Go
Eppo's open source Go SDK can be used for both feature flagging and experiment assignment:
1. Install the SDK
In your go.mod
, add the SDK package as a dependency:
require (
github.com/Eppo-exp/golang-sdk/v2
)
Or you can install the SDK from the command line with:
go get github.com/Eppo-exp/golang-sdk/v2
2. Initialize the SDK
Initialize the SDK with an API key, which can be generated in the Eppo interface. Initialization should happen when your application starts up to generate a singleton client instance, once per application lifecycle:
import (
"github.com/Eppo-exp/golang-sdk/v2/eppoclient"
)
var eppoClient = &eppoclient.EppoClient{}
func main() {
assignmentLogger := NewExampleAssignmentLogger()
eppoClient = eppoclient.InitClient(eppoclient.Config{
ApiKey: "<your_api_key>",
AssignmentLogger: assignmentLogger,
})
}
After initialization, the SDK begins polling Eppo’s API at regular intervals to retrieve the most recent experiment configurations such as variation values and traffic allocation. The SDK stores these configurations in memory so that assignments thereafter are effectively instant. If you are using the SDK for experiment assignments, make sure to pass in an assignment logging callback (see section below).
Define an assignment logger (experiment assignment only)
If you are using the Eppo SDK for experiment assignment (i.e randomization), pass in a callback logging function to the InitClient
function on SDK initialization. The SDK invokes the callback to capture assignment data whenever a variation is assigned.
The code below illustrates an example implementation of a logging callback using Segment. You could also use your own logging system, the only requirement is that the SDK receives a LogAssignment
function. Here we define an implementation of the Eppo IAssignmentLogger
interface containing a single function named LogAssignment
:
import (
"github.com/Eppo-exp/golang-sdk/v2/eppoclient"
"gopkg.in/segmentio/analytics-go.v3"
)
func main() {
// Connect to Segment (or your own event-tracking system)
client := analytics.New("YOUR_WRITE_KEY")
defer client.Close()
type ExampleAssignmentLogger struct {
}
func NewExampleAssignmentLogger() *ExampleAssignmentLogger {
return &ExampleAssignmentLogger{}
}
func (al *ExampleAssignmentLogger) LogAssignment(event eppoclient.AssignmentEvent) {
client.Enqueue(analytics.Track{
UserId: event.Subject,
Event: "Eppo Randomization Event",
Properties: event
})
}
}
The SDK will invoke the LogAssignment
function with an event
object that contains the following fields:
Field | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
experiment (string) | An Eppo experiment key | "recommendation_algo" |
subject (string) | An identifier of the subject or user assigned to the experiment variation | UUID |
variation (string) | The experiment variation the subject was assigned to | "control" |
timestamp (string) | The time when the subject was assigned to the variation | 2021-06-22T17:35:12.000Z |
subjectAttributes (map) | A free-form map of metadata about the subject. These attributes are only logged if passed to the SDK assignment function | { "country": "US" } |
More examples of logging (with Segment, Rudderstack, mParticle, and Snowplow) can be found in the event logging page.
3. Assign variations
Assigning users to flags or experiments with a single getStringAssignment
function:
import (
"github.com/Eppo-exp/golang-sdk/v2/eppoclient"
)
var eppoClient = &eppoclient.EppoClient{} // in global scope
variation := eppoClient.getStringAssignment("<SUBJECT-KEY>", "<FLAG-OR-EXPERIMENT-KEY>", <TARGETING_ATTRIBUTES>);
The getStringAssignment
function takes two required and one optional input to assign a variation:
subjectKey
- The entity ID that is being experimented on, typically represented by a uuid.flagOrExperimentKey
- This key is available on the detail page for both flags and experiments.targetingAttributes
- An optional map of metadata about the subject used for targeting. If you create rules based on attributes on a flag/experiment, those attributes should be passed in on every assignment call.
Typed assignments
Additional functions are available:
getBoolAssignment(...)
getNumericAssignment(...)
Handling the empty assignment
We recommend always handling the empty assignment case, when the SDK returns ""
. Here are some examples illustrating when the SDK returns ""
:
The Traffic Exposure setting on experiments/allocations determines the percentage of subjects the SDK will assign to that experiment/allocation. For example, if Traffic Exposure is 25%, the SDK will assign a variation for 25% of subjects and
""
for the remaining 75% (unless the subject is part of an allow list).If you are using Eppo for experiment assignments, you must start the experiment in the user interface before
getStringAssignment
returns variations. It will return""
if the experiment is not running, both before and after.
- If
getStringAssignment
is invoked before the SDK has finished initializing, the SDK may not have access to the most recent experiment configurations. In this case, the SDK will assign a variation based on any previously downloaded experiment configurations stored in local storage, or return""
if no configurations have been downloaded.
It may take up to 10 seconds for changes to Eppo experiments to be reflected by the SDK assignments.