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Java SDK reference

note

This SDK works with Harness Self-Managed Enterprise Edition (on premises).

This topic describes how to use the Harness Feature Flags Java SDK for your Java application.

For getting started quickly, you can use our sample code from the Java SDK README. You can also clone and run a sample application from the Java SDK GitHub Repository.

Before you begin

Make sure you read and understand:

Version

The current version of this SDK is 1.2.4.

Requirements

To use this SDK, make sure you:  

Install the SDK

Install the Feature Flag SDK as a dependency in your application using your application's dependency manager. You can use Maven, Gradle, SBT, etc. for your application. 

Below are the dependencies for Maven and Gradle that use Java SDK version 1.1.10 as an example:

Install using Maven

Add the following dependency in your project's pom.xml file:

<dependency>  
    <groupId>io.harness</groupId>
    <artifactId>ff-java-server-sdk</artifactId>
    <version>1.1.10</version>
</dependency>

If you are using the Harness Java sample application from the Java SDK GitHub repository, do not add the Maven dependency in the pom.xml file as it has already been added.

Install using Gradle

implementation group: 'io.harness', name: 'ff-java-server-sdk', version: '1.1.10'

Initialize the SDK

To initialize the Java SDK, you need to:

  1. Add your Server SDK key to connect to your Harness Environment.
  2. Add a Target that you want to Evaluate against a Feature Flag.
  3. Configure the SDK options, if needed. For more details on what features you can configure for this SDK, go to Configure the SDK.
  4. Complete the initialization with the SDK using the Server SDK Key, Target, and Configuration parameters you set.

Add the Server SDK Key

After installing the SDK, you must enter the server SDK key that you created in the Harness platform into the apiKey field, for example:

String apiKey = System.getProperty("FF_API_KEY", "<default api key>");

Add a Target

What is a Target?
Targets are used to control which users see which Variation of a Feature Flag, for example, if you want to do internal testing, you can enable the Flag for some users and not others. When creating a Target, you give it a name and a unique identifier. Often Targets are users but you can create a Target from anything that can be uniquely identified, such as an app or a machine.

For more information about Targets, go to Targeting Users With Flags.

To add a Target, build it and pass in arguments for the following:

ParameterDescriptionRequired?Example
identifierUnique ID for the TargetRead Regex requirements for Target names and identifiers below for accepted characters.Required.identifier("HT_1")
nameName for this Target. This does not have to be unique. Note: If you don’t provide a value, the name will be the same as the identifier.Read Regex requirements for Target names and identifiers below for accepted characters.Optional
Note: If you don't want to send a name, don't send the parameter. Sending an empty argument will cause an error.
.name("Harness_Target_1")
attributesAdditional data you can store for a Target, such as email addresses or location.Optional.attributes(new HashMap<String, Object>())
Regex requirements for Target names and identifiers

Identifier

Regex: ^[A-Za-z0-9.@_-]*$
Must consist of only alphabetical characters, numbers, and the following symbols:
. (period)
@ (at sign)
-(dash)
_ (underscore)

The characters can be lowercase or uppercase but cannot include accented letters, for example Cafe_789.

Name Regex: ^[\\p{L}\\d .@_-]*$

Must consist of only alphabetical characters, numbers, and the following symbols:
. (period)
@ (at sign)
-(dash)
_ (underscore)
(space)

The characters can be lowercase or uppercase and can include accented letters, for example Café_123.

For example:

Target target = Target.builder()  
                   .name("Harness_Target_1")
                   .attributes(new HashMap<String, Object>())
                   .identifier("HT_1")
                   .build();

Configure the SDK

You can configure the following features of the SDK through the baseConfig:

NameExampleDescriptionDefault Value
baseUrlHarnessConfig.configUrl("https://config.ff.harness.io/api/1.0")The URL used to fetch Feature Flag Evaluations. When using the Relay Proxy, change this to: http://localhost:7000https://config.ff.harness.io/api/1.0
eventUrlHarnessConfig.eventUrl("https://events.ff.harness.io/api/1.0")The URL for posting metrics data to the Feature Flag service. When using the Relay Proxy, change this to: http://localhost:7000https://events.ff.harness.io/api/1.0
pollIntervalBaseConfig.pollIntervalInSeconds(60))The interval in seconds that we poll for changes when you are not using stream mode.60 (seconds)
streamEnabledBaseConfig.streamEnabled(false)Set to true to enable streaming mode.Set to false to disable streaming mode.true
analyticsEnabledBaseConfig.analyticsEnabled(true)Set to true to enable analytics.Set to false to disable analytics.Note: When enabled, analytics data is posted every 60 seconds.true
frequencyBaseConfig.frequency(60))The interval in seconds of how often to send metrics data.60
For example:  
// Create Options
BaseConfig options = BaseConfig.builder()
        .pollIntervalInSeconds(60)
        .streamEnabled(true)
        .analyticsEnabled(true)
        .build();

When initializing the SDK, you can also configure it to use the Harness Relay Proxy, for more information about how to do this, go to Use the Relay Proxy

Complete the initialization

To complete the initialization, create an instance of the cfClient and pass in the Server SDK key, Target, and configuration options. 

