unleash-client-go
Unleash Client for Go. Read more about the Unleash project
Version 3.x of the client requires unleash-server
v3.x or higher.
Go Version
The client is currently tested against Go 1.10.x and 1.13.x. These versions will be updated
as new versions of Go are released.
The client may work on older versions of Go as well, but is not actively tested.
Getting started
1. Install unleash-client-go
To install the latest version of the client use:
go get github.com/Unleash/unleash-client-go/v3
If you are still using Unleash Server v2.x.x, then you should use:
go get github.com/Unleash/unleash-client-go
2. Initialize unleash
The easiest way to get started with Unleash is to initialize it early in your application code:
import (
"github.com/Unleash/unleash-client-go/v3"
)
func init() {
unleash.Initialize(
unleash.WithListener(&unleash.DebugListener{}),
unleash.WithAppName("my-application"),
unleash.WithUrl("http://unleash.herokuapp.com/api/"),
unleash.WithCustomHeaders(http.Header{"Authorization": {"<API token>"}}),
)
}
Preloading feature toggles
If you'd like to prebake your application with feature toggles (maybe you're working without persistent storage, so Unleash's backup isn't available), you can replace the defaultStorage implementation with a BootstrapStorage. This allows you to pass in a reader to where data in the format of /api/client/features
can be found.
Bootstrapping from file
Bootstrapping from file on disk is then done using something similar to:
import (
"github.com/Unleash/unleash-client-go/v3"
)
func init() {
myBootstrap := os.Open("bootstrapfile.json")
unleash.Initialize(
unleash.WithListener(&unleash.DebugListener{}),
unleash.WithAppName("my-application"),
unleash.WithUrl("http://unleash.herokuapp.com/api/"),
unleash.WithStorage(&BootstrapStorage{Reader: myBootstrap})
)
}
Bootstrapping from S3
Bootstrapping from S3 is then done by downloading the file using the AWS library and then passing in a Reader to the just downloaded file:
import (
"github.com/Unleash/unleash-client-go/v3"
"github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go-v2/aws"
"github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go-v2/config"
"github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go-v2/service/s3"
)
func init() {
cfg, err := config.LoadDefaultConfig(context.TODO())
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
client := s3.NewFromConfig(cfg)
obj, err := client.GetObject(context.TODO(), &s3.GetObjectInput{
Bucket: aws.String("YOURBUCKET"),
Key: aws.String("YOURKEY"),
})
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
reader := obj.Body
defer reader.Close()
unleash.Initialize(
unleash.WithListener(&unleash.DebugListener{}),
unleash.WithAppName("YOURAPPNAME"),
unleash.WithUrl("YOURINSTANCE_URL"),
unleash.WithStorage(&BootstrapStorage{Reader: reader})
)
}
Bootstrapping from Google
Since the Google Cloud Storage API returns a Reader, implementing a Bootstrap from GCS is done using something similar to
import (
"github.com/Unleash/unleash-client-go/v3"
"cloud.google.com/go/storage"
)
func init() {
ctx := context.Background()
client, err := storage.NewClient(ctx)
if err != nil {
}
defer client.Close()
reader := client.Bucket(bucketName).Object("my-bootstrap.json").NewReader(ctx)
unleash.Initialize(
unleash.WithListener(&unleash.DebugListener{}),
unleash.WithAppName("my-application"),
unleash.WithUrl("http://unleash.herokuapp.com/api/"),
unleash.WithStorage(&unleash.BootstrapStorage{Reader: reader})
)
}
3. Use unleash
After you have initialized the unleash-client you can easily check if a feature
toggle is enabled or not.
unleash.IsEnabled("app.ToggleX")
4. Stop unleash
To shut down the client (turn off the polling) you can simply call the
destroy-method. This is typically not required.
unleash.Close()
Built in activation strategies
The Go client comes with implementations for the built-in activation strategies
provided by unleash.
- DefaultStrategy
- UserIdStrategy
- FlexibleRolloutStrategy
- GradualRolloutUserIdStrategy
- GradualRolloutSessionIdStrategy
- GradualRolloutRandomStrategy
- RemoteAddressStrategy
- ApplicationHostnameStrategy
Read more about activation strategies in the docs.
Unleash context
In order to use some of the common activation strategies you must provide an
unleash-context.
This client SDK allows you to send in the unleash context as part of the isEnabled
call:
ctx := context.Context{
UserId: "123",
SessionId: "some-session-id",
RemoteAddress: "127.0.0.1",
}
unleash.IsEnabled("someToggle", unleash.WithContext(ctx))
Caveat
This client uses go routines to report several events and doesn't drain the channel by default. So you need to either register a listener using WithListener
or drain the channel "manually" (demonstrated in this example).
Feature Resolver
FeatureResolver
is a FeatureOption
used in IsEnabled
via the WithResolver
.
The FeatureResolver
can be used to provide a feature instance in a different way than the client would normally retrieve it. This alternative resolver can be useful if you already have the feature instance and don't want to incur the cost to retrieve it from the repository.
An example of its usage is below:
ctx := context.Context{
UserId: "123",
SessionId: "some-session-id",
RemoteAddress: "127.0.0.1",
}
resolver := func(featureName string) *api.Feature {
if featureName == "someToggle" {
return &api.Feature{
Name: "someToggle",
Description: "Example of someToggle",
Enabled: true,
Strategies: []api.Strategy{
{
Id: 1,
Name: "default",
},
},
CreatedAt: time.Time{},
Strategy: "default-strategy",
}
} else {
return nil
}
}
unleash.IsEnabled("someToggle", unleash.WithContext(ctx), unleash.WithResolver(resolver))
Development
To override dependency on unleash-client-go github repository to a local development folder (for instance when building a local test-app for the SDK),
you can add the following to your apps go.mod
:
replace github.com/Unleash/unleash-client-go/v3 => ../unleash-client-go/
Steps to release
- Update the clientVersion in
client.go
- Tag the repository with the new tag
Adding client specifications
In order to make sure the unleash clients uphold their contract, we have defined a set of
client specifications that define this contract. These are used to make sure that each unleash client
at any time adhere to the contract, and define a set of functionality that is core to unleash. You can view
the client specifications here.
In order to make the tests run please do the following steps.
// in repository root
// testdata is gitignored
mkdir testdata
cd testdata
git clone https://github.com/Unleash/client-specification.git
Requirements:
- make
- golint (go get -u golang.org/x/lint/golint)
Run tests:
make
Run lint check:
make lint
Run code-style checks:(currently failing)
make strict-check
Run race-tests:
make test-race
Benchmarking
You can benchmark feature toggle evaluation by running:
go test -run=^$ -bench=BenchmarkFeatureToggleEvaluation -benchtime=10s
Here's an example of how the output could look like:
goos: darwin
goarch: arm64
pkg: github.com/Unleash/unleash-client-go/v3
BenchmarkFeatureToggleEvaluation-8 Final Estimated Operations Per Day: 101.131 billion (1.011315e+11)
13635154 854.3 ns/op
PASS
ok github.com/Unleash/unleash-client-go/v3 13.388s
In this example the benchmark was run on a MacBook Pro (M1 Pro, 2021) with 16GB RAM.
We can see a result of 854.3 ns/op, which means around 101.131 billion feature toggle evaluations per day.
Note: The benchmark is run with a single CPU core, no parallelism.
Design philsophy
This feature flag SDK is designed according to our design philosophy. You can read more about that here.