twilio_voice 0.1.0 twilio_voice: ^0.1.0 copied to clipboard
Provides an interface to Twilio's Programmable Voice SDK to allow adding voice-over-IP (VoIP) calling into your Flutter applications.
twilio_voice #
Provides an interface to Twilio's Programmable Voice SDK to allow voice-over-IP (VoIP) calling into
your Flutter applications.
This plugin was taken from the original Project ownership & maintenance handed over by diegogarcia. For the foreseeable future, I'll be actively maintaining this project.flutter_twilio_voice
as it seems that plugin is no longer maintained, this one is.
🐞Bug? Issue? Something odd?
Report it here.
🚀 Feature Requests?
Any and all Feature Requests or Pull Requests are gladly welcome!
Live Example/Samples:
Currently, only Web sample is provided. If demand arises for a Desktop or Mobile builds, I'll throw one up on the relevant store/app provider or make one available.
Features #
- Receive and place calls from iOS devices, uses Callkit to receive calls.
- Receive and place calls from Android devices, uses
custom UInative call screen to receive calls (via aConnectionService
impl). - Receive and place calls from Web (FCM push notification integration not yet supported by Twilio Voice Web, see here for discussion)
- Receive and place calls from MacOS devices, uses custom UI to receive calls (in future & macOS 13.0+, we'll be using CallKit).
- Interpret TwiML parameters to populate UI, see below Interpreting Parameters
Feature addition schedule: #
- Audio device selection support (select input/output audio devices, on-hold)
- Update plugin to Flutter federated packages (step 1 of 2 with Web support merge)
- Desktop platform support (implementation as JS wrapper/native implementation, Windows/Linux to start development)
Android Limitations #
As iOS has CallKit, an Apple provided UI for answering calls, there is no default UI for android to
receive calls, for this reason a default UI was made. To increase customization, the UI will use a
splash_icon.png registered on your res/drawable folder. I haven't found a way to customize colors,
if you find one, please submit a pull request.
Android provides a native UI by way of the ConnectionService
. Twilio has made an attempt a ConnectionService implementation however it is fully realized in this package.
macOS Limitations #
- CallKit support is found in macOS 13.0+ which there is no support for yet. In future, this will be taken into consideration for feature development.
- Twilio Voice does not offer a native SDK for macOS, so we're using the Twilio Voice Web SDK ( twilio-voice.js, v2.4.1-dev) to provide the functionality. This is a temporary solution until (or even if) Twilio Voice SDK for macOS is released.
This limits macOS to not support remote push notifications .voip
and .apns
as the web SDK does
not support this. Instead, it uses a web socket connection to listen for incoming calls, arguably
more efficient vs time but forces the app to be open at all times to receive incoming calls.
Setup #
Please follow Twilio's quickstart setup for each platform, you don't need to write the native code but it will help you understand the basic functionality of setting up your server, registering your iOS app for VOIP, etc.
iOS Setup #
To customize the icon displayed on a CallKit call, Open XCode and add a png icon named ' callkit_icon' to your assets.xassets folder
see [Notes] for more information
macOS Setup #
Drop in addition.
see [Limitations] and [Notes] for more information.
Android Setup: #
register in your AndroidManifest.xml
the service in charge of displaying incoming call
notifications:
<Application>
.....
<service
android:name="com.twilio.twilio_voice.fcm.VoiceFirebaseMessagingService"
android:stopWithTask="false">
<intent-filter> <action android:name="com.google.firebase.MESSAGING_EVENT" />
</intent-filter> </service>
Phone Account
To register a Phone Account, request access to READ_PHONE_NUMBERS
permission first:
TwilioVoice.instance.requestReadPhoneNumbersPermission(); // Gives Android permissions to read Phone Accounts
then, register the PhoneAccount
with:
TwilioVoice.instance.registerPhoneAccount();
Enable calling account
To open the Call Account
settings, use the following code:
TwilioVoice.instance.openPhoneAccountSettings();
Check if it's enabled with:
TwilioVoice.instance.isPhoneAccountEnabled();
Calling with ConnectionService
Placing a call with Telecom app via Connection Service requires a PhoneAccount
to be registered. See Phone Account above for more information.
