UI for the Flipper gem.
Viewing list of features:
Viewing an individual feature:
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'flipper-ui'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install flipper-ui
Given that you've already initialized Flipper
as per the flipper readme, you can mount Flipper::UI
to a route of your choice:
# config/routes.rb
YourRailsApp::Application.routes.draw do
mount Flipper::UI.app(Flipper) => '/flipper'
end
If you'd like to lazy load flipper, you can instead pass a block to initialize it:
# config/routes.rb
YourRailsApp::Application.routes.draw do
flipper_block = lambda {
# some flipper initialization here, for example:
adapter = Flipper::Adapters::Memory.new
Flipper.new(adapter)
}
mount Flipper::UI.app(flipper_block) => '/flipper'
end
You almost certainly want to limit access when using Flipper::UI in production.
The Flipper::UI.app
method yields a builder instance prior to any predefined middleware. You can insert the Rack::Auth::Basic
middleware, that'll prompt for a username and password when visiting the defined (i.e., /flipper
) route.
# config/routes.rb
flipper_app = Flipper::UI.app(Flipper.instance) do |builder|
builder.use Rack::Auth::Basic do |username, password|
# Verify credentials
end
end
mount flipper_app, at: '/flipper'
It is possible to use routes constraints to limit access to routes:
# config/routes.rb
flipper_constraint = lambda { |request| request.remote_ip == '127.0.0.1' }
constraints flipper_constraint do
mount Flipper::UI.app(flipper) => '/flipper'
end
Another example is to use the current_user
when using a gem-based authentication system (i.e., warden or devise):
# initializers/admin_access.rb
class CanAccessFlipperUI
def self.matches?(request)
current_user = request.env['warden'].user
current_user.present? && current_user.respond_to?(:admin?) && current_user.admin?
end
end
# config/routes.rb
constraints CanAccessFlipperUI do
mount Flipper::UI.app(Flipper) => '/flipper'
end
Minimal example for Rack:
# config.ru
require 'flipper/ui'
adapter = Flipper::Adapters::Memory.new
flipper = Flipper.new(adapter)
run Flipper::UI.app(flipper) { |builder|
builder.use Rack::Session::Cookie, secret: "something long and random"
}
The key is that you need to have sessions setup. Rails does this for you, so this step isn't necessary, but for standalone rack, you'll need it. Without sessions setup, you will receive a Runtime error like:
RuntimeError: you need to set up a session middleware *before* Rack::Protection::RemoteToken.
See examples/ui/basic.ru for a more full example
Flipper UI can be customized via configure
, which yields a configuration instance.
We can associate a description
for each feature
by providing a descriptions source:
Flipper::UI.configure do |config|
config.descriptions_source = ->(keys) do
# descriptions loaded from YAML file or database (postgres, mysql, etc)
# return has to be hash of {String key => String description}
end
# Defaults to false. Set to true to show feature descriptions on the list
# page as well as the view page.
# config.show_feature_description_in_list = true
end
Descriptions show up in the UI like so:
Flipper UI can display a banner across the top of the page. The banner_text
and banner_class
can be configured by using the Flipper::UI.configure
block as seen below.
Flipper::UI.configure do |config|
config.banner_text = 'Production Environment'
config.banner_class = 'danger'
end
By default the environment
is set to an empty string so no banner will show. If you wish to customize the look of the banner, you can set banner_class
to one of the bootstrap color classes: primary
, secondary
, success
, danger
, warning
, info
, light
, or dark
. The default banner_class
is danger
.
The above configuration results in:
By default, Flipper UI displays a videoclip when there are no flags. The fun
mode can be configured by using the Flipper::UI.configure
block as seen below.
Flipper::UI.configure do |config|
config.fun = false
end
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Fire up the app (
script/server
) - Run the tests
bundle exec rake
- Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Added some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request