[!CAUTION]
The OpenFeature CLI is experimental!
Feel free to give it a shot and provide feedback, but expect breaking changes.
OpenFeature is an open specification that provides a vendor-agnostic, community-driven API for feature flagging that works with your favorite feature flag management tool or in-house solution.
Overview
The OpenFeature CLI is a command-line tool designed to improve the developer experience when working with feature flags.
It helps developers manage feature flags consistently across different environments and programming languages by providing powerful utilities for code generation, flag validation, and more.
The CLI bridges the gap between feature flag management systems and your application code by generating strongly typed flag accessors from a flag manifest. This approach provides:
Type Safety: Generate strongly-typed flag accessors for your preferred language
Developer Experience: Reduce errors and improve IDE autocomplete support
Language Support: Generate code for TypeScript, JavaScript, React, Go, C#, and more
Installation
via curl
The OpenFeature CLI can be installed using a shell command.
This method is suitable for most Unix-like operating systems.
curl -fsSL https://openfeature.dev/scripts/install_cli.sh | sh
You can run the CLI in a Docker container using the following command:
docker run -it -v $(pwd):/local -w /local ghcr.io/open-feature/cli:latest
via Go
If you have Go >= 1.23 installed, you can install the CLI using the following command:
go install github.com/open-feature/cli/cmd/openfeature@latest
via pre-built binaries
Download the appropriate pre-built binary from the releases page.
Quick Start
Create a flag manifest file in your project root:
cat > flags.json << EOL
{
"$schema": "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/open-feature/cli/refs/heads/main/schema/v0/flag-manifest.json",
"flags": {
"enableMagicButton": {
"flagType": "boolean",
"defaultValue": false,
"description": "Activates a special button that enhances user interaction with magical, intuitive functionalities."
}
}
}
EOL
[!NOTE]
This is for demonstration purposes only.
In a real-world scenario, you would typically want to fetch this file from a remote flag management service.
See here, more details.
Congratulations!
You have successfully generated your first strongly typed flag accessors.
You can now use the generated code in your application to access the feature flags.
This is just scratching the surface of what the OpenFeature CLI can do.
For more advanced usage, read on!
Commands
The OpenFeature CLI provides the following commands:
init
Initialize a new flag manifest in your project.
openfeature init
This command creates a flags.json file in your current directory with the proper schema reference.
You can customize the manifest path using configuration options.
Generate strongly typed flag accessors for your project.
# List available languages
openfeature generate
# Generate for a specific language
openfeature generate typescript
# With custom output directory
openfeature generate typescript --output ./src/flags
The flag manifest is a JSON file that defines your feature flags and their properties.
It serves as the source of truth for your feature flags and is used by the CLI to generate strongly typed accessors.
The manifest file should be named flags.json and placed in the root of your project.
Flag Manifest Structure
The flag manifest file should follow the JSON schema with the following properties:
$schema - The URL of the JSON schema for validation
flags - An object containing the feature flags
flagKey - A unique key for the flag
description - A description of what the flag does
type - The type of the flag (boolean, string, number, object)
defaultValue - The default value of the flag
Example Flag Manifest
{
"$schema": "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/open-feature/cli/refs/heads/main/schema/v0/flag-manifest.json",
"flags": {
"uniqueFlagKey": {
"description": "Description of what this flag does",
"type": "boolean|string|number|object",
"defaultValue": "default-value",
}
}
}
Configuration
The OpenFeature CLI uses an optional configuration file to override default settings and customize behavior.
This file can be in JSON or YAML format and should be named either .openfeature.json or .openfeature.yaml.
Configuration File Structure
# Example .openfeature.yaml
manifest: "flags/manifest.json" # Overrides the default manifest path
generate:
output: "src/flags" # Overrides the default output directory
# Any language-specific options can be specified here
# For example, for React:
react:
output: "src/flags/react" # Overrides the default React output directory
# For Go:
go:
package: "github.com/myorg/myrepo/flags" # Overrides the default Go package name
output: "src/flags/go" # Overrides the default Go output directory
Configuration Priority
The CLI uses a layered approach to configuration, allowing you to override settings at different levels.
The configuration is applied in the following order:
flowchart LR
default("Default Config")
config("Config File")
args("Command Line Args")
default --> config
config --> args