Finally, to grant access to place calls, run:
TwilioVoice.instance.requestCallPhonePermission(); // Gives Android permissions to place calls
See Customizing the Calling Account for more information.
Enabling the ConnectionService
To enable the ConnectionService
and make/receive calls, run:
TwilioVoice.instance.requestReadPhoneStatePermission(); // Gives Android permissions to read Phone State
Highly recommended to review the notes for Android. See [Notes] for more information.
Customizing the Calling Account
To customize the label
and shortDescription
of the calling account, add the following in your res/values/strings.xml
:
<string name="phone_account_name" translatable="false">Example App</string>
<string name="phone_account_desc" translatable="false">Example app voice calls calling account</string>
This can be found in alternatively the Phone App's settings, Other/Advanced Call Settings -> Calling Accounts -> (Example App)
(then toggle the switch)
See example for more details
Known Issues
Bluetooth, Telecom App Crash
- Upon accepting an inbound call, at times the Telecom app/ Bluetooth service will crash and restart. This is a known bug, caused by
Class not found when unmarshalling: com.twilio.voice.CallInvite
. This is due to the Telecom service not using the same Classloader as the main Flutter app. See here for source of error. - Callback action on post dialer screen may not work as expected - this is platform and manufacturer specific. PRs are welcome here.
- Complete integration with showing missed calls. This is a work in progress.
Web Setup: #
There are 4 important files for Twilio incoming/missed call notifications to work:
notifications.js
is the main file, it handles the notifications and the service worker.twilio-sw.js
is the service worker content used to work with the defaultflutter_service_worker.js
(this can be found inbuild/web/flutter_service_worker.js
after callingflutter build web
). This file's contents are to be copied into theflutter_service_worker.js
file after you've built your application.
Also, the twilio javascript SDK itself, twilio.min.js
is needed.
To ensure proper/as intended setup: #
- Copy files
example/web/notifications.js
andexample/web/twilio.min.js
into your application'sweb
folder. - This step should be done AFTER you've built your application, every time the
flutter_service_worker.js
changes (this includes hot reloads on your local machine unfortunately)- Copy the contents of
example/web/twilio-sw.js
into yourbuild/web/flutter_service_worker.js
file, at the end of the file. See service-worker for more information.
- Copy the contents of
Note, these files can be changed to suite your needs - however the core functionality should remain the same: responding to notificationclick
, notificationclose
, message
events and associated sub-functions.
Finally, add the following code to your index.html
file, at the end of body tag:
<body>
<!--Start Twilio Voice impl-->
<!--twilio native js library-->
<script type="text/javascript" src="./twilio.min.js"></script>
<!--End Twilio Voice impl-->
<script>
window.addEventListener('load', function(ev) {
// Download main.dart.js
...
</body>
Web Considerations
If you need to debug the service worker, open up Chrome Devtools, go to Application tab, and select Service Workers from the left menu. There you can see the service workers and their status.
To review service worker notificationclick
, notificationclose
, message
, etc events - do this using Chrome Devtools (Sources tab, left panel below 'site code' the service workers are listed)
Service Worker
Unifying the service worker(s) is best done via post-compilation tools or a CI/CD pipeline (suggested).
A snippet of the suggested service worker integration is as follows:
#...
- run: cd ./example; flutter build web --release --target=lib/main.dart --output=build/web
- name: Update service worker
run: cat ./example/web/twilio-sw.js > ./example/build/web/flutter_service_worker.js
#...
A complete example could be found in the github workflows .github/workflows/flutter.yml
file, see here.
Web Notifications
2 types of notifications are shown:
- Incoming call notifications with 2 buttons:
Answer
andReject
, - Missed call notifications with 1 button:
Call back
.
Notifications are presented as alerts. These notifications may not always been shown, check:
- if the browser supports notifications,
- if the user has granted permissions to show notifications,
- if the notifications display method / notifications is enabled by the system (e.g. macOS notifications are disabled, or Windows notifications are disabled, etc).
- if there are already notifications shown (https://stackoverflow.com/a/36383155/4628115)
- if system is in 'Do Not Disturb' or 'Focus' mode.
