an Apple client app for FCM or worked through the steps to Send your First Message.
Add Firebase to your Apple project
This section covers tasks you may have completed if you have already enabled other Firebase features for your app. For FCM specifically, you'll need to upload your APNs authentication key and register for remote notifications.
Prerequisites
Install the following:
- Xcode 15.2 or later
Make sure that your project meets these requirements:
- Your project must target these platform versions or later:
- iOS 13
- macOS 10.15
- tvOS 13
- watchOS 7
- Your project must target these platform versions or later:
Set up a physical Apple device to run your app, and complete these tasks:
- Obtain an Apple Push Notification Authentication Key for your Apple Developer account.
- Enable Push Notifications in XCode under App > Capabilities.
- Sign into Firebase using your Google account.
If you don't already have an Xcode project and just want to try out a Firebase product, you can download one of our quickstart samples.
Create a Firebase project
Before you can add Firebase to your Apple app, you need to create a Firebase project to connect to your app. Visit Understand Firebase Projects to learn more about Firebase projects.
Register your app with Firebase
To use Firebase in your Apple app, you need to register your app with your Firebase project. Registering your app is often called "adding" your app to your project.
Go to the Firebase console.
In the center of the project overview page, click the iOS+ icon to launch the setup workflow.
If you've already added an app to your Firebase project, click Add app to display the platform options.
Enter your app's bundle ID in the bundle ID field.
A bundle ID uniquely identifies an application in Apple's ecosystem.
Find your bundle ID: open your project in Xcode, select the top-level app in the project navigator, then select the General tab.
The value of the Bundle Identifier field is the bundle ID (for example,
com.yourcompany.yourproject
).Be aware that the bundle ID value is case-sensitive, and it cannot be changed for this Firebase app after it's registered with your Firebase project.
(Optional) Enter other app information: App nickname and App Store ID.
App nickname: An internal, convenience identifier that is only visible to you in the Firebase console
App Store ID: Used by Firebase Dynamic Links to redirect users to your App Store page and by Google Analytics to import conversion events into Google Ads. If your app doesn't yet have an App Store ID, you can add the ID later in your Project settings.
Click Register app.
Add a Firebase configuration file
Click Download GoogleService-Info.plist to obtain your Firebase Apple platforms config file (
GoogleService-Info.plist
).The Firebase config file contains unique, but non-secret identifiers for your project. To learn more about this config file, visit Understand Firebase Projects.
You can download your Firebase config file again at any time.
Make sure the config file name is not appended with additional characters, like
(2)
.
Move your config file into the root of your Xcode project. If prompted, select to add the config file to all targets.
If you have multiple bundle IDs in your project, you must associate each bundle
ID with a registered app in the Firebase console so that each app can have
its own GoogleService-Info.plist
file.
Add Firebase SDKs to your app
Use Swift Package Manager to install and manage Firebase dependencies.
- In Xcode, with your app project open, navigate to File > Add Packages.
- When prompted, add the Firebase Apple platforms SDK repository:
- Choose the Firebase Cloud Messaging library.
- Add the
-ObjC
flag to the Other Linker Flags section of your target's build settings. - For an optimal experience with Firebase Cloud Messaging, we recommend enabling Google Analytics in your Firebase project and adding the Firebase SDK for Google Analytics to your app. You can select either the library without IDFA collection or with IDFA collection.
- When finished, Xcode will automatically begin resolving and downloading your dependencies in the background.
https://github.com/firebase/firebase-ios-sdk.git
Upload your APNs authentication key
Upload your APNs authentication key to Firebase. If you don't already have an APNs authentication key, make sure to create one in the Apple Developer Member Center.
-
Inside your project in the Firebase console, select the gear icon, select Project Settings, and then select the Cloud Messaging tab.
-
In APNs authentication key under iOS app configuration, click the Upload button.
-
Browse to the location where you saved your key, select it, and click Open. Add the key ID for the key (available in the Apple Developer Member Center) and click Upload.
Initialize Firebase in your app
You'll need to add Firebase initialization code to your application. Import the Firebase module and configure a shared instance as shown:
- Import the
FirebaseCore
module in yourUIApplicationDelegate
, as well as any other Firebase modules your app delegate uses. For example, to use Cloud Firestore and Authentication:SwiftUI
import SwiftUI import FirebaseCore import FirebaseFirestore import FirebaseAuth // ...
