If your app server implements the XMPP Connection Server protocol, it can receive upstream messages from a user's device to the cloud. To initiate an upstream message, the client app sends a request containing the following:
- The address of the receiving app server in the format
SENDER_ID@fcm.googleapis.com
. - A message ID that should be unique for each sender ID.
- The message data comprising the key-value pairs of the message's payload.
When it receives this data, FCM builds an XMPP stanza to send to the app server, adding some additional information about the sending device and app.
Send an upstream message from an Android client app
Your Android app can send an upstream message using FirebaseMessaging.send:
Kotlin
val fm = Firebase.messaging fm.send( remoteMessage("$SENDER_ID@fcm.googleapis.com") { setMessageId(messageId.toString()) addData("my_message", "Hello World") addData("my_action", "SAY_HELLO") }, )
Java
FirebaseMessaging fm = FirebaseMessaging.getInstance(); fm.send(new RemoteMessage.Builder(SENDER_ID + "@fcm.googleapis.com") .setMessageId(Integer.toString(messageId)) .addData("my_message", "Hello World") .addData("my_action","SAY_HELLO") .build());
Handle upstream message callbacks
With FirebaseMessaging
, you can implement the
callbacks onMessageSent
and onSendError
to check the status of upstream
messages. In error cases, onSendError
returns a SendException
with an error code. For example, if the client attempts to
send more messages after the 20-message limit is reached, it returns
SendException#ERROR_TOO_MANY_MESSAGES
.
In cases where the device is offline or the FCM
service is unavailable to
forward upstream messages to your server, Android client app instances can
accumulate a maximum of 20 pending messages.
If such messages expire before FCM can successfully send
them, onSendError
returns SendException#ERROR_TTL_EXCEEDED
.
To optimize network usage, FCM batches responses to onMessageSent
and onSendError
, so the acknowledgement may not be immediate for each message.
Receive XMPP messages on the app server
When FCM receives an upstream messaging call from a client app, it generates
the necessary XMPP stanza for sending the upstream message.
FCM adds the category
and from
fields, and then sends a
stanza like the following to the app server:
<message id=""> <gcm xmlns="google:mobile:data"> { "category":"com.example.yourapp", // to know which app sent it "data": { "hello":"world", }, "message_id":"m-123", "from":"REGID" } </gcm> </message>
Sending an ACK message
In response to an upstream message like the above, the app server must use the same connection to send an ACK message containing the unique message ID. If FCM does not receive an ACK, it may retry sending the message to the app server.
<message id=""> <gcm xmlns="google:mobile:data"> { "to":"REGID", "message_id":"m-123" "message_type":"ack" } </gcm> </message>
See the XMPP Connection Server Reference for more information about upstream message syntax.