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Feature Toggle Dynamics in Large-Scale Systems: Prevalence, Growth, Lifespan, and Benchmarking
April 17, 2026 Β· Grace Period Β· + Add venue
Abstract
Feature toggles enable gradual rollouts and experimentation in software systems, yet often persist beyond their intended lifecycle, accumulating as technical debt. Prior research has examined feature toggle interactions and complexity, but no longitudinal study has quantified how toggles evolve over time across different organizational contexts. We analyse over 4,000 toggle events in Kubernetes (10 MLoC, 8.5 years) and GitLab (5 MLoC, 5 years). We find that feature toggle removals lags behind additions in both systems (by roughly 35% and 13%, respectively), leading to growing toggle inventories. Their lifespan patterns also differ notably, with Kubernetes toggles lasting a median of 734 days versus 185 in GitLab. Then, some feature toggles (1.33% and 0.73%, respectively) exceed all previously observed removal durations, becoming de facto permanent. Building on these findings, we propose a benchmarking framework with five key metrics and their empirically derived threshold zones, enabling practitioners to assess and compare toggle management practices across projects. All scripts and data are publicly available.
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