An application feature management JS framework to support multi-environments, multi-roles, multi-scenarios
This framework is transformed from Casl and is motivated by the actual needs (multi-environments feature management). It is used to manage the features and abilities of your application in multiple environments. The application features can be tailored and joined according to the environments and roles.
Special thanks to Casl, without Casl there is no current Caslin.
English | ä¸æ–‡
- Able to customize features in multiple environments
- Centralized feature management for easy viewing, definition, and changes
- Feature definition meets the free combination of functions, roles, and environments
- Feature definition and feature implementation decoupling, flexible change of feature definition or feature implementation
- Transformed from Casl, the underlying API logic is simple and clear, while providing a friendly, easy-to-use React utility
- Source code written by TypeScript
- Introduce the concept of the "environment" to solve the problem of "same function, different environment" that Casl does not focus
- Add environment-related APIs and React HOC components
npm install @caslin/feature --save
Principle: Each feature rule corresponds to a basic semantic:At <environment> can <do> <something>.
Generate a feature instance by defining multiple rules.
import { FeatureBuilder } from '@caslin/feature';
const feature = FeatureBuilder.define((can, cannot, at) => {
at('all').can('read', 'Article');
at('featEnv1').can('create', 'Article');
at('featEnv2').cannot('delete', 'Article');
can('read', 'Comment'); // Alias of `at('all').can('read', 'Comment');`
});
Use the feature instance to check if you have the corresponding ability.
feature.at('featEnv1').can('create', 'Article'); // true
feature.at('featEnv2').cannot('delete', 'Article'); // true
feature.at('featEnv1').cannot('delete', 'Article'); // true
feature.at('featEnv2').cannot(['delete', 'create'], 'Article'); // true
feature.at('featEnv2').can('read', 'Article'); // true, because "all" env could "read"
feature.can('read', 'Comment'); // true. Alias of `feature.at('all').can('read', 'Comment');`
Set the current default environment and check if the passed environment matches the default environment.
feature.setEnv('featEnv1'); // set current environment as "featEnv1",could be reset by `feature.resetEnv()`
// Check feature
feature.can('read', 'Article'); // true, same as `feature.at('featEnv1').can('read', 'Article')`
feature.can('manage', 'Article'); // true
feature.cannot('delete', 'Article'); // true
// Check environment
feature.env.is('featEnv1'); // true,current environment is "featEnv1"
feature.env.not('featEnv2'); // true,current environment is not "featEnv2"
feature.env.in(['featEnv2', 'featEnv3']); // false,current environment isn't been included
feature.env.notIn(['featEnv2', 'featEnv3']); // true,current environment isn't been included
For more details and APIs: API DOC
- FeatureBuilder.define(definer: Definer)
Receive a parameter of type Definer
to generate a feature instance. The type is { (definer: Definer): Feature }
.
The function that defines the rule, of type { (can, cannot, at): Promise<any> | void }
, the basic usage of defining a rule is at('environment').can('read', 'Article' )
.
You can omit at()
to indicate that this rule applies to all environments, such as can('read', 'Article')
, which is equivalent to at('all').can('read', 'Article')
.
Suppose there is already a feature
for the instance of Feature
.
- feature.at('env').can('action', 'subject')
Check if it is able to do action/actions on a subject at arbitrary environment, returns true
if yes, otherwise returns false
.
- feature.at('env').cannot('action', 'subject')
Check if it is unable to do action/actions on a subject at arbitrary environment, returns true
if yes, otherwise returns false
.
- feature.setEnv('env')
Set the current default environment.
- feature.resetEnv()
Reset the current default environment.
- feature.env.value
The value of current default environment.
- feature.env.is('env')
Check that the current default environment is "env", return true
if it is, or false
otherwise.
- feature.env.not('env')
Check that the current default environment is "env", return true
if it isn't, or false
otherwise.
- feature.env.in(['env1', 'env2'])
Check that the current default environment is included in env1, env2 and return true
if it contains, otherwise return false
.
- feature.env.notIn(['env1', 'env2'])
Verify that the current default environment is included in env1, env2 and return true
if it is not, otherwise return false
.
- feature.env.matchPick({ env1: 'value1', env2: 'value2' })
Pick the key-value pair whose key matches current environment, return the value of mathced key-value pair.
Just like Casl, Caslin is also a pure JS library with no external dependencies, and can be used in both Node and browser environments. In order to be better used in different environments, there are some environment-related integrated tool libraries available.
- @caslin/react for React