StoryShots adds automatic Jest Snapshot Testing for Storybook.
To use StoryShots, you must use your existing Storybook stories as the input for Jest Snapshot Testing.
Add the following module into your app.
yarn add @storybook/addon-storyshots --dev
Create a new test file with the name Storyshots.test.js
. (Or whatever the name you prefer, as long as it matches Jest's config testMatch
).
Then add following content to it:
import initStoryshots from '@storybook/addon-storyshots';
initStoryshots();
That's all.
Now run your Jest test command. (Usually, npm test
.) Then you can see all of your stories are converted as Jest snapshot tests.
If you have stories in your Storybook that can only render inside a decorator (for instance the apollo-storybook-decorator
), you'll need to ensure those decorators are applied in Storyshots.
If you export those decorators from your .storybook/preview.js
then Storyshots will apply those decorators for you in the same way that Storybook does. However if the addon automatically adds the decorator for you (which is a new feature in Storybook 6.0), you will find the decorator does not get added in Storyshots. This is a limitation in Storyshots currently.
To ensure such decorators get added, export them from .storybook/preview.js
:
import addonDecorator from 'some-addon';
export const decorators = [addonDecorator];
In many cases, for example Create React App, it's already configured for Jest. You need to create a filename with the extension .test.js
.
If you still need to configure jest you can use the resources mentioned below:
Note: If you use React 16, you'll need to follow these additional instructions.
Note: Make sure you have added the
json
extension tomoduleFileExtensions
injest.config.json
. If this is missing it leads to the following error:Cannot find module 'spdx-license-ids' from 'scan.js'
.Note: Please make sure you are using
jsdom
as the testEnvironment on your jest config file.
Configure Jest to work with Webpack's require.context()
NOTE: if you are using Storybook 5.3's main.js
to list story files, this is no longer needed.
Sometimes it's useful to configure Storybook with Webpack's require.context feature. You could be loading stories one of two ways.
- If you're using the
storiesOf
API, you can integrate it this way:
import { configure } from '@storybook/react';
const req = require.context('../stories', true, /\.stories\.js$/); // <- import all the stories at once
function loadStories() {
req.keys().forEach((filename) => req(filename));
}
configure(loadStories, module);
- If you're using Component Story Format (CSF), you'll integrate it like so:
import { configure } from '@storybook/react';
const req = require.context('../stories', true, /\.stories\.js$/); // <- import all the stories at once
configure(req, module);
The problem here is that it will work only during the build with webpack, other tools may lack this feature. Since Storyshot is running under Jest, we need to polyfill this functionality to work with Jest. The easiest way is to integrate it to babel.
You can do this with a Babel plugin or macro. If you're using create-react-app
(v2 or above), use the macro.
First, install it:
yarn add babel-plugin-require-context-hook --dev
Next, it needs to be registered and loaded before each test. To register it, create a file with the following register function .jest/register-context.js
:
import registerRequireContextHook from 'babel-plugin-require-context-hook/register';
registerRequireContextHook();
That file needs to be added as a setup file for Jest. To do that, add (or create) a property in Jest's config called setupFiles
. Add the file name and path to this array.
setupFiles: ['<rootDir>/.jest/register-context.js']
Finally, add the plugin to .babelrc
:
{
"presets": ["..."],
"plugins": ["..."],
"env": {
"test": {
"plugins": ["require-context-hook"]
}
}
}
The plugin is only added to the test environment otherwise it could replace webpack's version of it.
First, install it:
yarn add require-context.macro --dev
Now, inside of your Storybook config file, import the macro and run it in place of require.context
, like so:
import requireContext from 'require-context.macro';
// const req = require.context('../stories', true, /\.stories\.js$/); <-- replaced
const req = requireContext('../stories', true, /\.stories\.js$/);
StoryShots addon for React is dependent on react-test-renderer, but doesn't install it, so you need to install it separately.
yarn add react-test-renderer --dev
StoryShots addon for Angular is dependent on jest-preset-angular, but doesn't install it, so you need to install it separately.
yarn add jest-preset-angular
If you already use Jest for testing your angular app - probably you already have the needed jest configuration. Anyway you can add these lines to your jest config:
module.exports = {
globals: {
__TRANSFORM_HTML__: true,
},
transform: {
'^.+\\.jsx?$': 'babel-jest',
'^.+\\.(ts|html)$': '<rootDir>/node_modules/jest-preset-angular/preprocessor.js',
},
moduleFileExtensions: ['ts', 'tsx', 'js', 'jsx', 'json', 'node', '.html'],
};
StoryShots addon for Vue is dependent on jest-vue-preprocessor, but doesn't install it, so you need to install it separately.
