1
0
mirror of https://github.com/Unleash/unleash.git synced 2024-10-28 19:06:12 +01:00
Unleash is the open source feature toggle service.
Go to file
Thomas Heartman cfd9e4894a
chore: Establish a baseline for the number of envs disabled per project (#6807)
This PR adds a counter in Prometheus for counting the number of
"environment disabled" events we get per project. The purpose of this is
to establish a baseline for one of the "project management UI" project's
key results.

## On gauges vs counters

This PR uses a counter. Using a gauge would give you the total number of
envs disabled, not the number of disable events. The difference is
subtle, but important.

For projects that were created before the new feature, the gauge might
be appropriate. Because each disabled env would require at least one
disabled event, we can get a floor of how many events were triggered for
each project.

However, for projects created after we introduce the planned change,
we're not interested in the total envs anymore, because you can disable
a hundred envs on creation with a single action. In this case, a gauge
showing 100 disabled envs would be misleading, because it didn't take
100 events to disable them.

So the interesting metric here is how many times did you specifically
disable an environment in project settings, hence the counter.

## Assumptions and future plans

To make this easier on ourselves, we make the follow assumption: people
primarily disable envs **when creating a project**.

This means that there might be a few lagging indicators granting some
projects a smaller number of events than expected, but we may be able to
filter those out.

Further, if we had a metric for each project and its creation date, we
could correlate that with the metrics to answer the question "how many
envs do people disable in the first week? Two weeks? A month?". Or
worded differently: after creating a project, how long does it take for
people to configure environments?

Similarly, if we gather that data, it will also make filtering out the
number of events for projects created **after** the new changes have
been released much easier.

The good news: Because the project creation metric with dates is a
static aggregate, it can be applied at any time, even retroactively, to
see the effects.
2024-04-10 08:49:15 +02:00
.do
.floe
.github
.husky
.vscode
coverage
docker
docs/api/oas
examples
frontend fix: Do not show the MetricsChartTooltip InfoSummary when all projects (#6810) 2024-04-09 17:48:04 +03:00
perf
scripts Updated scripts to use owner (#5341) 2023-11-27 07:55:03 +00:00
src chore: Establish a baseline for the number of envs disabled per project (#6807) 2024-04-10 08:49:15 +02:00
test-migrations
website chore(deps): update dependency @tsconfig/docusaurus to v2.0.3 (#6780) 2024-04-04 17:46:09 +00:00
.dockerignore
.editorconfig
.gitignore chore: generate types (#5074) 2023-10-18 09:55:07 +03:00
.lycheeignore
.mergify.yml
.node-version chore(deps): update dependency node to v18.20.0 (#6749) 2024-04-02 01:35:32 +00:00
.nvmrc
app.json
biome.json
CHANGELOG.md
cliff.toml
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md Proposed version 2.1 2023-05-16 15:14:03 +02:00
CODEOWNERS
CONTRIBUTING.md docs: update min versions for node and postsgres (#6778) 2024-04-08 17:22:03 +02:00
docker-compose.yml chore: update DATABASE_URL to use the database created via POSTGRES_D… (#4836) 2023-09-28 13:07:03 +02:00
Dockerfile chore(deps): update node.js to v18.20.1 (#6801) 2024-04-08 19:51:36 +00:00
LICENSE
package.json chore(deps): update node.js to v18.20.1 (#6801) 2024-04-08 19:51:36 +00:00
README.md
renovate.json
tsconfig.json
USERS.md
yarn.lock chore(deps): update node.js to v18.20.1 (#6801) 2024-04-08 19:51:36 +00:00

What is Unleash?

Unleash is a powerful open source solution for feature management. It streamlines your development workflow, accelerates software delivery, and empowers teams to control how and when they roll out new features to end users. With Unleash, you can deploy code to production in smaller, more manageable releases at your own pace.

Feature flags in Unleash let you test your code with real production data, reducing the risk of negatively impacting your users' experience. It also enables your team to work on multiple features simultaneously without the need for separate feature branches.

Unleash is the most popular open source solution for feature flagging on GitHub. It supports 15 official client and server SDKs and over 15 community SDKs. You can even create your own SDK if you wish. Unleash is compatible with any language and framework.


Getting Started with Unleash

1. Setting Up Unleash

To get started with Unleash, you need git and docker installed on your machine.