MacOS Setup: #
The plugin is essentially a WKWebView wrapper. This makes macOS integration a drop-in solution.
However, you'll need to:
-
add the following to your
Info.plist
file:<key>NSMicrophoneUsageDescription</key> <string>Allow microphone access to make calls</string>
-
include Hardened Runtime entitlements (this is required for App Store distributed MacOS apps):
<key>com.apple.security.audio-input</key> <true/> <!--Optionally for bluetooth support/permissions--> <key>com.apple.security.device.bluetooth</key> <true/>
-
Lastly and most importantly, ensure the
index.html
andtwilio.min.js
is bundled inside oftwilio_voice
package (this shouldn't be a problem, but just in case). Found intwilio_voice.../.../Classes/Resources/*
.
See this for more information on preparing for publishing your macOS app
Usage #
The plugin was separated into two classes, the TwilioVoice.instance
and TwilioVoice.instance.call
, the first one is in charge of general configuration and the second
one is in charge of managing calls.
Register iOS capabilities
- Add Audio and Voice over IP in background modes
TwilioVoice.instance #
Setting the tokens
call TwilioVoice.instance.setTokens
as soon as your app starts.
accessToken
provided from your server, you can see an example cloud function here.deviceToken
is automatically handled on iOS, for android you need to pass a FCM token.
call TwilioVoice.instance.unregister
to unregister from Twilio, if no access token is passed, it
will use the token provided in setTokens
at the same session.
Call Identifier #
As incoming call UI is shown in background and the App can even be closed when receiving the calls,
you can map call identifiers such as firebaseAuth
userIds to real names, this operation must be
done before actually receiving the call. So if you have a chat app, and know the members names,
register them so when they call, the call UI can display their names and not their userIds.
Registering a client
TwilioVoice.instance.registerClient(String clientId, String clientName)
Unregistering a client
TwilioVoice.instance.unregisterClient(String clientId)
Default caller
You can also set a default caller, such as "unknown number" or "chat friend" in case a call comes in from an unregistered client.
TwilioVoice.instance.setDefaultCallerName(String callerName)
Call Events #
use stream TwilioVoice.instance.callEventsListener
to receive events from the TwilioSDK such as
call events and logs, it is a broadcast so you can listen to it on different parts of your app. Some
events might be missed when the app has not launched, please check out the example project to find
the workarounds.
The events sent are the following
- incoming // web, MacOS only
- ringing
- connected
- callEnded
- unhold
- hold
- unmute
- mute
- speakerOn
- speakerOff
- log
- declined (based on Twilio Error codes, or remote abort)
- answer
- missedCall
- returningCall
- permission (Android only)
Interpreting Parameters #
As a convenience, the plugin will interpret the TwiML parameters and send them as a map in the CallInvite
or provided via extraOptions
when creating the call. This is useful for passing additional information to the call screen and are prefixed with __TWI
.
__TWI_CALLER_ID
- caller id__TWI_CALLER_NAME
- caller name__TWI_CALLER_URL
- caller image/thumbnail url (not implemented/supported at the moment)__TWI_RECIPIENT_ID
- recipient id__TWI_RECIPIENT_NAME
- recipient name__TWI_RECIPIENT_URL
- recipient image/thumbnail url (not implemented/supported at the moment)__TWI_SUBJECT
- subject/additional info
These parameters above are interpreted as follows.
Name resolution
Caller is usually referred to as call.from
or callInvite.from
. This can either be a number of a string (with the format client:clientName
) or null.
