This package allows for easy and efficient feature flag managment in Laravel. Features include:
- Definition of feature toggles per environment (e.g. local, dev, stage, production).
- Managable way to keep flags in source control without becomming overwhelming.
- Creation of a default setting per feature that will be used if the environment specific setting is not found.
- Ability to easily request the status of a feature and automatically get the correct setting based on the current environment the application is running on.
- Ability to tag features as eligable for Javascript export.
- A helper method to easily export Javascript eligable feature flags and pass them along to your front-end framework.
Add the package to your project:
composer require kirschbaum/laravel-feature-flag
Add the following service provider:
// config/app.php
'providers' => [
...
Kirschbaum\LaravelFeatureFlag\ServiceProvider::class,
...
];
This package also comes with a facade, making it easy to retrieve the correct flags for the environment you are in:
// config/app.php
'aliases' => [
...
'FeatureFlag' => Kirschbaum\LaravelFeatureFlag\Facades\FeatureFlag::class,
...
]
Publish the config file using the arisan command:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Kirschbaum\LaravelFeatureFlag\ServiceProvider"
The configuration looks like this:
<?php
return [
'feature-1' => [
'environments' => [
'default' => false,
'local' => true,
'dev' => false,
'stage' => false
],
'js_export' => true,
],
'feature-2' => [
'environments' => [
'default' => false,
'production' => true,
],
'js_export' => true,
],
];
General PHP use:
if(FeatureFlag::isEnabled('feature-1'))
{
// Only do stuff if feature is enabled.
}
If you need to pass your feature flags to a front-end JS framework like Angular or Vue.js, you can do so by using the getJavascriptFlags() method:
$js->put(
[
'pusher_public_key' => env('PUSHER_PUBLIC'),
'feature_flags' => FeatureFlag::getJavascriptFlags()
]
);
Because not all feature flags should be passed to the front-end, only features with the setting 'js_export = true' will be included. The end result is a simple array of features with the correct flags for the environment:
array:2 [▼
"feature-1" => true
"feature-2" => false
]