Lightweight Redis-based feature-flagging for Ruby apps. Provides a simple syntax for enabling and disabling features, or gradually ramping up and down by enabling features for a percentage of total traffic.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'feature_guard'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install feature_guard
Check whether a feature is enabled globally:
FeatureGuard.enabled? :my_feature
Globally enable or disable a feature:
FeatureGuard.enable :my_feature
FeatureGuard.disable :my_feature
FeatureGuard.toggle :my_feature
Feature names can be strings or symbols. No data setup is necessary; any check for a feature which has never been enabled simply returns false.
For more fine-grained control, set a ramp-up value to decide which percentage of traffic should see the feature:
FeatureGuard.set_ramp :my_feature, 30.5 # 30.5%
FeatureGuard.bump_ramp :my_feature, 12 # 30.5 + 12 = 42.5%
FeatureGuard.bump_ramp :my_feature # 42.5 + 10 = 52.5%
FeatureGuard.ramp_val :my_feature # 52.5
.set_ramp
sets the ramp-up value; .bump_ramp
increments or decrements it by a given value (defaults to 10.0). Check the current ramp-up value with .ramp_val
.
Check whether to show the feature at the current ramp-up value:
FeatureGuard.allow? :my_feature, user_id
# true for 52.5% of user_id values
FeatureGuard.allow? :my_feature
# true for 52.5% of checks (random)
The optional second argument to.allow?
can be of any type (e.g., user ID or name or even an object). It is hashed with the feature name to create a reproducible numeric value for checking whether to return true or false based on the current ramp-up value. With no second argument, .allow?
uses a new random value on every call.
To retrieve information on all binary-enabled/disabled features, use .all_flags
:
FeatureGuard.enable :my_feature
FeatureGuard.enable :another_feature
FeatureGuard.toggle :my_feature
FeatureGuard.all_flags
# {"my_feature"=>false, "another_feature"=>true}
To retrieve information on all ramp values, use .all_ramps
:
FeatureGuard.set_ramp :my_feature, 50
FeatureGuard.set_ramp :another_feature, 30
FeatureGuard.all_ramps
# {"my_feature"=>50.0, "another_feature"=>30.0}
Optionally change the Redis client with:
FeatureGuard.redis = my_redis_client
Setting FeatureGuard.redis
to nil
will revert it to a new default instance (Redis.new
).
$ bundle exec rspec
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Added some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request