Securely querying data

This page builds on the concepts in Structuring Security Rules and Writing Conditions for Security Rules to explain how Firestore Security Rules interact with queries. It takes a closer look at how security rules affect the queries you can write and describes how to ensure your queries use the same constraints as your security rules. This page also describes how to write security rules to allow or deny queries based on query properties like limit and orderBy.

Rules are not filters

When writing queries to retrieve documents, keep in mind that security rules are not filters—queries are all or nothing. To save you time and resources, Firestore evaluates a query against its potential result set instead of the actual field values for all of your documents. If a query could potentially return documents that the client does not have permission to read, the entire request fails.

Queries and security rules

As the examples below demonstrate, you must write your queries to fit the constraints of your security rules.

Secure and query documents based on auth.uid

The following example demonstrates how to write a query to retrieve documents protected by a security rule. Consider a database that contains a collection of story documents:

/stories/{storyid}

{
  title: "A Great Story",
  content: "Once upon a time...",
  author: "some_auth_id",
  published: false
}

In addition to the title and content fields, each document stores the author and published fields to use for access control. These examples assume the app uses Firebase Authentication to set the author field to the UID of the user who created the document. Firebase Authentication also populates the request.auth variable in the security rules.

The following security rule uses the request.auth and resource.data variables to restrict read and write access for each story to its author:

service cloud.firestore {
  match /databases/{database}/documents {
    match /stories/{storyid} {
      // Only the authenticated user who authored the document can read or write
      allow read, write: if request.auth != null && request.auth.uid == resource.data.author;
    }
  }
}

Suppose that your app includes a page that shows the user a list of story documents that they authored. You might expect that you could use the following query to populate this page. However, this query will fail, because it does not include the same constraints as your security rules:

Invalid: Query constraints do not match security rules constraints

// This query will fail
db.collection("stories").get()

The query fails even if the current user actually is the author of every story document. The reason for this behavior is that when Firestore applies your security rules, it evaluates the query against its potential result set, not against the actual properties of documents in your database. If a query could potentially include documents that violate your security rules, the query will fail.

In contrast, the following query succeeds, because it includes the same constraint on the author field as the security rules:

Valid: Query constraints match security rules constraints

var user = firebase.auth().currentUser;

db.collection("stories").where("author", "==", user.uid).get()

Secure and query documents based on a field

To further demonstrate the interaction between queries and rules, the security rules below expand read access for the stories collection to allow any user to read story documents where the published field is set to true.

service cloud.firestore {
  match /databases/{database}/documents {
    match /stories/{storyid} {
      // Anyone can read a published story; only story authors can read unpublished stories
      allow read: if resource.data.published == true || (request.auth != null && request.auth.uid == resource.data.author);
      // Only story authors can write
      allow write: if request.auth != null && request.auth.uid == resource.data.author;
    }
  }
}

The query for published pages must include the same constraints as the security rules:

db.collection("stories").where("published", "==", true).get()

The query constraint .where("published", "==", true) guarantees that resource.data.published is true for any result. Therefore, this query satisfies the security rules and is allowed to read data.

OR queries

When evaluating a logical OR query (or, in, or array-contains-any) against a ruleset, Firestore evaluates each comparison value separately. Each comparison value must meet the security rule constraints. For example, for the following rule:

match /mydocuments/{doc} {
  allow read: if resource.data.x > 5;
}

Invalid: Query does not guarantee that x > 5 for all potential documents

// These queries will fail
query(db.collection("mydocuments"),
      or(where("x", "==", 1),
         where("x", "==", 6)
      )
    )

query(db.collection("mydocuments"),
      where("x", "in", [1, 3, 6, 42, 99])
    )

Valid: Query guarantees that x > 5 for all potential documents

query(db.collection("mydocuments"),
      or(where("x", "==", 6),
         where("x", "==", 42)
      )
    )

query(db.collection("mydocuments"),
      where("x", "in", [6, 42, 99, 105, 200])
    )

Evaluating constraints on queries

Your security rules can also accept or deny queries based on their constraints. The request.query variable contains the limit, offset, and orderBy properties of a query. For example, your security rules can deny any query that doesn't limit the maximum number of documents retrieved to a certain range:

allow list: if request.query.limit <= 10;

The following ruleset demonstrates how to write security rules that evaluate constraints placed on queries. This example expands the previous stories ruleset with the following changes:

  • The ruleset separates the read rule into rules for get and list.
  • The get rule restricts retrieval of single documents to public documents or documents the user authored.
  • The list rule applies the same restrictions as get but for queries. It also checks the query limit, then denies any query without a limit or with a limit greater than 10.
  • The ruleset defines an authorOrPublished() function to avoid code duplication.
service cloud.firestore {

  match /databases/{database}/documents {

    match /stories/{storyid} {

      // Returns `true` if the requested story is 'published'
      // or the user authored the story
      function authorOrPublished() {
        return resource.data.published == true || request.auth.uid == resource.data.author;
      }

      // Deny any query not limited to 10 or fewer documents
      // Anyone can query published stories
      // Authors can query their unpublished stories
      allow list: if request.query.limit <= 10 &&
                     authorOrPublished();

      // Anyone can retrieve a published story
      // Only a story's author can retrieve an unpublished story
      allow get: if authorOrPublished();

      // Only a story's author can write to a story
      allow write: if request.auth.uid == resource.data.author;
    }

  }
}

Collection group queries and security rules

By default, queries are scoped to a single collection and they retrieve results only from that collection. With collection group queries, you can retrieve results from a collection group consisting of all collections with the same ID. This section describes how to secure your collection group queries using security rules.