The following rules are applied to determine the caller/recipient name, which is shown in the call screen and heads-up notification:
Incoming Calls:
__TWI_CALLER_NAME
-> resolve(__TWI_CALLER_ID)
-> (phone number) -> registered client (from)
-> defaultCaller name
-> "Unknown Caller"
Outgoing Calls:
__TWI_RECIPIENT_NAME
-> resolve(__TWI_RECIPIENT_ID)
-> (phone number) -> registered client (to)
-> defaultCaller name
-> "Unknown Caller"
Details explaination:
- if the call is an CallInvite (incoming), the plugin will interpret the string as follows or if the call is outgoing, the twilio
To
parameter field is used to:- if the
__TWI_CALLER_NAME
(or__TWI_RECIPIENT_NAME
) parameter is provided, the plugin will show the value of__TWI_CALLER_NAME
(or__TWI_RECIPIENT_NAME
) as is, else - if the
__TWI_CALLER_ID
(or__TWI_RECIPIENT_ID
) parameter is provided, the plugin will search for a registered client with the same id and show the client name,
- if the
- if the caller (
from
orto
fields) is empty/not provided, the default caller name is shown e.g. "Unknown Caller", else - else if the caller (
from
orto
fields) is a number, the plugin will show the number as is, else - else the plugin will search for a registered client with the
callInvite.from
(or call.to) value and show the client name, as a last resort- the default caller name is shown e.g. "Unknown Caller"
Please note: the same approach applies to both caller and recipient name resolution.
Subject
Using the provided __TWI_SUBJECT
parameter, the plugin will show the subject as is, else (depending on the platform and manufacturer), the plugin will show:
- the caller name as the subject, or
- the app name as the subject, or
- the default subject "Incoming Call"
showMissedCallNotifications #
By default a local notification will be shown to the user after missing a call, clicking on the
notification will call back the user. To remove this feature, set showMissedCallNotifications
to false
.
Calls #
Make a Call
from
your own identifier
to
the id you want to call
use extraOptions
to pass additional variables to your server callback function.
await TwilioVoice.instance.call.place(from:myId, to: clientId, extraOptions);
These translate to the your TwiML event
function/service as:
javascript sample
exports.handler = function(context, event, callback) {
const from = event.From;
const to = event.To;
// event contains extraOptions as a key/value map
// your TwiML code...
}
See Setting up the Application for more information.
Please note: the hardcoded To
, From
may change in future.
Receiving Calls
iOS
Receives calls via CallKit integration. Make sure to review the iOS Setup section for more information.
Android
Receives calls via ConnectionService integration. Make sure to review the Android Setup section for more information.
Mute a Call
TwilioVoice.instance.call.toggleMute(isMuted: true);
Toggle Speaker
TwilioVoice.instance.call.toggleSpeaker(speakerIsOn: true);
Hang Up
TwilioVoice.instance.call.hangUp();
Send Digits
TwilioVoice.instance.call.sendDigits(String digits);
Permissions #
Microphone
To receive and place calls you need Microphone permissions, register the microphone permission in your info.plist for iOS.
You can use TwilioVoice.instance.hasMicAccess
and TwilioVoice.instance.requestMicAccess
to check
and request the permission. Permissions is also automatically requested when receiving a call.
Background calls (Android only on some devices)
Xiaomi devices, and maybe others, need a special permission to receive background calls.
use TwilioVoice.instance.requiresBackgroundPermissions
to check if your device requires a special
permission, if it does, show a rationale explaining the user why you need the permission. Finally
call
TwilioVoice.instance.requestBackgroundPermissions
which will take the user to the App Settings
page to enable the permission.
Deprecated in 0.10.0, as it is no longer needed. Custom UI has been replaced with native UI.
ConnectionService & Native Phone Account (Android only)
Similar to CallKit on iOS, Android implements their own via a ConnectionService integration. To make use of this, you'll need to request CALL_PHONE
permissions via:
TwilioVoice.instance.requestCallPhonePermission(); // Gives Android permissions to place outgoing calls
TwilioVoice.instance.requestReadPhoneStatePermission(); // Gives Android permissions to read Phone State including receiving calls
TwilioVoice.instance.requestReadPhoneNumbersPermission(); // Gives Android permissions to read Phone Accounts
Following this, to register a Phone Account (required by all applications implementing a system-managed ConnectionService
, run:
TwilioVoice.instance.registerPhoneAccount(); // Registers the Phone Account
TwilioVoice.instance.openPhoneAccountSettings(); // Opens the Phone Account settings
// After the account is enabled, you can check if it's enabled with:
TwilioVoice.instance.isPhoneAccountEnabled(); // Checks if the Phone Account is enabled
This last step can be considered the 'final check' to make/receive calls on Android.
Permissions not granted?