Swift
import FirebaseCore import FirebaseFirestore import FirebaseAuth // ...
Objective-C
@import FirebaseCore; @import FirebaseFirestore; @import FirebaseAuth; // ...
- Configure a
FirebaseApp
shared instance in your app delegate'sapplication(_:didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:)
method:SwiftUI
// Use Firebase library to configure APIs FirebaseApp.configure()
Swift
// Use Firebase library to configure APIs FirebaseApp.configure()
Objective-C
// Use Firebase library to configure APIs [FIRApp configure];
- If you're using SwiftUI, you must create an application delegate and attach it
to your
App
struct viaUIApplicationDelegateAdaptor
orNSApplicationDelegateAdaptor
. You must also disable app delegate swizzling. For more information, see the SwiftUI instructions.SwiftUI
@main struct YourApp: App { // register app delegate for Firebase setup @UIApplicationDelegateAdaptor(AppDelegate.self) var delegate var body: some Scene { WindowGroup { NavigationView { ContentView() } } } }
Register for remote notifications
Either at startup, or at the desired point in your application flow, register your app for remote notifications. CallregisterForRemoteNotifications
as shown:
Swift
UNUserNotificationCenter.current().delegate = self let authOptions: UNAuthorizationOptions = [.alert, .badge, .sound] UNUserNotificationCenter.current().requestAuthorization( options: authOptions, completionHandler: { _, _ in } ) application.registerForRemoteNotifications()
Objective-C
[UNUserNotificationCenter currentNotificationCenter].delegate = self; UNAuthorizationOptions authOptions = UNAuthorizationOptionAlert | UNAuthorizationOptionSound | UNAuthorizationOptionBadge; [[UNUserNotificationCenter currentNotificationCenter] requestAuthorizationWithOptions:authOptions completionHandler:^(BOOL granted, NSError * _Nullable error) { // ... }]; [application registerForRemoteNotifications];
Subscribe the client app to a topic
Client apps can subscribe to any existing topic, or they can create a new topic. When a client app subscribes to a new topic name (one that does not already exist for your Firebase project), a new topic of that name is created in FCM and any client can subsequently subscribe to it.
To subscribe to a topic, call the subscription method from your application's main thread (FCM is not thread-safe). If the subscription request fails initially, FCM retries automatically. For cases where the subscription cannot be completed, the subscription throws an error that you can catch in a completion handler as shown:
Swift
Messaging.messaging().subscribe(toTopic: "weather") { error in print("Subscribed to weather topic") }
Objective-C
[[FIRMessaging messaging] subscribeToTopic:@"weather" completion:^(NSError * _Nullable error) { NSLog(@"Subscribed to weather topic"); }];
This call makes an
asynchronous request to the FCM backend and subscribes the client to
the given topic. Before calling subscribeToTopic:topic
, make sure that the
client app instance has already received a registration token via the
callback didReceiveRegistrationToken
.
Each time the app starts,
FCM makes sure that all requested topics have been subscribed. To
unsubscribe, call unsubscribeFromTopic:topic
,
and FCM unsubscribes from the topic in the background.
Receive and handle topic messages
FCM delivers topic messages in the same way as other downstream messages.
Implement application(_:didReceiveRemoteNotification:fetchCompletionHandler:)
as shown:
Swift
func application(_ application: UIApplication, didReceiveRemoteNotification userInfo: [AnyHashable: Any]) async -> UIBackgroundFetchResult { // If you are receiving a notification message while your app is in the background, // this callback will not be fired till the user taps on the notification launching the application. // TODO: Handle data of notification // With swizzling disabled you must let Messaging know about the message, for Analytics // Messaging.messaging().appDidReceiveMessage(userInfo) // Print message ID. if let messageID = userInfo[gcmMessageIDKey] { print("Message ID: \(messageID)") } // Print full message. print(userInfo) return UIBackgroundFetchResult.newData }
Objective-C
- (void)application:(UIApplication *)application didReceiveRemoteNotification:(NSDictionary *)userInfo fetchCompletionHandler:(void (^)(UIBackgroundFetchResult))completionHandler { // If you are receiving a notification message while your app is in the background, // this callback will not be fired till the user taps on the notification launching the application. // TODO: Handle data of notification // With swizzling disabled you must let Messaging know about the message, for Analytics // [[FIRMessaging messaging] appDidReceiveMessage:userInfo]; // ... // Print full message. NSLog(@"%@", userInfo); completionHandler(UIBackgroundFetchResultNewData); }
Build send requests
After you have created a topic, either by subscribing client app instances to the topic on the client side or via the server API, you can send messages to the topic. If this is your first time building send requests for FCM, see the guide to your server environment and FCM for important background and setup information.