Secure and query documents based on collection groups

In your security rules, you must explicitly allow collection group queries by writing a rule for the collection group:

  1. Make sure rules_version = '2'; is the first line of your ruleset. Collection group queries require the new recursive wildcard {name=**} behavior of security rules version 2.
  2. Write a rule for you collection group using match /{path=**}/[COLLECTION_ID]/{doc}.

For example, consider a forum organized into forum documents containing posts subcollections:

/forums/{forumid}/posts/{postid}

{
  author: "some_auth_id",
  authorname: "some_username",
  content: "I just read a great story.",
}

In this application, we make posts editable by their owners and readable by authenticated users:

service cloud.firestore {
  match /databases/{database}/documents {
    match /forums/{forumid}/posts/{post} {
      // Only authenticated users can read
      allow read: if request.auth != null;
      // Only the post author can write
      allow write: if request.auth != null && request.auth.uid == resource.data.author;
    }
  }
}

Any authenticated user can retrieve the posts of any single forum:

db.collection("forums/technology/posts").get()

But what if you want to show the current user their posts across all forums? You can use a collection group query to retrieve results from all posts collections:

var user = firebase.auth().currentUser;

db.collectionGroup("posts").where("author", "==", user.uid).get()

In your security rules, you must allow this query by writing a read or list rule for the posts collection group:

rules_version = '2';
service cloud.firestore {

  match /databases/{database}/documents {
    // Authenticated users can query the posts collection group
    // Applies to collection queries, collection group queries, and
    // single document retrievals
    match /{path=**}/posts/{post} {
      allow read: if request.auth != null;
    }
    match /forums/{forumid}/posts/{postid} {
      // Only a post's author can write to a post
      allow write: if request.auth != null && request.auth.uid == resource.data.author;

    }
  }
}

Note, however, that these rules will apply to all collections with ID posts, regardless of hierarchy. For example, these rules apply to all of the following posts collections:

  • /posts/{postid}
  • /forums/{forumid}/posts/{postid}
  • /forums/{forumid}/subforum/{subforumid}/posts/{postid}

Secure collection group queries based on a field

Like single-collection queries, collection group queries must also meet the constraints set by your security rules. For example, we can add a published field to each forum post like we did in the stories example above:

/forums/{forumid}/posts/{postid}

{
  author: "some_auth_id",
  authorname: "some_username",
  content: "I just read a great story.",
  published: false
}

We can then write rules for the posts collection group based on the published status and the post author:

rules_version = '2';
service cloud.firestore {

  match /databases/{database}/documents {

    // Returns `true` if the requested post is 'published'
    // or the user authored the post
    function authorOrPublished() {
      return resource.data.published == true || request.auth.uid == resource.data.author;
    }

    match /{path=**}/posts/{post} {

      // Anyone can query published posts
      // Authors can query their unpublished posts
      allow list: if authorOrPublished();

      // Anyone can retrieve a published post
      // Authors can retrieve an unpublished post
      allow get: if authorOrPublished();
    }

    match /forums/{forumid}/posts/{postid} {
      // Only a post's author can write to a post
      allow write: if request.auth.uid == resource.data.author;
    }
  }
}

With these rules, Web, Apple, and Android clients can make the following queries:

  • Anyone can retrieve published posts in a forum:

    db.collection("forums/technology/posts").where('published', '==', true).get()
    
  • Anyone can retrieve an author's published posts across all forums:

    db.collectionGroup("posts").where("author", "==", "some_auth_id").where('published', '==', true).get()
    
  • Authors can retrieve all their published and unpublished posts across all forums:

    var user = firebase.auth().currentUser;
    
    db.collectionGroup("posts").where("author", "==", user.uid).get()
    

Secure and query documents based on collection group and document path

In some cases, you might want to restrict collection group queries based on document path. To create these restrictions, you can use the same techniques for securing and querying documents based on a field.

Consider an application that keeps track of each user's transactions among several stock and cryptocurrency exchanges:

/users/{userid}/exchange/{exchangeid}/transactions/{transaction}

{
  amount: 100,
  exchange: 'some_exchange_name',
  timestamp: April 1, 2019 at 12:00:00 PM UTC-7,
  user: "some_auth_id",
}

Notice the user field. Even though we know which user owns a transaction document from the document's path, we duplicate this information in each transaction document because it allows us to do two things:

  • Write collection group queries that are restricted to documents that include a specific /users/{userid} in their document path. For example:

    var user = firebase.auth().currentUser;
    // Return current user's last five transactions across all exchanges
    db.collectionGroup("transactions").where("user", "==", user).orderBy('timestamp').limit(5)
    
  • Enforce this restriction for all queries on the transactions collection group so one user cannot retrieve another user's transaction documents.

We enforce this restriction in our security rules and include data validation for the user field:

rules_version = '2';
service cloud.firestore {

  match /databases/{database}/documents {

    match /{path=**}/transactions/{transaction} {
      // Authenticated users can retrieve only their own transactions
      allow read: if resource.data.user == request.auth.uid;
    }

    match /users/{userid}/exchange/{exchangeid}/transactions/{transaction} {
      // Authenticated users can write to their own transactions subcollections
      // Writes must populate the user field with the correct auth id
      allow write: if userid == request.auth.uid && request.data.user == request.auth.uid
    }
  }
}

Next steps