Finally, a consideration for not all (CALL_PHONE
) permissions granted on an Android device. The following feature is available on Android only:
TwilioVoice.instance.rejectCallOnNoPermissions({Bool = false}); // Rejects incoming calls if permissions are not granted
TwilioVoice.instance.isRejectingCallOnNoPermissions(); // Checks if the plugin is rejecting calls if permissions are not granted
If the CALL_PHONE
permissions group i.e. READ_PHONE_STATE
, READ_PHONE_NUMBERS
, CALL_PHONE
aren't granted nor a Phone Account is registered and enabled, the plugin will either reject the incoming call (true) or not show the incoming call UI (false).
See Android Setup and Android Notes for more information regarding configuring the ConnectionService
and registering a Phone Account.
Localization #
Because some of the UI is in native code, you need to localize those strings natively in your project. You can find in the example project localization for spanish, PRs are welcome for other languages.
Twilio Setup/Quickstart Help #
Twilio makes use of cloud functions to generate access tokens and sends them to your app. Further, Twilio makes use of their own apps called TwiML apps to handle calling functions, etc
There are 2 major components to get Twilio Setup.
- Cloud functions (facility generating access tokens and then handling call requests)
- Mobile app that receives/updates tokens and performs the actual calls (see above)
1) Cloud Functions #
Cloud functions can be separated or grouped together. The main 2 components are:
- generate access tokens
make-call
endpoint to actually place the call
You can host both in firebase, in TwiML apps or a mixture. The setup below assumes a mixture, where
Firebase Functions hosts the access-token
for easy integration into Flutter and TwiML hosting
the make-call
function.
Cloud-Functions-Step-1: Create your TwiML app #
This will allow you to actually place the call
Prerequisites #
- A Twilio Account. Don't have one? Sign up for free!
Setting up the Application #
Grab this project from github, the sample TwiML app.
cp .env.example .env
Edit .env
with the three configuration parameters we gathered from above.
See configure environment below for details
Next, we need to install our dependencies from npm:
npm install
To make things easier for you, go into the src/
folder, rename the server.js
file to make-call
. This assumes each function will have its own file which for a new project isn't a bad idea.
Then add the following code:
const AccessToken = require('twilio').jwt.AccessToken;
const VoiceGrant = AccessToken.VoiceGrant;
const VoiceResponse = require('twilio').twiml.VoiceResponse;
/**
* Creates an endpoint that can be used in your TwiML App as the Voice Request Url.
* <br><br>
* In order to make an outgoing call using Twilio Voice SDK, you need to provide a
* TwiML App SID in the Access Token. You can run your server, make it publicly
* accessible and use `/makeCall` endpoint as the Voice Request Url in your TwiML App.
* <br><br>
*
* @returns {Object} - The Response Object with TwiMl, used to respond to an outgoing call
* @param context
* @param event
* @param callback
*/
exports.handler = function(context, event, callback) {
// The recipient of the call, a phone number or a client
console.log(event);
const from = event.From;
let to = event.to;
if(isEmptyOrNull(to)) {
to = event.To;
if(isEmptyOrNull(to)) {
console.error("Could not find someone to call");
to = undefined;
}
}
const voiceResponse = new VoiceResponse();
if (!to) {
voiceResponse.say("Welcome, you made your first call.");
} else if (isNumber(to)) {
const dial = voiceResponse.dial({callerId : callerNumber});
dial.number(to);
} else {
console.log(`Calling [${from}] -> [${to}]`)
const dial = voiceResponse.dial({callerId: to, timeout: 30, record: "record-from-answer-dual", trim: "trim-silence"});
dial.client(to);
}
callback(null, voiceResponse);
}
const isEmptyOrNull = (s) => {
return !s || s === '';
}
Setup Twilio CLI #
Ensure you are logged into twilio-cli
. First, install twilio-cli
with
npm i twilio-cli -g
Afterwards, login to twilio using: (b sure to provide Twilio account SID and auth token for login):
twilio login
We need to generate an app, this will give us an App SID to use later in firebase functions, ( see this more info)
Create TwiML app #
We need to create a TwiML app that will allow us to host a make-call
function:
twilio api:core:applications:create \
--friendly-name=my-twiml-app \
--voice-method=POST \
--voice-url="https://my-quickstart-dev.twil.io/make-call"
This will present you with a application SID in the format APxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
,
we will use this later in firebase config and generating push credential keys.
