This Bundle provides the integration with our toggle library. It provides the services and configuration you need to implement feature toggles in your application.
Read the our blog post series about this repository at:
- http://labs.qandidate.com/blog/2014/08/18/a-new-feature-toggling-library-for-php/
- http://labs.qandidate.com/blog/2014/08/19/open-sourcing-our-feature-toggle-api-and-ui/
The easiest way to install and configure the QandidateToggleBundle with Symfony is by using Symfony Flex.
Make sure you have Symfony Flex installed:
$ composer require symfony/flex ^1.0
$ composer config extra.symfony.allow-contrib true
Install the bundle:
$ composer require qandidate/toggle-bundle ^1.0
Symfony Flex will automatically register and configure the bundle.
Add the bundle to your composer.json
$ composer require qandidate/toggle-bundle ^1.0
Add the bundle to your Kernel:
$bundles = array(
// ..
new Symfony\Bundle\SecurityBundle\SecurityBundle(),
new Symfony\Bundle\TwigBundle\TwigBundle(),
new Qandidate\Bundle\ToggleBundle\QandidateToggleBundle(),
);
qandidate_toggle:
persistence: in_memory|redis|factory|config
context_factory: null|your.context_factory.service.id
redis_namespace: toggle_%kernel.environment% # default, only required when persistence = redis
redis_client: null|your.redis_client.service.id # only required when persistence = redis
collection_factory: # only required when persistence = factory
service_id: your.collection_factory.service.id
method: create
qandidate_toggle:
persistence: config
toggles:
always-active-feature:
name: always-active-feature
status: always-active
inactive-feature:
name: inactive-feature
status: inactive
conditions:
conditionally-active:
name: conditionally-active
status: conditionally-active
conditions:
- name: operator-condition
key: user_id
operator:
name: greater-than
value: 42
Usage can vary on your application. This example uses the supplied
UserContextFactory
, but you probably need to create your own factory.
<!-- services.xml -->
<service id="acme.controller" class="Acme\Controller">
<argument type="service" id="qandidate.toggle.manager" />
<argument type="service" id="qandidate.toggle.user_context_factory" />
</service>
// Acme\Controller
public function __construct(
/* ArticleRepository, Templating, ..*/
ToggleManager $manager,
ContextFactory $contextFactory
) {
// ..
$this->manager = $manager;
$this->context = $contextFactory->createContext();
}
// ..
public function articleAction(Request $request)
{
$this->article = $this->repository->findBySlug($request->request->get('slug'));
return $this->templating->render('article.html.twig', array(
'article' => $article,
'enableComments' => $this->manager->active('comments', $this->context),
));
}
You can find a working example using the Symfony MicroKernelTrait in the Resources/doc/example directory.
You can also use the @Toggle
annotation on a controller. When the toggle isn't active a 404 exception is thrown.
use Qandidate\Bundle\ToggleBundle\Annotations\Toggle;
/**
* @Toggle("cool-feature")
*/
class FooController
{
/**
* @Toggle("another-cool-feature")
*/
public function barAction()
{
}
public function bazAction()
{
}
}
If you use Twig you can also use the function:
{% if feature_is_active('comments') %}
{# Awesome comments #}
{% endif %}
Or the Twig test:
{% if 'comments' is active feature %}
{# Awesome comments #}
{% endif %}
Both are registered in the ToggleTwigExtension.
With the data collector you have a overview about all toggles. In the toolbar you see all conditions and the current status.
In the panel you have two lists:
- You can see all keys and there current values.
- Then you can see all configured toggles, there conditions and if they are active.
To run PHPUnit tests:
$ ./vendor/bin/phpunit
MIT, see LICENSE.