yarn add jest-vue-preprocessor
If you already use Jest for testing your vue app - probably you already have the needed jest configuration. Anyway you can add these lines to your jest config:
module.exports = {
transform: {
'^.+\\.jsx?$': 'babel-jest',
'.*\\.(vue)$': '<rootDir>/node_modules/jest-vue-preprocessor',
},
transformIgnorePatterns: ['/node_modules/(?!(@storybook/.*\\.vue$))'],
moduleFileExtensions: ['vue', 'js', 'jsx', 'json', 'node'],
};
StoryShots addon for Preact is dependent on preact-render-to-json, but doesn't install it, so you need to install it separately.
yarn add preact-render-to-json --dev
StoryShots addon for Web Components requires jsdom 16 or later to fully support the
web component shadow dom. To use jsdom 16 or later you can set the Jest testEnvironment
configuration key to
jest-environment-jsdom-sixteen
. This should work back to Jest 24 and is the default in Jest 26 and later.
If using the Docs add-on with MDX stories you will need to configure Jest to transform MDX stories into something Storyshots can understand:
Add the following to your Jest configuration:
{
"transform": {
"^.+\\.[tj]sx?$": "babel-jest",
"^.+\\.mdx?$": "@storybook/addon-docs/jest-transform-mdx"
}
}
Storyshots addon is currently supporting React, Angular and Vue. Each framework needs its own packages to be integrated with Jest. We don't want people that use only React will need to bring other dependencies that do not make sense for them.
dependencies
- will installed an exact version of the particular dep - Storyshots can work with different versions of the same framework (let's say React v16 and React v15), that have to be compatible with a version of its plugin (react-test-renderer).
optionalDependencies
- behaves like a regular dependency, but do not fail the installation in case there is a problem to bring the dep.
peerDependencies
- listing all the deps in peer will trigger warnings during the installation - we don't want users to install unneeded deps by hand.
optionalPeerDependencies
- unfortunately there is nothing like this =(
For more information read npm docs
react-test-renderer
doesn't provide refs for rendered components. By
default, it returns null when the refs are referenced. In order to mock
out elements that rely on refs, you will have to use the
createNodeMock
option added to React starting with version 15.4.0.
Here is an example of how to specify the createNodeMock
option in Storyshots:
import initStoryshots, { snapshotWithOptions } from '@storybook/addon-storyshots';
import TextareaThatUsesRefs from '../component/TextareaThatUsesRefs';
initStoryshots({
test: snapshotWithOptions({
createNodeMock: (element) => {
if (element.type === TextareaThatUsesRefs) {
return document.createElement('textarea');
}
},
}),
});
Provide a function to have story-specific options:
initStoryshots({
test: snapshotWithOptions((story) => ({
createNodeMock: (element) => {
if (story.name == 'foobar') {
return null;
}
return element;
},
})),
});
You can make use of Jest done callback to test components that render asynchronously. This callback is passed as param to test method passed to initStoryshots(...)
when the asyncJest
option is given as true.
The following example shows how we can use the done callback to take StoryShots of a Relay component. Each kind of story is written into its own snapshot file with the use of getSnapshotFileName
.
Add stories of UserForm in the file: UserForm.story.jsx
/* global module */
import React from 'react';
import { QueryRenderer } from 'react-relay';
import { storiesOf } from '@storybook/react';
// Use the same queries used in YOUR app routes
import { newUserFormQuery, editUserFormQuery } from 'app/routes';
import UserFormContainer from 'app/users/UserForm';
// YOUR function to generate a Relay Environment mock.
// See https://github.com/1stdibs/relay-mock-network-layer for more info
import getEnvironment from 'test/support/relay-environment-mock';
// User test data YOU generated for your tests
import { user } from 'test/support/data/index';
// Use this function to return a new Environment for each story
const Environment = () =>
getEnvironment({
mocks: {
Node: () => ({ __typename: 'User' }),
User: () => user,
},
});
/**
NOTICE that the QueryRenderer render its children via its render props.
If we don't take the StoryShot async then we will only see the QueryRenderer in the StoryShot.
