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Tutorial: Enable conditional features with a custom filter in a Python application

Feature flags can use feature filters to enable features conditionally. To learn more about feature filters, see Tutorial: Enable conditional features with feature filters.

The example used in this tutorial is based on the Python application introduced in the feature management quickstart. Before proceeding further, complete the quickstart to create a Python application with a Beta feature flag. Once completed, you must add a custom feature filter to the Beta feature flag in your App Configuration store.

In this tutorial, you'll learn how to implement a custom feature filter and use the feature filter to enable features conditionally.

Prerequisites

Implement a custom feature filter

You've added a custom feature filter named Random with a Percentage parameter for your Beta feature flag in the prerequisites. Next, you implement the feature filter to enable the Beta feature flag based on the chance defined by the Percentage parameter.

  1. Add a RandomFilter.py file with the following code.

    import random
    from featuremanagement import FeatureFilter
    
    @FeatureFilter.alias("Random")
    class RandomFilter(FeatureFilter):
    
        def evaluate(self, context, **kwargs):
            value = context.get("parameters", {}).get("Value", 0)
            if value < random.randint(0, 100):
                return True
            return False
    

    You added a RandomFilter class that implements the FeatureFilter abstract class from the FeatureManagement library. The FeatureFilter class has a single method named evaluate, which is called whenever a feature flag is evaluated. In evaluate, a feature filter enables a feature flag by returning true.

    You decorated a FeatureFilter.alias to the RandomFilter to give your filter an alias Random, which matches the filter name you set in the Beta feature flag in Azure App Configuration.

  2. Open the app.py file and register the RandomFilter when creating the FeatureManager. Also, modify the code to not automatically refresh and to also access the Beta feature flag a few times, as seen below.

    from featuremanagement import FeatureManager
    from azure.appconfiguration.provider import load
    from azure.identity import DefaultAzureCredential
    import os
    
    endpoint = os.environ.get("APPCONFIGURATION_ENDPOINT_STRING")
    
    # Connect to Azure App Configuration using and Endpoint and Azure Entra ID
    # feature_flag_enabled makes it so that the provider will load feature flags from Azure App Configuration
    # feature_flag_refresh_enabled makes it so that the provider will refresh feature flags
    # from Azure App Configuration, when the refresh operation is triggered
    config = load(endpoint=endpoint, credential=DefaultAzureCredential(), feature_flag_enabled=True)
    
    feature_manager = FeatureManager(config, feature_filters=[RandomFilter()])
    
    for i in range(0, 10):
        print("Beta is", feature_manager.is_enabled("Beta"))
    

Feature filter in action

When you run the application the configuration provider will load the Beta feature flag from Azure App Configuration. The result of the is_enabled("Beta") method will be printed to the console. As the RandomFilter is implemented and used by the Beta feature flag, the result will be True 50 percent of the time and False the other 50 percent of the time.

Running the application will show that the Beta feature flag is sometimes enabled and sometimes not.

Beta is True
Beta is False
Beta is True
Beta is True
Beta is True
Beta is False
Beta is False
Beta is False
Beta is True
Beta is True

Next steps

To learn more about the built-in feature filters, continue to the following tutorials.