The Web SDK is under development and based on a experimental client concepts.
For more information, see this issue.
👋 Hey there! Thanks for checking out the OpenFeature Web SDK
What is OpenFeature?
OpenFeature is an open standard that provides a vendor-agnostic, community-driven API for feature
flagging that works with your favorite feature flag management tool.
Why standardize feature flags?
Standardizing feature flags unifies tools and vendors behind a common interface which avoids vendor lock-in at the code
level. Additionally, it offers a framework for building extensions and integrations and allows providers to focus on
their unique value proposition.
🔍 Requirements:
ES2015-compatible web browser (Chrome, Edge, Firefox, etc)
import { OpenFeature } from'@openfeature/web-sdk';
// configure a providerawaitOpenFeature.setProvider(newYourProviderOfChoice());
// create a clientconst client = OpenFeature.getClient('my-app');
// get a bool flag valueconst boolValue = client.getBooleanValue('boolFlag', false);
Context-aware evaluation:
Sometimes the value of a flag must take into account some dynamic criteria about the application or user, such as the
user location, IP, email address, or the location of the server.
In OpenFeature, we refer to this as targeting.
If the flag system you're using supports targeting, you can provide the input data using the EvaluationContext.
// global context for static dataawaitOpenFeature.setContext({ origin: document.location.host })
// use contextual data to determine a flag valueconst boolValue = client.getBooleanValue('some-flag', false);
Providers:
To develop a provider, you need to create a new project and include the OpenFeature SDK as a dependency. This can be a
new repository or included in an existing contrib repository available under the OpenFeature organization. Finally,
you’ll then need to write the provider itself. In most languages, this can be accomplished by implementing the provider
interface exported by the OpenFeature SDK.
import { JsonValue, Provider, ResolutionDetails } from'@openfeature/web-sdk';
// implement the provider interfaceclassMyProviderimplementsProvider {
readonly metadata = {
name: 'My Provider'
} asconst;
resolveBooleanEvaluation(flagKey: string, defaultValue: boolean): ResolutionDetails<boolean> {
// resolve a boolean flag value
}
resolveStringEvaluation(flagKey: string, defaultValue: string): ResolutionDetails<string> {
// resolve a string flag value
}
resolveNumberEvaluation(flagKey: string, defaultValue: number): ResolutionDetails<number> {
// resolve a numeric flag value
}
resolveObjectEvaluation<T extendsJsonValue>(flagKey: string, defaultValue: T): ResolutionDetails<T> {
// resolve an object flag value
}
Hooks are a mechanism that allow for the addition of arbitrary behavior at well-defined points of the flag evaluation
life-cycle. Use cases include validation of the resolved flag value, modifying or adding data to the evaluation context,
logging, telemetry, and tracking.
import { OpenFeature, Hook, HookContext } from'@openfeature/web-sdk';
// Example hook that logs if an error occurs during flag evaluationexportclassGlobalDebugHookimplementsHook {
after(hookContext: HookContext, err: Error) {
console.log('hook context', hookContext);
console.error(err);
}
}
You can implement the Logger interface (compatible with the console object, and implementations from common logging
libraries such as winston) and set it on the global API object.
// implement loggerclassMyLoggerimplementsLogger {
error(...args: unknown[]): void {
// implement me
}
warn(...args: unknown[]): void {
// implement me
}
info(...args: unknown[]): void {
// implement me
}
debug(...args: unknown[]): void {
// implement me
}
}
// set the loggerOpenFeature.setLogger(newMyLogger());
Named clients:
You can have several clients, that can be referenced by a name.
Every client can have a different provider assigned. If no provider is assigned to a named client, the global default
provider is used.
import { OpenFeature, ProviderEvents } from'@openfeature/web-sdk';
OpenFeature.setProvider(newYourProviderOfChoice())
OpenFeature.setProvider("client-1", newYourOtherProviderOfChoice())
// Uses YourProviderOfChoice (the default)const unnamedClient = OpenFeature.getClient()
// Uses YourOtherProviderOfChoice as it is set explicitlyconst client1 = OpenFeature.getClient("client-1")
// Uses YourProviderOfChoice as no provider is setconst client2 = OpenFeature.getClient("client-2")
Events:
Events provide a way to react to state changes in the provider or underlying flag management system.
You can listen to events of either the OpenFeature API or individual clients.
The events after initialization, PROVIDER_READY on success, PROVIDER_ERROR on failure during initialization,
are dispatched for every provider.
However, other event types may not be supported by your provider.
Please refer to the documentation of the provider you're using to see what events are supported.
The OpenFeature API provides a close function to perform a cleanup of all registered providers.
This should only be called when your application is in the process of shutting down.
The npm package @openfeature/web-sdk receives a total of 23,533 weekly downloads. As such, @openfeature/web-sdk popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @openfeature/web-sdk demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago.It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Package last updated on 05 Jul 2023
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