Execute the following commands:

git clone git@github.com:Unleash/unleash.git
cd unleash
docker compose up -d

Then point your browser to localhost:4242 and log in using:

  • username: admin
  • password: unleash4all

If you'd rather run the source code in this repo directly via Node.js, see the step-by-step instructions to get up and running in the contributing guide.

2. Connect your SDK

Find your preferred SDK in our list of official SDKs and import it into your project. Follow the setup guides for your specific SDK.

If you use the docker compose file from the previous step, here's the configuration details you'll need to get going:

  • For front-end SDKs, use:
    • URL: http://localhost:4242/api/frontend/
    • clientKey: default:development.unleash-insecure-frontend-api-token
  • For server-side SDKs, use:
    • Unleash API URL: http://localhost:4242/api/
    • API token: default:development.unleash-insecure-api-token

If you use a different setup, your configuration details will most likely also be different.

Check a feature toggle

Checking the state of a feature toggle in your code is easy! The syntax will vary depending on your language, but all you need is a simple function call to check whether a toggle is available. Here's how it might look in Java:

if (unleash.isEnabled("AwesomeFeature")) {
  // do new, flashy thing
} else {
  // do old, boring stuff
}

Run Unleash on a service?

If you don't want to run Unleash locally, we also provide easy deployment setups for Heroku and Digital Ocean:

Deploy to Heroku Deploy to DigitalOcean

Configure and run Unleash anywhere

The above sections show you how to get up and running quickly and easily. When you're ready to start configuring and customizing Unleash for your own environment, check out the documentation for getting started with self-managed deployments, Unleash configuration options, or running Unleash locally via docker.


Online demo

Try out the Unleash online demo.

The Unleash online demo


Community and help — sharing is caring

We know that learning a new tool can be hard and time-consuming. We have a growing community that loves to help out. Please don't hesitate to reach out for help.

Join Unleash on Slack

💬 Join Unleash on Slack if you want ask open questions about Unleash, feature toggling or discuss these topics in general.

💻 Create a GitHub issue if you have found a bug or have ideas on how to improve Unleash.

📚 Visit the documentation for more in-depth descriptions, how-to guides, and more.

📖 Learn more about the principles of building and scaling feature flag solutions.


Contribute to Unleash

Unleash is the largest open source feature flag solution on GitHub. Building Unleash is a collaborative effort, and we owe a lot of gratitude to many smart and talented individuals. Building it together with the community ensures that we build a product that solves real problems for real people. We'd love to have your help too: Please feel free to open issues or provide pull requests.

Check out the CONTRIBUTING.md file for contribution guidelines and the Unleash developer guide for tips on environment setup, running the tests, and running Unleash from source.

Contributors

The Unleash contributors


Features our users love

Flexibility and adaptability

Security and performance

  • Privacy by design (GDPR and Schrems II). End-user data never leaves your application.
  • Audit logs
  • Enforce OWASP's secure headers via the strict HTTPS-only mode
  • Flexible hosting options: host it on premise or in the cloud (any cloud)
  • Scale the Unleash Proxy independently of the Unleash server to support any number of front-end clients without overloading your Unleash instance

Looking for more features?

If you're looking for one of the following features, please take a look at our Pro and Enterprise plans:


Architecture

Read more in the system overview section of the Unleash documentation.


Unleash SDKs

To connect your application to Unleash you'll need to use a client SDK for your programming language.

Official server-side SDKs:

Official front-end SDKs:

The front-end SDKs connects via the Unleash Proxy in order to ensure privacy, scalability and security.

Community SDKs:

If none of the official SDKs fit your need, there's also a number of community-developed SDKs where you might find an implementation for your preferred language (such as Elixir, Dart, Clojure, and more).


Users of Unleash

Unleash is trusted by thousands of companies all over the world.

Proud Open-Source users: (send us a message if you want to add your logo here)

The Unleash logo encircled by logos for Finn.no, nav (the Norwegian Labour and Welfare Administration), Budgets, Otovo, and Amedia. The encircling logos are all connected to the Unleash logo.


Migration guides

Unleash has evolved significantly over the past few years, and we know how hard it can be to keep software up to date. If you're using the current major version, upgrading shouldn't be an issue. If you're on a previous major version, check out the Unleash migration guide!


Want to know more about Unleash?

Videos and podcasts

Articles and more