In your sending logic on the backend, specify the desired topic name as shown:
Node.js
// The topic name can be optionally prefixed with "/topics/".
const topic = 'highScores';
const message = {
data: {
score: '850',
time: '2:45'
},
topic: topic
};
// Send a message to devices subscribed to the provided topic.
getMessaging().send(message)
.then((response) => {
// Response is a message ID string.
console.log('Successfully sent message:', response);
})
.catch((error) => {
console.log('Error sending message:', error);
});
Java
// The topic name can be optionally prefixed with "/topics/".
String topic = "highScores";
// See documentation on defining a message payload.
Message message = Message.builder()
.putData("score", "850")
.putData("time", "2:45")
.setTopic(topic)
.build();
// Send a message to the devices subscribed to the provided topic.
String response = FirebaseMessaging.getInstance().send(message);
// Response is a message ID string.
System.out.println("Successfully sent message: " + response);
Python
# The topic name can be optionally prefixed with "/topics/".
topic = 'highScores'
# See documentation on defining a message payload.
message = messaging.Message(
data={
'score': '850',
'time': '2:45',
},
topic=topic,
)
# Send a message to the devices subscribed to the provided topic.
response = messaging.send(message)
# Response is a message ID string.
print('Successfully sent message:', response)
Go
// The topic name can be optionally prefixed with "/topics/".
topic := "highScores"
// See documentation on defining a message payload.
message := &messaging.Message{
Data: map[string]string{
"score": "850",
"time": "2:45",
},
Topic: topic,
}
// Send a message to the devices subscribed to the provided topic.
response, err := client.Send(ctx, message)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalln(err)
}
// Response is a message ID string.
fmt.Println("Successfully sent message:", response)
C#
// The topic name can be optionally prefixed with "/topics/".
var topic = "highScores";
// See documentation on defining a message payload.
var message = new Message()
{
Data = new Dictionary<string, string>()
{
{ "score", "850" },
{ "time", "2:45" },
},
Topic = topic,
};
// Send a message to the devices subscribed to the provided topic.
string response = await FirebaseMessaging.DefaultInstance.SendAsync(message);
// Response is a message ID string.
Console.WriteLine("Successfully sent message: " + response);
REST
POST https://fcm.googleapis.com/v1/projects/myproject-b5ae1/messages:send HTTP/1.1
Content-Type: application/json
Authorization: Bearer ya29.ElqKBGN2Ri_Uz...HnS_uNreA
{
"message":{
"topic" : "foo-bar",
"notification" : {
"body" : "This is a Firebase Cloud Messaging Topic Message!",
"title" : "FCM Message"
}
}
}
cURL command:
curl -X POST -H "Authorization: Bearer ya29.ElqKBGN2Ri_Uz...HnS_uNreA" -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{
"message": {
"topic" : "foo-bar",
"notification": {
"body": "This is a Firebase Cloud Messaging Topic Message!",
"title": "FCM Message"
}
}
}' https://fcm.googleapis.com/v1/projects/myproject-b5ae1/messages:send HTTP/1.1
To send a message to a combination of topics,
specify a condition, which is a boolean expression that specifies the
target topics. For example, the following condition will send messages to
devices that are subscribed to TopicA
and either TopicB
or TopicC
:
"'TopicA' in topics && ('TopicB' in topics || 'TopicC' in topics)"
FCM first evaluates any conditions in parentheses, and then evaluates
the expression from left to right. In the above expression, a user subscribed to
any single topic does not receive the message. Likewise, a user who does not
subscribe to TopicA
does not receive the message. These combinations do
receive it:
TopicA
andTopicB
TopicA
andTopicC
You can include up to five topics in your conditional expression.
