Experiment Guide
Experiments can be conducted by any GitLab team, most often the teams from the Growth Sub-department. Experiments are not tied to releases because they will primarily target GitLab.com.
Experiments will be run as an A/B test and will be behind a feature flag to turn the test on or off. Based on the data the experiment generates, the team will decide if the experiment had a positive impact and will be the new default or rolled back.
Experiment tracking issue
Each experiment should have an Experiment tracking issue to track the experiment from roll-out through to cleanup/removal. Immediately after an experiment is deployed, the due date of the issue should be set (this depends on the experiment but can be up to a few weeks in the future). After the deadline, the issue needs to be resolved and either:
- It was successful and the experiment will be the new default.
- It was not successful and all code related to the experiment will be removed.
In either case, an outcome of the experiment should be posted to the issue with the reasoning for the decision.
Code reviews
Experiments’ code quality can fail our standards for several reasons. These reasons can include not being added to the codebase for a long time, or because of fast iteration to retrieve data. However, having the experiment run (or not run) shouldn’t impact GitLab’s availability. To avoid or identify issues, experiments are initially deployed to a small number of users. Regardless, experiments still need tests.
If, as a reviewer or maintainer, you find code that would usually fail review but is acceptable for now, mention your concerns with a note that there’s no need to change the code. The author can then add a comment to this piece of code and link to the issue that resolves the experiment. If the experiment is successful and becomes part of the product, any follow up issues should be addressed.
How to create an A/B test
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Add the experiment to the
Gitlab::Experimentation::EXPERIMENTShash inexperimentation.rb:EXPERIMENTS = { other_experiment: { #... }, # Add your experiment here: signup_flow: { environment: ::Gitlab.dev_env_or_com?, # Target environment, defaults to enabled for development and GitLab.com tracking_category: 'Growth::Acquisition::Experiment::SignUpFlow' # Used for providing the category when setting up tracking data } }.freeze -
Use the experiment in a controller:
class RegistrationController < ApplicationController def show # experiment_enabled?(:feature_name) is also available in views and helpers if experiment_enabled?(:signup_flow) # render the experiment else # render the original version end end end - Track necessary events. See the telemetry guide for details.
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After the merge request is merged, use
chatopsin the appropriate channel to start the experiment for 10% of the users. The feature flag should have the name of the experiment with the_experiment_percentagesuffix appended. For visibility, please also share any commands run against production in the#s_growthchannel:/chatops run feature set signup_flow_experiment_percentage 10If you notice issues with the experiment, you can disable the experiment by removing the feature flag:
/chatops run feature delete signup_flow_experiment_percentage