Sample of initializing the SDK

// Connector Config  
HarnessConfig connectorConfig = HarnessConfig.builder()
        .configUrl("https://config.ff.harness.io/api/1.0")
        .eventUrl("https://events.ff.harness.io/api/1.0")
        .build();

// Create Options
BaseConfig options = BaseConfig.builder()
        .pollIntervalInSeconds(60)
        .streamEnabled(true)
        .analyticsEnabled(true)
        .build();

// Create the client
CfClient cfClient = new CfClient(new HarnessConnector(apiKey, connectorConfig), options);

Evaluate a Flag

Evaluating a Flag is when the SDK processes all Flag rules and returns the correct Variation of that Flag for the Target you provide. 

If a matching Flag can’t be found, or the SDK can’t remotely fetch flags, the default value is returned. 

There are different methods for the different Variation types and for each method you need to pass in:

  • Identifier of the Flag you want to evaluate
  • The Target object you want to evaluate against
  • The default Variation

For example:

Evaluate a boolean Variation

boolean result = cfClient.boolVariation("sample_boolean_flag", target, false);

Evaluate a number Variation

boolean result = cfClient.numberVariation("sample_number_flag", target, 0);

Evaluate a string Variation

boolean result = cfClient.stringVariation("sample_string_flag", target, "");

Evaluate a multivariate Variation

double number = cfClient.numberVariation(COUNT_FEATURE_KEY, parentTarget, 1);  
      String color = cfClient.stringVariation(COLOR_FEATURE_KEY, target, "black");

Test your app is connected to Harness

When you receive a response showing the current status of your Feature Flag, go to the Harness Platform and toggle the Flag on and off. Then, check your app to verify if the Flag Variation displayed is updated with the Variation you toggled.

note

The SDK must run for at least 60 seconds before it sends metrics. Please ensure metrics have not been disabled in the SDK.

Close the SDK client

In most applications, you won't need to close the SDK client.

However, you should close the SDK client if:

  • Your application is about to terminate. Closing the client ensures that all associated resources are released.
  • You have determined that you do not need to evaluate flags again in your application lifecycle.
important

The SDK does not evaluate flags after the client is closed.

To close the SDK client:

  • Call the following function>

    cfClient.close();

Additional options

Develop on your local environment

By default, you are connected to the Harness environment but you can use a local connector to develop in your local environment. To do this: 

  1. Create three folders to contain the data for your  flags, segments and metrics, for example:
    local/flags
    local/segments
    local/metrics
  2. In the flags folder, create files with a json extension and the following structure:
{  
  "project": "string",
  "environment": "string",
  "feature": "string",
  "state": "on",
  "kind": "boolean",
  "variations": [
    {
      "identifier": "off-variation",
      "value": true,
      "name": "Off Variation",
      "description": "string"
    }
  ],
  "rules": [
    {
      "ruleId": "string",
      "priority": 1,
      "clauses": [
        {
          "id": 32434243,
          "attribute": "identifier",
          "op": "starts_with",
          "values": [
            "string"
          ],
          "negate": false
        }
      ],
      "serve": {
        "distribution": {
          "bucketBy": "string",
          "variations": [
            {
              "variation": "off-variation",
              "weight": 50
            }
          ]
        },
        "variation": "string"
      }
    }
  ],
  "defaultServe": {
    "distribution": {
      "bucketBy": "string",
      "variations": [
        {
          "variation": "off-variation",
          "weight": 50
        }
      ]
    },
    "variation": "string"
  },
  "offVariation": "string",
  "prerequisites": [
    {
      "feature": "string",
      "variations": [
        "string"
      ]
    }
  ],
  "variationToTargetMap": [
    {
      "variation": "off-variation",
      "targets": [
        {
          "identifier": "string",
          "name": "string"
        }
      ],
      "targetSegments": [
        "string"
      ]
    }
  ],
  "version": 0
}
  1. In the segments folder, create files with a json extension and the following structure:
{  
   "identifier": "string",
   "name": "Beta Testers",
   "environment": "Production",
   "tags": [
     {
       "name": "string",
       "value": "string"
     }
   ],
   "included": [
     {
       "identifier": "john-doe",
       "account": "abcXDdffdaffd",
       "org": "string",
       "environment": "string",
       "project": "string",
       "name": "John Doe",
       "anonymous": true,
       "attributes": {
         "age": 20,
         "location": "Belfast"
       },
       "createdAt": 0,
       "segments": [
         null
       ]
     }
   ],
   "excluded": [
     {
       "identifier": "john-doe",
       "account": "abcXDdffdaffd",
       "org": "string",
       "environment": "string",
       "project": "string",
       "name": "John Doe",
       "anonymous": true,
       "attributes": {
         "age": 20,
         "location": "Belfast"
       },
       "createdAt": 0,
       "segments": [
         null
       ]
     }
   ],
   "rules": [
     {
       "id": 32434243,
       "attribute": "identifier",
       "op": "starts_with",
       "values": [
         "string"
       ],
       "negate": false
     }
   ],
   "createdAt": 0,
   "modifiedAt": 0,
   "version": 1
 }
  1. Leave the metrics folder empty.
  2. Create an instance of LocalConnector and pass in the location of your folders.
  3. Pass the instance into the cfClient when initializing the SDK.

