The server component for Clutch framework and Cluth A/B Testing.
Project description
Clutch.io
Clutch.io is two projects:
Native A/B testing for iOS and Android
A toolkit for developing hybrid native/HTML applications for iOS
You may be interested in one or the other, but this project is the server component for both projects.
Prerequisites
Python 2.6 or Greater
PostgreSQL (including the required headers to compile psycopg2)
libevent 2.0.20
S3 Account (for hybrid native/html application framework ONLY)
Installing and Running Clutch.io
Before you get started, make sure all of the prerequisites are installed and that PostgreSQL is running. Now we need to create a Clutch user and database:
createuser -s clutch
createdb -E utf8 –owner=clutch clutch
Next we need to install Clutch:
easy_install clutchserver
Now we will generate a configuration file used to setup ports and such:
clutch-config > conf.py
You can check the configuration defaults provided by clutch-config and decide whether they are right for your setup. For most people, the defaults should be just fine. When you’re ready, let’s start up the server:
clutch-all conf.py
That’s it, you’re now running Clutch.io! Visit http://127.0.0.1:8000/ to see it in action.
More Documentation
Local Documentation
To generate a local copy of the above documentation, first check out this repo:
git clone https://github.com/clutchio/clutch.git
Make sure you have Sphinx installed so that you can generate the docs:
easy_install Sphinx==1.1.3
Now change to the docs directory and make the docs
cd clutch/docs make html
Finally, open the docs:
open _build/html/index.html
Tests
To run the tests, generate a test configuration file using clutch-config like above, but instead of using clutch-all to run it, use clutch-test:
clutch-test conf.py
This is one area where this project could use a lot of help. If you’re interested in contributing, helping out by improving our test coverage is a great place to start!
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.