This repository houses the JavaScript SDK for use with Optimizely Feature Experimentation and Optimizely Full Stack (legacy).
Optimizely Feature Experimentation is an A/B testing and feature management tool for product development teams that enables you to experiment at every step. Using Optimizely Feature Experimentation allows for every feature on your roadmap to be an opportunity to discover hidden insights. Learn more at Optimizely.com, or see the developer documentation.
Optimizely Rollouts is free feature flags for development teams. You can easily roll out and roll back features in any application without code deploys, mitigating risk for every feature on your roadmap.
For Browser applications, refer to the JavaScript SDK's developer documentation for detailed instructions on getting started with using the SDK within client-side applications.
For Node.js applications, refer to the JavaScript (Node) variant of the developer documentation.
For Edge Functions, we provide starter kits that utilize the Optimizely JavaScript SDK for the following platforms:
Note: We recommend using the Lite version of the sdk for edge platforms. These starter kits also use the Lite variant of the JavaScript SDK which excludes the datafile manager and event processor packages.
Ensure the SDK supports all of the platforms you're targeting. In particular, the SDK targets modern ES5-compliant JavaScript environment. We officially support:
- Node.js >= 16.0.0. By extension, environments like AWS Lambda, Google Cloud Functions, and Auth0 Webtasks are supported as well. Older Node.js releases likely work too (try
npm test
to validate for yourself), but are not formally supported. - Modern Web Browsers, such as Microsoft Edge 84+, Firefox 91+, Safari 13+, and Chrome 102+, Opera 76+
In addition, other environments are likely compatible but are not formally supported including:
- Progressive Web Apps, WebViews, and hybrid mobile apps like those built with React Native and Apache Cordova.
- Cloudflare Workers and Fly, both of which are powered by recent releases of V8.
- Anywhere else you can think of that might embed a JavaScript engine. The sky is the limit; experiment everywhere! 🚀
-
JavaScript (Browser): Modern web browser that is ES5-compliant.
-
JavaScript (Node): Node 16.0.0+
Once you've validated that the SDK supports the platforms you're targeting, fetch the package from NPM:
Using npm
:
npm install --save @optimizely/optimizely-sdk
Using yarn
:
yarn add @optimizely/optimizely-sdk
Using pnpm
:
pnpm add @optimizely/optimizely-sdk
Using deno
(no installation required):
import optimizely from "npm:@optimizely/optimizely-sdk"
See the Optimizely Feature Experimentation developer documentation for JavaScript (Browser) to learn how to set up your first JavaScript project and use the SDK for client-side applications.
The package has different entry points for different environments. The browser entry point is an ES module, which can be used with an appropriate bundler like Webpack or Rollup. Additionally, for ease of use during initial evaluations you can include a standalone umd bundle of the SDK in your web page by fetching it from unpkg:
<script src="https://unpkg.com/@optimizely/optimizely-sdk/dist/optimizely.browser.umd.min.js"></script>
<!-- You can also use the unminified version if necessary -->
<script src="https://unpkg.com/@optimizely/optimizely-sdk/dist/optimizely.browser.umd.js"></script>
When evaluated, that bundle assigns the SDK's exports to window.optimizelySdk
. If you wish to use the asset locally (for example, if unpkg is down), you can find it in your local copy of the package at dist/optimizely.browser.umd.min.js. We do not recommend using this method in production settings as it introduces a third-party performance dependency.
As window.optimizelySdk
should be a global variable at this point, you can continue to use it like so:
const optimizelyClient = window.optimizelySdk.createInstance({
sdkKey: '<YOUR_SDK_KEY>',
// datafile: window.optimizelyDatafile,
// etc.
});
optimizelyClient.onReady().then(({ success, reason }) => {
if (success) {
// Create the Optimizely user context, make decisions, and more here!
}
});
Regarding EventDispatcher
s: In Node.js and browser environments, the default EventDispatcher
is powered by the http/s
modules and by XMLHttpRequest
, respectively. In all other environments, you must supply your own EventDispatcher
.
See the Optimizely Feature Experimentation developer documentation for JavaScript (Node) to learn how to set up your first JavaScript project and use the SDK for server-side applications.
The package has different entry points for different environments. The node entry point is CommonJS module.
const optimizelySdk = require('@optimizely/optimizely-sdk');
const optimizelyClient = optimizelySdk.createInstance({
sdkKey: '<YOUR_SDK_KEY>',
// datafile: window.optimizelyDatafile,
// etc.
});
optimizelyClient.onReady().then(({ success, reason }) => {
if (success) {
// Create the Optimizely user context, make decisions, and more here!
}
});
Regarding EventDispatcher
s: In Node.js environment, the default EventDispatcher
is powered by the http/s
module.
There is a mix of testing paradigms used within the JavaScript SDK which include Mocha, Chai, Karma, and Jest, indicated by their respective *.tests.js
and *.spec.ts
filenames.
When contributing code to the SDK, aim to keep the percentage of code test coverage at the current level () or above.
To run unit tests on the primary JavaScript SDK package source code, you can take the following steps:
- On your command line or terminal, navigate to the
~/javascript-sdk/packages/optimizely-sdk
directory. - Ensure that you have run
npm install
to install all project dependencies. - Run
npm test
to run all test files. - (For cross-browser testing) Run
npm run test-xbrowser
to run tests in many browsers via BrowserStack. - Resolve any tests that fail before continuing with your contribution.
This information is relevant only if you plan on contributing to the SDK itself.
# Prerequisite: Install dependencies.
npm install
# Run unit tests.
npm test
# Run unit tests in many browsers, currently via BrowserStack.
# For this to work, the following environment variables must be set:
# - BROWSER_STACK_USERNAME
# - BROWSER_STACK_PASSWORD
npm run test-xbrowser
/.github/workflows/javascript.yml contains the definitions for BROWSER_STACK_USERNAME
and BROWSER_STACK_ACCESS_KEY
used in the GitHub Actions CI pipeline. When developing locally, you must provide your own credentials in order to run npm run test-xbrowser
. You can register for an account for free on the BrowserStack official website here.
For more information regarding contributing to the Optimizely JavaScript SDK, please read Contributing.
This version represents a major version change and, as such, introduces some breaking changes. Please refer to the Changelog for more details.
To access the Feature Management configuration in the Optimizely dashboard, please contact your Optimizely customer success manager.
@optimizely/optimizely-sdk
is developed and maintained by Optimizely and many contributors. If you're interested in learning more about what Optimizely Feature Experimentation can do for your company you can visit the official Optimizely Feature Experimentation product page here to learn more.
First-party code (under packages/optimizely-sdk/lib/
, packages/datafile-manager/lib
, packages/datafile-manager/src
, packages/datafile-manager/__test__
, packages/event-processor/src
, packages/event-processor/__tests__
, packages/logging/src
, packages/logging/__tests__
, packages/utils/src
, packages/utils/__tests__
) is copyright Optimizely, Inc. and contributors, licensed under Apache 2.0.