For example: 

LocalConnector connector = new LocalConnector(path);  
CfClient client = new CfClient(connector, BaseConfig.builder().build())

Configure your logger

You can provide your own logger to the SDK and configure it using the standard logging configuration. 

Log4j logger

If using Log4j you can add the following log4j2.xml to your project, for example:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>  
<Configuration status="INFO" monitorInterval="30">
    <Properties>
        <Property name="LOG_PATTERN">%d{yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss} %-5p %c{1} SDK=${sys:SDK} flag=${sys:version} target=%mdc{target} - %m%n</Property>
    </Properties>

     <Appenders>
        <Console name="console" target="SYSTEM_OUT" follow="true">
            <PatternLayout pattern="${LOG_PATTERN}"/>
        </Console>
    </Appenders>
 
    <Loggers>
        <Root level="debug">
            <AppenderRef ref="console"/>
        </Root>
    </Loggers>
</Configuration>

Use the Relay Proxy

To use the Relay Proxy, you need to change the following URLs in the HarnessConfig class when initializing the SDK to http://localhost:7000.

NameExampleDescriptionDefault Value
baseUrlHarnessConfig.configUrl("https://config.ff.harness.io/api/1.0")The URL used to fetch Feature Flag Evaluations. When using the Relay Proxy, change this to: http://localhost:7000https://config.ff.harness.io/api/1.0
eventUrlHarnessConfig.eventUrl("https://events.ff.harness.io/api/1.0")The URL for posting metrics data to the Feature Flag service. When using the Relay Proxy, change this to: http://localhost:7000https://events.ff.harness.io/api/1.0

For example: 

HarnessConfig connectorConfig = HarnessConfig.builder()  
        .configUrl("http://localhost:7000")
        .eventUrl("http://localhost:7000")
        .build();

Sample code for a Java application

Here is a sample code for integrating with the Java SDK:

package io.harness.ff.examples;  

import io.harness.cf.client.api.*;
import io.harness.cf.client.dto.Target;
 
import java.util.concurrent.Executors;
import java.util.concurrent.ScheduledExecutorService;

import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit;

public class GettingStarted {
    // API Key - set this as an env variable
    private static String apiKey = getEnvOrDefault("FF_API_KEY", "");
 
    // Flag Identifier

    private static String flagName = getEnvOrDefault("FF_FLAG_NAME", "harnessappdemodarkmode");

    private static final ScheduledExecutorService scheduler = Executors.newScheduledThreadPool(1);

 
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        System.out.println("Harness SDK Getting Started");
 
        try {
            //Create a Feature Flag Client
            CfClient cfClient = new CfClient(apiKey);
            cfClient.waitForInitialization();
 
            // Create a target (different targets can get different results based on rules.  This includes a custom attribute 'location')

            final Target target = Target.builder()
                    .identifier("javasdk")
                    .name("JavaSDK")
                    .attribute("location", "emea")
                    .build();

 
            // Loop forever reporting the state of the flag
            scheduler.scheduleAtFixedRate(
                    () -> {
                        boolean result = cfClient.boolVariation(flagName, target, false);
                        System.out.println("Boolean variation is " + result);
                    },
                    0,
                    10,
                    TimeUnit.SECONDS);
 
        } catch (Exception e) {
            e.printStackTrace();

        } finally {
            // Close the SDK
            CfClient.getInstance().close();
        }
    }
 
    // Get the value from the environment or return the default
    private static String getEnvOrDefault(String key, String defaultValue) {
        String value = System.getenv(key);
        if (value == null || value.isEmpty()) {
            return defaultValue;
        }
        return value;
    }
}

Known issues

Error when importing the SDK JAR file

If you're using the Java server SDK version 1.2.2 or earlier, you may see the following error when importing the SDK JAR file:

Missing artifact com.github.heremaps:oksse:jar:0.9.0

If you get this error, then add the Maven repository https://jitpack.io to your build system as follows:

If using Gradle:

repositories {
maven {
url 'https://jitpack.io'
}
}

If using Maven:

<repository>
<url>https://jitpack.io</url>
...
</repository>