⚠️ Caution: this repository is a work-in-progress.⚠️
Django OpenFeature is a set of utilities to use OpenFeature in your Django applications.
- Django Debug Toolbar integration
- Templatetags for flag evaluation
- Automatic evaluation context from request
- Flag override mechanism for testing
pip install django-openfeature
Add django_openfeature
to your INSTALLED_APPS
setting.
INSTALLED_APPS = [
# ...
'django_openfeature',
# ...
]
django-openfeature provides a set of helpers to evaluate a feature flag:
from django_openfeature import feature
feature(request, 'my_feature', False)
The feature
function will infer the type of the feature flag based on the default value provided
and call the appropriate resolver method.
It will also create an evaluation context from the request. This context can be configured via the
OPENFEATURE
setting (described below).
Inside templates, you can use the feature
template tag to evaluate feature flags. Remember to load the
openfeature
library first.
{% load openfeature %}
{% feature 'my_feature' False as my_feature_enabled %}
{% if my_feature_enabed %}
<p>Feature is enabled</p>
{% else %}
<p>Feature is disabled</p>
{% endif %}
As an alternative to evaluating feature flags to a variable you can use the iffeature
template tag.
It will output the contents of the block if the boolean flag resolves to True. It supports a single
{% else %}
clause that will be displayed otherwise.
{% load openfeature %}
{% iffeature 'my_feature' %}
<p>Feature is enabled</p>
{% else %}
<p>Feature is disabled</p>
{% endif %}
OPENFEATURE = {
"CONTEXT_EVALUATOR": "myapp.utils.get_evaluation_context",
}
The CONTEXT_EVALUATOR
setting should point to a function that receives a request and returns an OpenFeature EvaluationContext as defined in the openfeature-sdk
package.
Alternatively, the context evaluator can point to a class that produces callable instances with the same signature. The default context evaluator is django_openfeature.context.OpenFeatureContext
and looks roughly like this:
class OpenFeatureContext:
targeting_key = "id"
targeting_key_anonymous = "unknown"
user_attributes = ("username", "email")
def get_context(self, request):
user = request.user
if not user or user.is_anonymous:
return EvaluationContext(self.targeting_key_anonymous)
return self.get_user_context(user)
def get_user_context(self, user):
attributes = {}
for attr in self.user_attributes:
attributes[attr] = getattr(user, attr)
targeting_key = str(getattr(user, self.targeting_key))
return EvaluationContext(targeting_key, attributes)
def __call__(self, request):
return self.get_context(request)
Use this class as base to declaratively define your own context evaluator. For example, to change the targeting key to the user's username:
from django_openfeature.context import OpenFeatureContext
class MyOpenFeatureContext(OpenFeatureContext):
targeting_key = "username"
Then in your settings:
OPENFEATURE = {
"CONTEXT_EVALUATOR": "myapp.utils.MyOpenFeatureContext",
}
django-openfeature comes with a Feature Flags panel for the Django Debug Toolbar. You can activate it by adding openfeature.debug_toolbar.panels.FeatureFlagsPanel
to your DEBUG_TOOLBAR_PANELS
setting.
DEBUG_TOOLBAR_PANELS = [
# ...
'openfeature.debug_toolbar.panels.FeatureFlagsPanel',
# ...
]
The Feature Flags panel will show you the feature flag evaluations for the current request, the request evaluation context and the configured providers for those evaluations.
django-openfeature provides a set of utilities to help you test your feature flags. To use them, you must set the provider to an instance of django_openfeature.provider.DjangoTestProvider
in your test settings.
# in your test settings
import openfeature.api
from django_openfeature.provider import DjangoTestProvider
openfeature.api.set_provider(DjangoTestProvider())
override_feature
is a function decorator that allows you to override the value of a feature flag for the duration of a test.
from django_openfeature.test import override_feature
@override_feature('my_feature', True)
def test_my_feature_enabled(self):
# ...
Decorators can be stacked to override multiple feature flags.
You can also use override_feature
as a context manager.
from django_openfeature.test import override_feature
def test_my_feature_enabled(self):
with override_feature('my_feature', True):
# ...
- Add support for OpenFeature domains (requires SDK release)
MIT License