yusinto / ld-redux

A library to integrate launch darkly with react redux
MIT License
34 stars 17 forks source link
darkly feature feature-flag feature-flags feature-toggle feature-toggles flags integration launch launch-darkly launchdarkly ld ld-redux ldclient react redux toggle

ld-redux

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A library to integrate launch darkly with react redux :clap:

Launch Darkly is a great tool for feature flagging and a/b testing. It has a fully capable client-side javascript sdk, so why this package?

If you use react redux and you want to store your feature flags as part of your redux state, this package will do that for you. It does the heavy lifting of:

Breaking changes in v3.1

ld-redux v3.1. is NOT* backwards compatible! The init method now accepts dispatch instead of store. Follow the quickstart example below to see this.

Installation

yarn add ld-redux

Quickstart

  1. In your client bootstrap, initialise the launch darkly client by invoking the init method:

    import createStore from '<your-project>/store';
    import ldRedux from 'ld-redux';
    
    // standard redux createStore
    const store = createStore();
    
    // do this once
    ldRedux.init({
      clientSideId: 'your-client-side-id',
      dispatch: store.dispatch,
    });
    
    render(
      <Provider store={store}>
        <Router routes={routes} history={browserHistory}/>
      </Provider>,
      document.getElementById('reactDiv')
    );
  2. Include ldReducer as one of the reducers in your app:

    import { combineReducers } from 'redux';
    import ldRedux from 'ld-redux';
    import reducers from '<your-project>/reducers';
    
    export default combineReducers({
      ...reducers,
      LD: ldRedux.reducer(), // Note: the LD key can be anything you want
    });
  3. Use the flag:

    import React, {Component} from 'react';
    import {connect} from 'react-redux';
    
    const mapStateToProps = (state) => {
      const {featureFlagKey} = state.LD; // Note: the key LD must be the same as step 2.
    
      return {
        featureFlagKey,
      };
    };
    
    @connect(mapStateToProps)
    export default class Home extends Component {
      render() {
        return (
          <div>
            {
              /* look ma, feature flag! */
              this.props.featureFlagKey ?
                <div>
                  <p>Welcome to feature toggling!</p>
                </div>
                :
                'nothing'
            }
          </div>
        );
      }
    }

API

init({clientSideId, dispatch, flags, useCamelCaseFlagKeys, user, subscribe, options})

The init method accepts an object with the above properties. clientSideId, dispatch are mandatory.

The flags property is optional. This is an object containing all the flags you want to use and subscribe to in your app. If you don't specify this, ld-redux will subscribe to all flags in your ld environment.

// standard redux createStore
const store = createStore();
const flags = { 'feature-flag-key': false }; // only subscribe to  this one flag

// do this once
ldRedux.init({
  clientSideId: 'your-client-side-id',
  dispatch: store.dispatch,
  flags,
});

The subscribe property is optional. This defaults to true which means by default you'll get automatic live updates of flag changes from the server. You can turn this off and manually subscribe to flag changes through the ldClient object if for some reason you don't want to get live updates.

The user property is optional. You can initialise the sdk with a custom user by specifying one. This must be an object containing at least a "key" property. If you don't specify a user object, ldRedux will create a default one that looks like this:

const defaultUser = {
  key: uuid.v4(), // random guid
  ip: ip.address(),
  custom: {
    browser: userAgentParser.getResult().browser.name,
    device
  }
};

For more info on the user object, see here.

The useCamelCaseFlagKeys property is optional. This defaults to true which means by default the flags that are stored in redux will be camel cased. If this property is false, no transformation on the flag name will be done.

The options property is optional. It can be used to pass in extra options such as Bootstrapping. For example:

ldRedux.init({
    clientSideId,
    dispatch,
    flags,
    options: {
      bootstrap: 'localStorage',
    }
});

reducer()

This is ld-redux's reducer. You must include this reducer in your app as per step 2 above with any key of your choice. You then use this key to retrieve your flags from redux's state.

window.ldClient

Internally the ldRedux.init method above initialises the js sdk and stores the resultant ldClient object in window.ldClient. You can use this object to access the official sdk methods directly. For example, you can do things like:

// track goals
window.ldClient.track('add to cart');

// change user context
window.ldClient.identify({key: 'someUserId'});

For more info on changing user context, see the official documentation.

isLDReady

You no longer need to deal with isLDReady. However if you need to, it is still available in the store. You can access it via the LD state like so:

const mapStateToProps = (state) => {
  const {isLDReady} = state.LD; // Note: the key LD must be the same as step 2.

  return {
    isLDReady,
  };
};

This is useful to solve "flickering" issues above the fold on your front page caused by a flag transitioning from a default false value to true.

Example

Check the example for a fully working spa with react, redux and react-router. Remember to enter your client side sdk in the client bootstrap file before running the example!