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132 lines
8.3 KiB
Markdown
132 lines
8.3 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Activation Strategies
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---
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It is powerful to be able to turn a feature on and off instantaneously, without redeploying the application. Activation strategies let you enable a feature only for a specified audience. Different strategies use different parameters. Predefined strategies are bundled with Unleash. The recommended strategy is the gradual rollout strategy with 100% rollout, which basically means that the feature should be enabled to everyone.
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Unleash comes with a number of built-in strategies (described below) and also lets you add your own [custom activation strategies](../reference/custom-activation-strategies.md) if you need more control. However, while activation strategies are _defined_ on the server, the server does not _implement_ the strategies. Instead, activation strategy implementation is done client-side. This means that it is _the client_ that decides whether a feature should be enabled or not.
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All [server-side client SDKs](../reference/sdks/index.md#server-side-sdks) and the [Unleash Proxy](../generated/unleash-proxy.md) implement the default strategies (and allow you to add your own [custom strategy implementations](../reference/custom-activation-strategies.md#implementation)). The [front-end client SDKs](../reference/sdks/index.md#front-end-sdks) do not do the evaluation themselves, instead relying on the [Unleash Proxy](../generated/unleash-proxy.md) to take care of the implementation and evaluation.
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Some activation strategies require the client to provide the current [Unleash context](unleash-context.md) to the toggle evaluation function for the evaluation to be done correctly.
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The following activation strategies are bundled with Unleash and always available:
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- [Standard](#standard)
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- [UserIDs](#userids)
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- [Gradual Rollout](#gradual-rollout)
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- [IPs](#ips)
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- [Hostnames](#hostnames)
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## Standard {#standard}
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A basic strategy that means "active for everyone".
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This strategy has the following modelling name in the code:
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- **default**
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## UserIDs {#userids}
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Active for users with a `userId` defined in the `userIds` list. A typical use case is to enable a feature for a few specific devs or key persons before enabling the feature for everyone else. This strategy allows you to specify a list of user IDs that you want to expose the new feature for. (A user id may, of course, be an email if that is more appropriate in your system.)
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**Parameters**
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- userIds - _List of user IDs you want the feature toggle to be enabled for_
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This strategy has the following modelling name in the code:
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- **userWithId**
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## Gradual Rollout {#gradual-rollout}
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A flexible rollout strategy which combines all gradual rollout strategies in to a single strategy. This strategy allows you to customize what parameter should be sticky, and defaults to userId or sessionId.
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**Parameters**
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- **stickiness** is used to define how we guarantee consistency for a gradual rollout. The same userId and the same rollout percentage should give predictable results. Configuration that should be supported:
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- **default** - Unleash chooses the first value present on the context in defined order userId, sessionId, random.
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- **userId** - guaranteed to be sticky on userId. If userId not present the behavior would be false
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- **sessionId** - guaranteed to be sticky on sessionId. If sessionId not present the behavior would be false.
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- **random** - no stickiness guaranteed. For every isEnabled call it will yield a random true/false based on the selected rollout percentage.
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- **groupId** is used to ensure that different toggles will **hash differently** for the same user. The groupId defaults to _feature toggle name_, but the user can override it to _correlate rollout_ of multiple feature toggles.
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- **rollout** The percentage (0-100) you want to enable the feature toggle for.
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This strategy has the following modelling name in the code:
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- **flexibleRollout**
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### Custom stickiness {#custom-stickiness}
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:::note SDK compatibility
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Custom stickiness is supported by all of our SDKs except for the Rust SDK. You can always refer to the [SDK compatibility table](../reference/sdks/index.md#server-side-sdk-compatibility-table) for the full overview.
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:::
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By enabling the stickiness option on a custom context field you can use the custom context field to group users with the gradual rollout strategy. This will guarantee a consistent behavior for specific values of this context field.
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## IPs {#ips}
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The remote address strategy activates a feature toggle for remote addresses defined in the IP list. We occasionally use this strategy to enable a feature only for IPs in our office network.
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**Parameters**
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- IPs - _List of IPs to enable the feature for._
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This strategy has the following modelling name in the code:
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- **remoteAddress**
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## Hostnames {#hostnames}
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The application hostname strategy activates a feature toggle for client instances with a hostName in the `hostNames` list.
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**Parameters**
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- hostNames - _List of hostnames to enable the feature toggle for._
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This strategy has the following modelling name in the code:
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- **applicationHostname**
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## Multiple activation strategies {#multiple-activation-strategies}
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You can apply as many activation strategies to a toggle as you want. When a toggle has multiple strategies, Unleash will check each strategy in isolation. If any one of the strategies would enable the toggle for the current user, then the toggle is enabled.
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As an example, consider a case where you want to roll a feature out to 75% of your users. However, you also want to make sure that you and your product lead get access to the feature. To achieve this, you would apply a **gradual rollout** strategy and set it to 75%. Additionally, you would add a **user IDs** strategy and add `engineer@mycompany.com` and `productlead@mycompany.com`.
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![A feature toggle with two active strategies: a user ID strategy and a gradual rollout strategy. The strategies are configured as described in the preceding paragraph.](/img/control_rollout_multiple_strategies.png)
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## Deprecated strategies
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### gradualRolloutUserId (DEPRECATED from v4) - Use Gradual rollout instead {#gradualrolloutuserid-deprecated-from-v4---use-gradual-rollout-instead}
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The `gradualRolloutUserId` strategy gradually activates a feature toggle for logged-in users. Stickiness is based on the user ID. The strategy guarantees that the same user gets the same experience every time across devices. It also assures that a user which is among the first 10% will also be among the first 20% of the users. That way, we ensure the users get the same experience, even if we gradually increase the number of users exposed to a particular feature. To achieve this, we hash the user ID and normalize the hash value to a number between 1 and 100 with a simple modulo operator.
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![hash_and_normalise](/img/hash_and_normalise.png)
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Starting from v3.x all clients should use the 32-bit [MurmurHash3](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MurmurHash) algorithm to normalize values. ([issue 247](https://github.com/Unleash/unleash/issues/247))
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**Parameters**
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- percentage - _The percentage (0-100) you want to enable the feature toggle for._
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- groupId - _Used to define an activation group, which allows you to correlate rollout across feature toggles._
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### gradualRolloutSessionId (DEPRECATED from v4) - Use Gradual rollout instead {#gradualrolloutsessionid-deprecated-from-v4---use-gradual-rollout-instead}
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Similar to `gradualRolloutUserId` strategy, this strategy gradually activates a feature toggle, with the exception being that the stickiness is based on the session IDs. This makes it possible to target all users (not just logged-in users), guaranteeing that a user will get the same experience within a session.
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**Parameters**
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- percentage - _The percentage (0-100) you want to enable the feature toggle for._
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- groupId - _Used to define an activation group, which allows you to correlate rollout across feature toggles._
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### gradualRolloutRandom (DEPRECATED from v4) - Use Gradual rollout instead {#gradualrolloutrandom-deprecated-from-v4---use-gradual-rollout-instead}
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The `gradualRolloutRandom` strategy randomly activates a feature toggle and has no stickiness. We have found this rollout strategy very useful in some scenarios, especially when we enable a feature which is not visible to the user. It is also the strategy we use to sample metrics and error reports.
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**Parameters**
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- percentage - _The percentage (0-100) you want to enable the feature toggle for._
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