Very Important! The URL given here https://my-quickstart-dev.twil.io/make-call
won't work for
you. Once you deployed your TwiML application (later), a URL is given to you (on first deploy) which
you need to copy and paste as your Request URL call. If you don't do this, calling won't work!
Configure environment #
ensure you have a .env
file in the root of your project in the same directory as package.json
next, edit the .env
file in the format
ACCOUNT_SID=(insert account SID)
APP_SID=(insert App SID, found on TwiML app or the APxxxxx key above)
API_KEY
and API_KEY_SECRET
aren't necessary here since we won't be using them
Get Push Credential:
We will generate them a bit later
- Android FCM: Android instructions
- Apple APNS: Apple instructions
You will get a Push Credential SID in the format: CRxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
, use this
in PUSH_CREDENTIAL_SID
Deploying #
Now lets deploy.
Please note: Check you have configured your environment first
Navigate to root directory, and deploy using
twilio serverless:deploy
Very Important!: once complete (if you haven't done so), make sure to add the make-call
endpoint your Twilio app's Request URL
in the main Twilio page. This URL will be shown as part of
the deployment text. If this isn't done, calling won't work!
Cloud-Functions-Step-2: Setup Firebase & Configuration #
Twilio's configurations are stored in .runtimeconfig.json
which contains:
"auth_token": "", "account_sid": "", "app_sid": "", "phone": "", "api_key": "", "api_key_secret": "", "android_push_credential": "", "apple_push_credential_debug": "", "apple_push_credential_release": "" Note: this is used for local emulator testing, but you need to deploy these to your firebase function application once you are ready to go live. If you don't, this won't work!
Push Credentials are created once (for iOS, Android) and used to generate access-token
s, a
callback function for all Twilio apps to use for their communication.
Below are the 3 operations you need to run to generate push credentials that should be added into
the .runtimeconfig.json
above
Android
To generate Android push credentials, get the Cloud Messaging server key from Firebase FCM, and add it to the following:
twilio api:chat:v2:credentials:create \
--type=fcm \
--friendly-name="voice-push-credential-fcm" \
--secret=SERVER_KEY_VALUE
and then place into the field: android_push_credential
above
This generated a push credential SID in the format CRxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
which must
be used to generate access tokens for android devices.
see for more info: https://github.com/twilio/voice-quickstart-android#7-create-a-push-credential-using-your-fcm-server-key
iOS
Similar to Android, but more steps including using .p12 certificates. To get these certificates, login into Apple's developer site and go to the certificates page. You need to generate a VoIP Services certificate as shown below.
Please note: there are 2 different modes: sandbox and production.
- SandBox Mode
Using sandbox VoIP certificate:
Export your VoIP Service Certificate as a .p12 file from Keychain Access and extract the certificate and private key from the .p12 file using the openssl command.
$ openssl pkcs12 -in PATH_TO_YOUR_SANDBOX_P12 -nokeys -out sandbox_cert.pem -nodes
$ openssl pkcs12 -in PATH_TO_YOUR_SANDBOX_P12 -nocerts -out sandbox_key.pem -nodes
$ openssl rsa -in sandbox_key.pem -out sandbox_key.pem
Using sandbox certificates, generate credential:
twilio api:chat:v2:credentials:create \
--type=apn \
--sandbox \
--friendly-name="voice-push-credential (sandbox)" \
--certificate="$(cat PATH_TO_SANDBOX_CERT_PEM)" \
--private-key="$(cat PATH_TO_SANDBOX_KEY_PEM)"
then place it into the field apple_push_credential_debug
- Production Mode
Using production VoIP certificate:
Export your VoIP Service Certificate as a .p12 file from Keychain Access and extract the certificate and private key from the .p12 file using the openssl command.