To send to a condition:
Node.js
// Define a condition which will send to devices which are subscribed
// to either the Google stock or the tech industry topics.
const condition = '\'stock-GOOG\' in topics || \'industry-tech\' in topics';
// See documentation on defining a message payload.
const message = {
notification: {
title: '$FooCorp up 1.43% on the day',
body: '$FooCorp gained 11.80 points to close at 835.67, up 1.43% on the day.'
},
condition: condition
};
// Send a message to devices subscribed to the combination of topics
// specified by the provided condition.
getMessaging().send(message)
.then((response) => {
// Response is a message ID string.
console.log('Successfully sent message:', response);
})
.catch((error) => {
console.log('Error sending message:', error);
});
Java
// Define a condition which will send to devices which are subscribed
// to either the Google stock or the tech industry topics.
String condition = "'stock-GOOG' in topics || 'industry-tech' in topics";
// See documentation on defining a message payload.
Message message = Message.builder()
.setNotification(Notification.builder()
.setTitle("$GOOG up 1.43% on the day")
.setBody("$GOOG gained 11.80 points to close at 835.67, up 1.43% on the day.")
.build())
.setCondition(condition)
.build();
// Send a message to devices subscribed to the combination of topics
// specified by the provided condition.
String response = FirebaseMessaging.getInstance().send(message);
// Response is a message ID string.
System.out.println("Successfully sent message: " + response);
Python
# Define a condition which will send to devices which are subscribed
# to either the Google stock or the tech industry topics.
condition = "'stock-GOOG' in topics || 'industry-tech' in topics"
# See documentation on defining a message payload.
message = messaging.Message(
notification=messaging.Notification(
title='$GOOG up 1.43% on the day',
body='$GOOG gained 11.80 points to close at 835.67, up 1.43% on the day.',
),
condition=condition,
)
# Send a message to devices subscribed to the combination of topics
# specified by the provided condition.
response = messaging.send(message)
# Response is a message ID string.
print('Successfully sent message:', response)
Go
// Define a condition which will send to devices which are subscribed
// to either the Google stock or the tech industry topics.
condition := "'stock-GOOG' in topics || 'industry-tech' in topics"
// See documentation on defining a message payload.
message := &messaging.Message{
Data: map[string]string{
"score": "850",
"time": "2:45",
},
Condition: condition,
}
// Send a message to devices subscribed to the combination of topics
// specified by the provided condition.
response, err := client.Send(ctx, message)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalln(err)
}
// Response is a message ID string.
fmt.Println("Successfully sent message:", response)
C#
// Define a condition which will send to devices which are subscribed
// to either the Google stock or the tech industry topics.
var condition = "'stock-GOOG' in topics || 'industry-tech' in topics";
// See documentation on defining a message payload.
var message = new Message()
{
Notification = new Notification()
{
Title = "$GOOG up 1.43% on the day",
Body = "$GOOG gained 11.80 points to close at 835.67, up 1.43% on the day.",
},
Condition = condition,
};
// Send a message to devices subscribed to the combination of topics
// specified by the provided condition.
string response = await FirebaseMessaging.DefaultInstance.SendAsync(message);
// Response is a message ID string.
Console.WriteLine("Successfully sent message: " + response);
REST
POST https://fcm.googleapis.com/v1/projects/myproject-b5ae1/messages:send HTTP/1.1
Content-Type: application/json
Authorization: Bearer ya29.ElqKBGN2Ri_Uz...HnS_uNreA
{
"message":{
"condition": "'dogs' in topics || 'cats' in topics",
"notification" : {
"body" : "This is a Firebase Cloud Messaging Topic Message!",
"title" : "FCM Message",
}
}
}
cURL command:
curl -X POST -H "Authorization: Bearer ya29.ElqKBGN2Ri_Uz...HnS_uNreA" -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{
"notification": {
"title": "FCM Message",
"body": "This is a Firebase Cloud Messaging Topic Message!",
},
"condition": "'dogs' in topics || 'cats' in topics"
}' https://fcm.googleapis.com/v1/projects/myproject-b5ae1/messages:send HTTP/1.1
Next steps
- You can use your server to subscribe client app instances to topics and perform other management tasks. See Manage topic subscriptions on the server.