Config
This library can be used for managing server- and client-side configs.
All configs are stored in .json
files (see examples in sample-config
) in a config
folder in your working directory. This path can be overridden via the CALYPSO_CONFIG_PATH
environment variable.
At boot-up time, the server decides which config file to use based on the NODE_ENV
environment variable. The default value is development
. For values shared across environments, add them to the _shared.json
file. Local-only values can be added via a {environment}.local.json
file (e.g. development.local.json
).
The entire configuration is available on the server-side and certain keys can be exposed to the client.
Server-side Usage
Config values can be retrieved by invoking the config()
exported function with the desired key name:
import config from '@automattic/calypso-config';
console.log( config( 'redirect_uri' ) );
Client-side Usage
To access config
values on the client-side, add the property name to the client.json
file, which is a whitelist of config
properties that will be exposed to the client.
A global configData
object must also be output during the initial render. Here's an example using webpack and the interpolate
In your webpack build config:
const HtmlWebpackPlugin = require( 'html-webpack-plugin' );
const InterpolateHtmlPlugin = require( 'react-dev-utils/InterpolateHtmlPlugin' );
const clientData = require( '@automattic/calypso-config' ).clientData;
// ...
const interpolateHtmlData = Object.assign( {}, {
CALYPSO_CONFIG_DATA_AS_JSON: JSON.stringify( clientData ),
} );
// ...
module.exports = {
// ...
plugins: [
new InterpolateHtmlPlugin( interpolateHtmlData ),
new HtmlWebpackPlugin( {
inject: true,
template: '/path/to/index.html',
} ),
],
// ...
}
Then, in your index.html
template:
<html>
<head>
...
<script>var configData = %CALYPSO_CONFIG_DATA_AS_JSON%;</script>
...
</head>
</html>
And finally, to access the configs:
import config from '@automattic/calypso-config/client';
console.log( config( 'redirect_uri' ) );
console.log( config.isEnabled( 'secret-features' ) );
Feature Flags
The config files contain a features object that can be used to determine whether to enable a feature for certain environments. This allows us to merge in-progress features without launching them to production. The config module adds a method to detect this: config.isEnabled()
. Please make sure to add new feature flags alphabetically so they are easy to find.
{
"features": {
"manage/posts": true,
"reader": true
}
}
Testing Feature Flags Locally
If you want to temporarily enable/disable some feature flags for a given build, you can do so by setting the ENABLE_FEATURES
and/or DISABLE_FEATURES
environment variables. Set them to a comma separated list of features you want to enable/disable, respectively:
ENABLE_FEATURES=manage/plugins/compatibility-warning DISABLE_FEATURES=code-splitting,reader npm start
Testing Feature Flags via URLs
If you want to temporarily enable/disable some feature flags you can add a ?flags=
query parameter to the URL.
Note that this only works on development, staging, and calypso.live, not in production (this functionality is not suitable for public use on *.wordpress.com
).
-
?flags=foo
enables feature foo. -
?flags=-bar
disables feature bar. -
?flags=foo,-bar
enables feature foo and disables feature bar.
E.g. http://calypso.localhost:3000/?flags=manage/plugins/compatibility-warning