diff --git a/web-docs/intro.md b/web-docs/intro.md index 63ee82fe2..87184f6fe 100644 --- a/web-docs/intro.md +++ b/web-docs/intro.md @@ -2,7 +2,6 @@ _flagd_ is a _feature flag evaluation engine_. Think of it as a ready-made, open source, OpenFeature-compliant feature flag backend system. -It allows you to dynamically evaluate feature flags. With flagd you can: @@ -11,8 +10,30 @@ With flagd you can: * use context-sensitive rules to target specific users or user-traits * perform pseudorandom assignments for experimentation * perform progressive roll-outs of new features -* aggregate flag definitions from multiple sources +* aggregate flag definitions from multiple sources It doesn't include a UI, management console or a persistence layer. It's configurable entirely via a POSIX-style CLI. Thanks to it's minimalism, it's _extremely flexible_; you can leverage flagd as a sidecar alongside your application, an engine running in your application process, or as a central service evaluating thousands of flags per second. + +# How can deploy flagd? + +flagd is designed to fit well into a variety of infrastructures, and can run on various architectures. +It run as a separate process or directly in your application. +It's distributed as a binary, container image, and various libraries. +If you're already leveraging containers in your infrastructure, you can extend the docker image with your required configuration. +You can also run flagd as a service on a VM or a "bare-metal" host. +If you'd prefer not to run an additional process at all, you can run the flagd evaluation engine directly in your application. +No matter how you run flagd, you will need to supply it with feature flags. +The flag definitions supplied to flagd (*sources*) are monitored for changes which will be immediately reflected in flagd's evaluations. +Currently supported sources include files, HTTP endpoints, Kubernetes custom resources, and proto-compliant gRPC services. + + + + +# How to I use flagd? + +flagd is fully OpenFeature compliant. +To leverage it in your application you must use the OpenFeature SDK and flagd provider for your language. +You can configure the provider to connect to a flagd instance you deployed earlier (evaluating flags over gRPC) or use the in-process evaluation engine to do flag evaluations directly in your application. +Once you've configured the OpenFeature SDK, you can start evaluating the feature flags configured in your flagd definitions.