Swab: Simple WSGI A/B testing
Project description
Simple WSGI A/B testing - Swab
What is A/B testing?
A/B testing is a way of comparing two versions of a web page against each other, to see which performs best for your visitors. It could be testing changes to your website copy, visual design or user interface.
When you run an A/B test experiment you need to tell Swab what variants you have, and what goals you want to optimize for. Swab will then randomly assign visitors to each variant and keep track of how many times each variant is shown, along with how many of those visits resulted in a conversion.
Using this data, Swab can show you the conversion rate for each variant along with some basic statistics to help you decide whether there is a meaningful difference between the versions.
Setting up a Swab instance
Swab needs a directory where it can save the data files it uses for tracking trial and conversion data:
from swab import Swab s = Swab('/tmp/.swab-test-data')
Then you need to tell swab about the experiments you want to run, the variants available and the name of the conversion goal:
s.add_experiment('button-color', ['red', 'blue'], 'signup')
Finally you need to wrap your WSGI app in swab’s middleware:
application = s.middleware(application)
Integrating swab in your app
Swab makes a number of functions available to you that you can put in your application code:
show_variant(environ, experiment, record=False, variant=None)
Return the variant name to show for the current request. In the above example, a call to show_variant(environ, 'button-color') would return either 'red' or 'blue'
record_trial_tag(environ, experiment)
Return the HTML tag for a javascript beacon that should be placed in the page you are testing. The tag causes the user’s browser to load a referenced javascript file, triggering swab to record a trial for the given experiment.
If you only have a single experiment running on the requested page and have previously called show_variant you can safely omit the experiment name.
record_trial(environ, experiment)
If you don’t want to use the javascript beacon to track trials, you can call record_trial directly. The javascript beacon method is preferred as it is unlikely to be triggered by bots.
If you only have a single experiment running on the requested page and have previously called show_variant you can safely omit the experiment name.
record_goal(environ, goal, experiment)
Record a goal conversion for the named experiment
Viewing results
Test results are available at the URL /swab/results.
Caching
Swab automatically adds a Cache-Control: no-cache response header if show_variant or record_trial was called during the request. This helps avoid proxies caching your test variants. It will also remove any other cache related headers (eg ‘ETag’ or ‘Last-Modified’). If you don’t want this behaviour, you need to pass cache_control=False when creating the Swab instance.
Viewing the variants
To test your competing pages append ‘?swab.<experiment-name>=<variant-name>’ to URLs to force any given variant to be shown.
Basic design
Each visitor is assigned an identity which is persisted by means of a cookie. The identity is a base64 encoded randomly generated byte sequence. This identity is used as a seed for a RNG, which is used to switch visitors into test groups.
Every time a test is shown, a line is entered into a file at <datadir>/<experiment>/<variant>/__all__. This is triggered by calling record_trial
Every time a goal is recorded (triggered by calling record_goal), a line is entered into a file at <datadir>/<experiment>/<variant>/<goal>
Each log line has the format <timestamp>:<identity>\n.
No file locking is used: it is assumed that this will be run on a system where each line is smaller than the fs blocksize, allowing us to avoid this overhead. The lines may become interleaved, but there should be no risk of corruption even with multiple simultaneous writes. See http://www.perlmonks.org/?node_id=486488 for a discussion of the issue.
0.2.4
Add support for Python 3.12
Drop support for Python 3.8
0.2.3 (released 2024-05-02)
Bugfix: fix cookie max-age value
0.2.2 (released 2018-02-23)
Bugfix: fix for exception triggered when a bot visits a page containing record_trial_tag
0.2.1 (released 2018-02-23)
Bugfix: fixed link rendering on test results page
0.2.0 (released 2018-02-23)
Compatibility with python 3
Allow the application to force a variant when calling show_variant
Improved JS snippet no longer blocks browser rendering
No longer records duplicate trials if show_variant is called twice
Allow experiments to customize the swabid generation strategy - useful if you want to deterministically seed the RNG based on some request attribute.
Allow weighted variants: add_experiment('foo', 'AAAB') will show variant A 75% of the time.
Include bayesian results calculation based on http://www.evanmiller.org/bayesian-ab-testing.html#binary_ab_implementation
Better caching: only sets cookies on pages where an experiment is invoked
record_trial_tag can now infer the experiment name from a previous call to show_variant: less duplicated code when running an experiment.
Results now show results per visitor by default
Version 0.1.3
Added a javascript beacon to record tests (helps exclude bots)
Better exclusion of bots on server side too
Record trial app won’t raise an error if the experiment name doesn’t exist
Removed debug flag, the ability to force a variant is now always present
Strip HTTP caching headers if an experiment has been invoked during the request
Improved accuracy of conversion tracking
Cookie path can be specified in middleware configuration
Version 0.1.2
Minor bugfixes
Version 0.1.1
Bugfix for ZeroDivisionErrors when no data has been collected
Version 0.1
Initial release
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