$ openssl pkcs12 -in PATH_TO_YOUR_P12 -nokeys -out prod_cert.pem -nodes
$ openssl pkcs12 -in PATH_TO_YOUR_P12 -nocerts -out prod_key.pem -nodes
$ openssl rsa -in prod_key.pem -out prod_key.pem
Using production certificates, generate credential:
twilio api:chat:v2:credentials:create \
--type=apn \
--friendly-name="voice-push-credential (production)" \
--certificate="$(cat PATH_TO_PROD_CERT_PEM)" \
--private-key="$(cat PATH_TO_PROD_KEY_PEM)"
then place it into the field apple_push_credential_release
see for more info: https://github.com/twilio/voice-quickstart-ios#6-create-a-push-credential-with-your-voip-service-certificate
Cloud-Functions-Step-3: Generate access tokens via cloud function #
HTTP/GET api-voice-accessToken
To generate access-tokens, the following firebase function is used:
Please Note the default time is 1 hour token validity.
See for more info: https://github.com/twilio/voice-quickstart-android/blob/master/Docs/access-token.md
Firebase Cloud Function: access-token
const { AccessToken } = require('twilio').jwt;
const functions = require('firebase-functions');
const { VoiceGrant } = AccessToken;
/**
* Creates an access token with VoiceGrant using your Twilio credentials.
*
* @param {Object} request - POST or GET request that provides the recipient of the call, a phone number or a client
* @param {Object} response - The Response Object for the http request
* @returns {string} - The Access Token string and expiry date in milliseconds
*/
exports.accessToken = functions.https.onCall((payload, context) => {
// Check user authenticated
if (typeof (context.auth) === 'undefined') {
throw new functions.https.HttpsError('unauthenticated', 'The function must be called while authenticated');
}
let userId = context.auth.uid;
console.log('creating access token for ', userId);
//configuration using firebase environment variables
const twilioConfig = functions.config().twilio;
const accountSid = twilioConfig.account_sid;
const apiKey = twilioConfig.api_key;
const apiSecret = twilioConfig.api_key_secret;
const outgoingApplicationSid = twilioConfig.app_sid;
// Used specifically for creating Voice tokens, we need to use seperate push credentials for each platform.
// iOS has different APNs environments, so we need to distinguish between sandbox & production as the one won't work in the other.
let pushCredSid;
if (payload.isIOS === true) {
console.log('creating access token for iOS');
pushCredSid = payload.production ? twilioConfig.apple_push_credential_release
: (twilioConfig.apple_push_credential_debug || twilioConfig.apple_push_credential_release);
} else if (payload.isAndroid === true) {
console.log('creating access token for Android');
pushCredSid = twilioConfig.android_push_credential;
} else {
throw new functions.https.HttpsError('unknown_platform', 'No platform specified');
}
// generate token valid for 24 hours - minimum is 3min, max is 24 hours, default is 1 hour
const dateTime = new Date();
dateTime.setDate(dateTime.getDate()+1);
// Create an access token which we will sign and return to the client,
// containing the grant we just created
const voiceGrant = new VoiceGrant({
outgoingApplicationSid,
pushCredentialSid: pushCredSid,
});
// Create an access token which we will sign and return to the client,
// containing the grant we just created
const token = new AccessToken(accountSid, apiKey, apiSecret);
token.addGrant(voiceGrant);
// use firebase ID for identity
token.identity = userId;
console.log(`Token:${token.toJwt()}`);
// return json object
return {
"token": token.toJwt(),
"identity": userId,
"expiry_date": dateTime.getTime()
};
});
Add the function above to your Firebase Functions application, see this for more help on creating a firebase functions project
After you are done, deploy your .runtimeconfig.json
,
see this for more help.
Once done with everything above, deploy your firebase function with this:
firebase deploy --only functions
Done!
Calling should work naturally - just make sure to fetch the token from the endpoint and you can call
See example
code, make sure to change the voice-accessToken
to your function name, given to you by firebase
when deploying (as part of the deploy text)
Future Work #
- Move package to
federated plugin
structure (see here for more info), see reduced overhead advantages covered as motivation (see here for more info))
Updating Twilio Voice JS SDK #
twilio.js
is no longer hosted via CDNs (see reference), instead it is hosted via npm / github. See instructions found here
This is automatically added to your web/index.html
file, as a <script/>
tag during runtime. See here for more info.);