<!-- Thanks for creating a PR! To make it easier for reviewers and everyone else to understand what your changes relate to, please add some relevant content to the headings below. Feel free to ignore or delete sections that you don't think are relevant. Thank you! ❤️ --> ## About the changes <!-- Describe the changes introduced. What are they and why are they being introduced? Feel free to also add screenshots or steps to view the changes if they're visual. --> - update anchor link descriptions - fix ordered lists across files - formatting updates <!-- Does it close an issue? Multiple? --> Closes # <!-- (For internal contributors): Does it relate to an issue on public roadmap? --> <!-- Relates to [roadmap](https://github.com/orgs/Unleash/projects/10) item: # --> ### Important files <!-- PRs can contain a lot of changes, but not all changes are equally important. Where should a reviewer start looking to get an overview of the changes? Are any files particularly important? --> ## Discussion points <!-- Anything about the PR you'd like to discuss before it gets merged? Got any questions or doubts? -->
8.3 KiB
title | description | slug |
---|---|---|
How to Implement Feature Flags in Ruby | How to use Unleash feature flags with Ruby. | /feature-flag-tutorials/ruby |
Hello! In this tutorial we’ll show you how to add feature flags to your Ruby app , using Unleash and the official Unleash Ruby SDK. With Unleash, an open-source feature flag service, you can use our tooling to add feature flags to your application and release new features faster.
In a classic tutorial fashion, we’ll get a list of planets from the Star Wars API, with just Ruby (i.e., not Ruby on Rails). We’ll use feature flags to decide whether to call the REST or the GraphQL version of the API.
- Best practices for backend apps with Unleash
- Install a local feature flag provider
- Grab a list of planets from the Star Wars API
- Add the GraphQL endpoint
- Add Unleash to your Ruby app
- Verify the feature flag experience
Prerequisites
For this tutorial, you’ll need the following:
- Ruby v3+
- Git
- Docker and Docker Compose
- (Optional) Bundler, to manage your gemfile
The Unleash Server is a Feature Flag Control Service, which manages your feature flags and lets you retrieve flag data. Unleash has a UI for creating and managing projects and feature flags. There are also API commands available to perform the same actions straight from your CLI or server-side app.
1. Best practices for backend apps with Unleash
Ruby is a backend language, so there are special considerations to plan around when implementing feature flags.
Most importantly, you must:
- Limit feature flag payloads for scalability, security, and efficiency
- Use graceful degradation where possible to improve the resiliency of your architecture.
For a complete list of architectural guidelines, including caching strategies, see our best practices for building and scaling feature flag systems.
2. Install a local feature flag provider
In this section, we’ll install Unleash, run the instance locally, log in, and create a feature flag. If you prefer, you can use other tools instead of Unleash, but you’ll need to update the code accordingly. The basic steps will probably be the same.
Use Git to clone the Unleash repository and Docker to build and run it. Open a terminal window and run the following commands:
git clone https://github.com/unleash/unleash.git
cd unleash
docker compose up -d
You will now have Unleash installed onto your machine and running in the background. You can access this instance in your web browser at http://localhost:4242.
Log in to the platform using these credentials:
Username: admin
Password: unleash4all
Click the ‘New feature flag’ button to create a new feature flag.
Call it graphql-api
and enable it in the development
environment.
Everything’s now setup on the Unleash side. Let’s go to the code now.
3. Grab a list of planets from the Star Wars API
We’ll use httpx
to make our http requests and the Unleash SDK to connect to your local Unleash instance and retrieve your feature flag.
Open a new tab in your terminal, and create a new folder (NOT in the unleash folder).
mkdir unleash-ruby
Then, create a file named main.rb
.
Install dependencies
gem install httpx unleash
Then, let’s make sure our setup is working. Let’s make a call to the REST API to retrieve a list of planets and their population numbers.
require 'httpx'
require 'json'
require 'unleash'
# Call the REST API
response = HTTPX.get('https://swapi.dev/api/planets/')
planets = JSON.parse(response.body)['results'].map do |planet|
{ name: planet['name'], population: planet['population'] }
end
puts "There are #{planets.length} planets"
Run the code:
ruby main.rb
You should see There are 10 planets
in your terminal.
4. Add the GraphQL endpoint
The point of this tutorial is to mimic a real-world scenario where, based on a boolean feature flag, you would migrate from a REST API to GraphQL. So far, we’ve just used REST. Now, let’s add the GraphQL version. The GraphQL endpoint is https://swapi-graphql.netlify.app/.netlify/functions/index
, which looks like someone’s weekend project but is an official endpoint from Apollo.
Let’s create a static feature flag, for now, just to test that we can call both versions successfully.
require 'httpx'
require 'json'
require 'unleash'
# Define a static feature flag
is_graphql = true
if is_graphql
# Call the GraphQL API
query = {
query: '
{
allPlanets {
planets {
population
name
}
}
}
'
}
response = HTTPX.post('https://swapi-graphql.netlify.app/.netlify/functions/index', body: query.to_json,
headers: { 'Content-Type' => 'application/json' })
planets = JSON.parse(response.body)['data']['allPlanets']['planets']
puts "Hello GraphQL"
else
# Call the REST API
response = HTTPX.get('https://swapi.dev/api/planets/')
planets = JSON.parse(response.body)['results'].map do |planet|
{ name: planet['name'], population: planet['population'] }
end
end
puts "There are #{planets.length} planets"
Run the code again:
ruby main.rb
You should see Hello GraphQL
, followed by There are 60 planets
in your terminal.
Yes, there are more planets with the GraphQL API, this is because the REST API is paginated.
5. Add Unleash to your Ruby app
Now, let’s connect our project to Unleash so that you can toggle that feature flag at runtime. If you wanted to, you could also do a gradual rollout, use it for a/b testing, etc.
You’ll need 2 things:
- The URL of your Unleash instance’s API. So far it’s
[http://localhost:4242/api/](http://localhost:4242/api/)
for your local version. You’ll want to replace it with your remote instance. - The API token we created on our Unleash instance, feel free to create another one if you can’t find it.
With these 2, you can initialize your Unleash client as follows:
@unleash = Unleash::Client.new(app_name: 'starwars_ruby', url: 'http://localhost:4242/api/', custom_http_headers: {
'Authorization': 'YOUR_API_KEY'
})
You can check our API token and client keys documentation for more specifics.
Now, let’s add our client to our project, grab the feature flag from Unleash, and update our conditional statement. Don't forget to also update the config with your API key.
require 'httpx'
require 'json'
require 'unleash'
+ @unleash = Unleash::Client.new(app_name: 'starwars_ruby', url: 'http://localhost:4242/api/', custom_http_headers: {
+ 'Authorization': 'YOUR_API_KEY'
+ })
+ if @unleash.is_enabled?("graphql")
- # Define a static feature flag
- is_graphql = true
- if is_graphql
# Call the GraphQL API
# ... rest of the code
See additional use cases in our Server-Side SDK with Ruby documentation.
6. Verify the toggle experience
Now that we’ve connected our project to Unleash and grabbed our feature flag, we can verify that if you disable that flag in your development environment, you stop seeing the Hello GraphQL
message and only get 10 planets.
Note: An update to a feature flag may take 30 seconds to propagate.
Conclusion
All done! Now you know how to add feature flags with Unleash in Ruby. You’ve learned how to:
- Toggle between a REST and a GraphQL endpoint based on a feature flag
- Install Unleash and create/enable a feature flag
- Grab the value of a feature flag with the Ruby SDK
Thank you