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mirror of https://github.com/Unleash/unleash.git synced 2024-10-18 20:09:08 +02:00
unleash.unleash/website/docs/how-to/how-to-use-custom-strategies.md
Thomas Heartman 14e052b9ac
docs: auto-generate remaining server-side SDK docs (#2858)
This PR builds on the preceding doc auto-generation PRs and generates
documentation for the remaining server-side SDKs.

## Why

Refer to https://github.com/Unleash/unleash/pull/2809 for more context
about generating SDK docs.

## What

-   Adds generation for the remaining server-side SDKs
- Moves generated docs from the `/reference/sdks` directory to
`/generated` directory.
- Makes sure that the URLs do not change because of the move by using
the `slug` frontmatter property.
- replaces relative github links in the markdown documents so that they
become absolute github links. (refer to the next section)
- Updates some image styling so that it doesn't apply to readme badges
(we don't need them using `display: block`)

### On link replacing:

This PR adds handling of links in the generated documentation.
Specifically, it changes links in one case:

Relative links to github. Links to code and other files in the
repository. These are prefixed with the repository's URL.

While this should work in most cases, it will fail in cases where the
links to the files are not on the repository's primary branch.
(typically main, but could also be "v3", for instance). In these cases,
the links will get a double branch in the URL and will fail. However, I
see no easy way around this (though suggestions are definitely
accepted!), and think it's a fair tradeoff. It takes the links from
"definitely failing" to "will work in the vast majority of cases".

Note: I originally also wanted to handle the case where the link is an
absolute link to docs.getunleash.io. We could turn these into relative
urls to avoid full page reloads and enjoy a smoother experience.
However, the client-side redirects don't work correctly if the relative
URL goes to a redirect page, so you end up with a 404 page. As such, I
think it's better to leave the links as absolute for now.
2023-01-13 12:40:28 +01:00

8.6 KiB

title
How to use custom activation strategies

This guide takes you through how to use custom activation strategies with Unleash. We'll go through how you define a custom strategy in the admin UI, how you add it to a toggle, and how you'd implement it in a client SDK.

In this example we want to define an activation strategy offers a scheduled release of a feature toggle. This means that we want the feature toggle to be activated after a given date and time.

Step 1: Define your custom strategy

  1. Navigate to the strategies view. Interact with the "Configure" button in the page header and then go to the "Strategies" link in the dropdown menu that appears.

    A visual guide for how to navigate to the strategies page in the Unleash admin UI. It shows the steps described in the preceding paragraph.

  2. Define your strategy. Use the "Add new strategy" button to open the strategy creation form. Fill in the form to define your strategy. Refer to the custom strategy reference documentation for a full list of options.

    A strategy creation form. It has fields labeled "strategy name" — "TimeStamp" — and "description" — "activate toggle after a given timestamp". It also has fields for a parameter named "enableAfter". The parameter is of type "string" and the parameter description is "Expected format: YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM". The parameter is required.

Step 2: Apply your custom strategy to a feature toggle

Navigate to your feature toggle and apply the strategy you just created.

The strategy configuration screen for the custom "TimeStamp" strategy from the previous step. The "enableAfter" field says "2021-12-25 00:00".

Step 3: Implement the strategy in your client SDK

The steps to implement a custom strategy for your client depend on the kind of client SDK you're using:

Option A: Implement the strategy for a server-side client SDK

  1. Implement the custom strategy in your client SDK. The exact way to do this will vary depending on the specific SDK you're using, so refer to the SDK's documentation. The example below shows an example of how you'd implement a custom strategy called "TimeStamp" for the Node.js client SDK.

    const { Strategy } = require('unleash-client');
    
    class TimeStampStrategy extends Strategy {
      constructor() {
        super('TimeStamp');
      }
    
      isEnabled(parameters, context) {
        return Date.parse(parameters.enableAfter) < Date.now();
      }
    }
    
  2. Register the custom strategy with the Unleash Client. When instantiating the Unleash Client, provide it with a list of the custom strategies you'd like to use — again: refer to your client SDK's docs for the specifics.

