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A continuously improving experimentation framework

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\\//, Prosper

A continuously improving, experimentation framework.

semantic-release: prosper

Installation

npm

npm i @bkknights/prosper

yarn

yarn add @bkknights/prosper

Why

Prosper provides a means of:

  • injecting intelligently selected experimental code that is shorted lived
  • using multi armed bandit machine learning to selected which experimental code is injected
  • prevents code churn where long-lived code belongs

The non-Prosper way:

  • Uses feature flagging
  • Favors code churn, with highly fractured experimentation
  • Constantly effects test coverage
  • Provides a very blurry understanding of the code base when experimenting

The Prosper way:

  • Use experiments rather than Features Flags
    • Picture one master switch, rather than a many small switches
    • Code for each variant lives close together, within an experiment
  • Favors short-lived experimental code, that accentuates long-lived code
    • Once understandings from a variant is known, then it can be moved from short-lived (experiment) to long-lived (source)
  • Meant to churn as little as possible, using decorator @pick(symbol) with class properties.
  • Provides a very clear understanding of the code base when experimenting

Examples

Suppose we had a contrived set of classes:

This is considered 'long-term' code. Our goal is that we want to find out if a Vulcan reply string is better, based on some user interaction.

class ReplyHandler {
  reply() {
    return 'See ya!';
  }
}

class Service {
  replyHandler: ReplyHandler = new ReplyHandler();
  async setup(httpEvent): Promise<void> {}
  run(): string {
    return this.replyHandler.reply();
  }
}
Without Prosper

Using Feature Flags, and a hypothetical function findBestReplyIndex, which finds the best index for user. Note: We now have to change from sync to async, which changes usage as well.

class ReplyHandler {
  async reply(): string {
    // short lived code
    const index = await findBestReplyIndex();
    // long lived code
    const defaultValue = 'See ya!';
    // short lived code
    if (featureFlagsEnabled()) { // If's can get tricky, when experimenting...
      switch (index) {
        case 0: return 'Live long, and prosper.';
        // Others?
      }
    }
    return defaultValue;
  }
}

class Service {
  replyHandler: ReplyHandler = new ReplyHandler();
  async setup(httpEvent): Promise<void> {}
  // Note: Changed from sync to async
  async run(): string {
    return await this.replyHandler.reply();
  }
}
With Prosper

Using Experiments

// Imports
import { BaseExperiment, Variant } from '@bkknights/prosper';

// Create a symbol to reference ReplyHandler
const replyHandlerSymbol = Symbol('ReplyHandler');

//
class Experiment extends BaseExperiment {
  // pretend I've connected it up to database
}

// Setup short lived experimentation Code
function whichReply(): Experiment {
  class VulcanReply extends ReplyHandler {
    reply(): string {
      return 'Live Long And Prosper';
    }
  }
  
  // Setup both defaults, and control set against experiment
  return new Experiment('Which Reply Is Best?', [
    new Variant('A: Control Set', {
      [replyHandlerSymbol]: ReplyHandler
    }),
    new Variant('B: Vulcan Greeting/Reply', {
      ...defaults,
      [replyHandlerSymbol]: VulcanReply
    }),
  ]);
}

// Instantiate Prosper, with whichReply experiment set
const prosper = new Prosper().with(whichReply());

class Service {
  prosper = prosper; // Note: Or inject?
  // Note: Now "picking" from multiple ReplyHandler's, associated in setup
  @pick(replyHandlerSymbol) replyHandler: ReplyHandler;

  // Note: Need to allow prosper to both setup and bind to a value that persists over time in 1 key location within codebase
  async setup(httpEvent): Promise<void> {
    await this.prosper.setForUser(httpEvent.userId);
  } 
  // Note: usage stayed the same
  run(): string {
    return this.replyHandler.reply();
  }
}
Key takeaways
  • Tests remain isolated, period.
  • A/B tests are very focused and isolated

API

Class Level

Interacting with Prosper is done by creating a single instance of prosper used on classes where @pick(Symbol) is used.

import { Prosper, pick } from '@bkknights/prosper';

const prosper = new Prosper();

class MyClass {
  prosper: Prosper = prosper;
  @pick(Symbol('foo')) foo: Function;
  bar() {
    this.foo();
  }
}

Setup

Prosper is interacted with by extending the abstract class BaseExperimentSet

import { Prosper, pick } from '@bkknights/prosper';
import { BaseExperiment } from '@bkknights/prosper/base-experiment';

export class MyExperiment extends BaseExperiment<AlgorithmType> {
  public async getExperiment(): Promise<IExperiment | null> {
  }

  public async upsertExperiment(experiment: IExperiment): Promise<void> {
  }

  public async deleteExperiment(experiment: IExperiment): Promise<void> {
  }

  public async getUserExperiment(userId: string, experimentId: string): Promise<IUserVariant | null> {
  }

  public async upsertUserVariant(userVariant: IUserVariant): Promise<void> {
  }

  public async deleteUserVariant(userExperiment: IUserVariant): Promise<void> {
  }

  public async deleteUserVariants(): Promise<void> {
  }

  public async getAlgorithm(): Promise<Algorithm> {
  }

  public async upsertAlgorithm(algorithm: Algorithm): Promise<void> {
  }

  public async deleteAlgorithm(): Promise<void> {
  }

  public async getVariantIndex(algorithm: Algorithm): Promise<number> {
  }

  public async rewardAlgorithm(algorithm: Algorithm, userVariantIndex: number, reward: number): Promise<Algorithm> {
  }
}

new Prosper().with(setupEvents(new MyExperiment()))

Experimentation Level

Variants are written and added to an MyExperiment

import { Prosper } from '@bkknights/prosper';
import { BaseExperiment } from '@bkknights/prosper/base-experiment';
import { Variant } from '@bkknights/prosper/variant';

const fooSymbol = Symbol('foo');
const foo1 = () => {
  // do default
};
const foo2 = () => {
  // do experiment!
};

class Experiment extends BaseExperiment {
  constructor(name: string, variants: Variant[]) {
    super();
    this.name = name;
    this.variants = variants;
  }
}

const prosper = new Prosper()
  .with(
    new Experiment('My Experiments', [
      new Variant('Control Set: A', {
        [fooSymbol]: foo1
      }),
      new Variant('Deveation: B', {
        [fooSymbol]: foo2
      }),
    ])
  );

// call and `await prosper.setForUser(key)` just after database connectivity!

// elsewhere in codebase
class MyClass {
  prosper = prosper;
  @pick(fooSymbol) foo: Function;

  myMethod() {
    this.foo(); // calls either `foo1` or `foo2`, whichever the algorithms is indicating
  }
}

...Vulcan's are cool.

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