    Here's a full, working example for Node.js. Notice the strategies property being passed to the initialize function.

    const { Strategy, initialize, isEnabled } = require('unleash-client');
    
    class TimeStampStrategy extends Strategy {
      constructor() {
        super('TimeStamp');
      }
    
      isEnabled(parameters, context) {
        return Date.parse(parameters.enableAfter) < Date.now();
      }
    }
    
    const instance = initialize({
      url: 'https://unleash.example.com/api/',
      appName: 'unleash-demo',
      instanceId: '1',
      // highlight-next-line
      strategies: [new TimeStampStrategy()],
    });
    
    instance.on('ready', () => {
      setInterval(() => {
        console.log(isEnabled('demo.TimeStampRollout'));
      }, 1000);
    });
    

Option B: Implement the strategy for a front-end client SDK

Front-end client SDKs don't evaluate strategies directly, so you need to implement the custom strategy in the Unleash Proxy. Depending on how you run the Unleash Proxy, follow one of the below series of steps:

With a containerized proxy

Strategies are stored in separate JavaScript files and loaded into the container at startup. Refer to the Unleash Proxy documentation for a full overview of all the options.

  1. Create a strategies directory. Create a directory that Docker has access to where you can store your strategies. The next steps assume you called it strategies

  2. Initialize a Node.js project and install the Unleash Client:

    npm init -y && \
    npm install unleash-client
    
  3. Create a strategy file and implement your strategies. Remember to export your list of strategies. The next steps will assume you called the file timestamp.js. An example implementation looks like this:

    const { Strategy } = require('unleash-client');
    
    class TimeStampStrategy extends Strategy {
      constructor() {
        super('TimeStamp');
      }
    
      isEnabled(parameters, context) {
        return Date.parse(parameters.enableAfter) < Date.now();
      }
    }
    
    module.exports = [new TimeStampStrategy()]; // <- export strategies
    
  4. Mount the strategies directory and point the Unleash Proxy docker container at your strategies file. The highlighted lines below show the extra options you need to add. The following command assumes that your strategies directory is a direct subdirectory of your current working directory. Modify the rest of the command to suit your needs.

    docker run --name unleash-proxy --pull=always \
        -e UNLEASH_PROXY_CLIENT_KEYS=some-secret \
        -e UNLEASH_URL='http://unleash:4242/api/' \
        -e UNLEASH_API_TOKEN=${API_TOKEN} \
        # highlight-start
        -e UNLEASH_CUSTOM_STRATEGIES_FILE=/strategies/timestamp.js \
        --mount type=bind,source="$(pwd)"/strategies,target=/strategies \
        # highlight-end
        -p 3000:3000 --network unleash unleashorg/unleash-proxy
    

When running the proxy with Node.js

The Unleash Proxy accepts a customStrategies property as part of its initialization options. Use this to pass it initialized strategies.

  1. Install the unleash-client package. You'll need this to implement the custom strategy:

    npm install unleash-client
    
  2. Implement your strategy. You can import it from a different file or put it in the same file as the Proxy initialization. For instance, a TimeStampStrategy could look like this:

    const { Strategy } = require('unleash-client');
    
    class TimeStampStrategy extends Strategy {
      constructor() {
        super('TimeStamp');
      }
    
      isEnabled(parameters, context) {
        return Date.parse(parameters.enableAfter) < Date.now();
      }
    }
    
  3. Pass the strategy to the Proxy Client using the customStrategies option. A full code example:

    const { createApp } = require('@unleash/proxy');
    const { Strategy } = require('unleash-client');
    
    class TimeStampStrategy extends Strategy {
      constructor() {
        super('TimeStamp');
      }
    
      isEnabled(parameters, context) {
        return Date.parse(parameters.enableAfter) < Date.now();
      }
    }
    
    const port = 3000;
    
    const app = createApp({
      unleashUrl: 'https://app.unleash-hosted.com/demo/api/',
      unleashApiToken:
        '*:default.56907a2fa53c1d16101d509a10b78e36190b0f918d9f122d',
      clientKeys: ['proxy-secret', 'another-proxy-secret', 's1'],
      refreshInterval: 1000,
      // highlight-next-line
      customStrategies: [new TimeStampStrategy()],
    });
    
    app.listen(port, () =>
      // eslint-disable-next-line no-console
      console.log(`Unleash Proxy listening on http://localhost:${port}/proxy`),
    );