The following QueryRenderer returns null in the first render (it can be a loading indicator instead in real file) and then when it gets the data to respond to query, it renders again with props containing the data for the Component
*/
const renderStory = (query, environment, variables = {}) => (
<QueryRenderer
environment={environment}
query={query}
variables={variables}
render={({ props, error }) => {
if (error) {
console.error(error);
} else if (props) {
return <UserFormContainer {...props} />;
}
return null;
}}
/>
);
storiesOf('users/UserForm', module)
.add('New User', () => {
const environment = new Environment();
return renderStory(newUserFormQuery, environment);
})
.add('Editing User', () => {
const environment = new Environment();
return renderStory(editUserFormQuery, environment, { id: user.id });
});
Then, init Storyshots for async component in the file: StoryShots.test.js
import initStoryshots, { Stories2SnapsConverter } from '@storybook/addon-storyshots';
import { mount } from 'enzyme';
import toJson from 'enzyme-to-json';
// Runner
initStoryshots({
asyncJest: true, // this is the option that activates the async behaviour
test: ({
story,
context,
done, // --> callback passed to test method when asyncJest option is true
}) => {
const converter = new Stories2SnapsConverter();
const snapshotFilename = converter.getSnapshotFileName(context);
const storyElement = story.render();
// mount the story
const tree = mount(storyElement);
// wait until the mount is updated, in our app mostly by Relay
// but maybe something else updating the state of the component
// somewhere
const waitTime = 1;
setTimeout(() => {
if (snapshotFilename) {
expect(toJson(tree.update())).toMatchSpecificSnapshot(snapshotFilename);
}
done();
}, waitTime);
},
// other options here
});
NOTICE that When using the asyncJest: true
option, you also must specify a test
method that calls the done()
callback.
This is a really powerful technique to write stories of Relay components because it integrates data fetching with component rendering. So instead of passing data props manually, we can let Relay do the job for us as it does in our application.
Whenever you change your data requirements by adding (and rendering) or (accidentally) deleting fields in your graphql query fragments, you'll get a different snapshot and thus an error in the StoryShot test.
Depending on your project's needs, you can configure the @storybook/addon-storyshots
to use a custom directory for the snapshots. You can read more about it in the official docs.
The config
parameter must be a function that helps to configure storybook like the preview.js
does.
If it's not specified, storyshots will try to use configPath parameter.
import initStoryshots from '@storybook/addon-storyshots';
initStoryshots({
config: ({ configure }) =>
configure(() => {
require('../stories/Button.story.js');
}, module),
});
By default, Storyshots assumes the config directory path for your project as below:
- Storybook for React:
.storybook
- Storybook for React Native:
storybook
If you are using a different config directory path, you could change it like this:
import initStoryshots from '@storybook/addon-storyshots';
initStoryshots({
configPath: '.my-storybook-config-dir',
});
Or, as a more complex example, if we have a package in our lerna
project called app
with the path ./packages/app/src/__tests__/storyshots.js
and the storybook config directory ./packages/app/.storybook
:
import path from 'path';
import initStoryshots from '@storybook/addon-storyshots';
initStoryshots({ configPath: path.resolve(__dirname, '../../.storybook') });
configPath
can also specify path to the preview.js
itself. In this case, config directory will be
a base directory of the configPath
. It may be useful when the preview.js
for test should differ from the
original one. It also may be useful for separating tests to different test configs:
initStoryshots({
configPath: '.my-storybook-config-dir/testConfig1.js',
});
initStoryshots({
configPath: '.my-storybook-config-dir/testConfig2.js',
});
By default, Storyshots groups stories inside a Jest test suite called "Storyshots". You could change it like this:
import initStoryshots from '@storybook/addon-storyshots';
initStoryshots({
suite: 'MyStoryshots',
});
If you'd like to only run a subset of the stories for your snapshot tests based on the story's kind:
import initStoryshots from '@storybook/addon-storyshots';
initStoryshots({
storyKindRegex: /^MyComponent$/,
});
This can be useful if you want to separate the snapshots in directories next to each component. See an example here.
If you want to run all stories except stories of a specific kind, you can write an inverse regex which is true for all kinds except those with a specific word such as DontTest
import initStoryshots from '@storybook/addon-storyshots';
initStoryshots({
storyKindRegex: /^((?!.*?DontTest).)*$/,
});
This can be useful while testing react components which make use of the findDomNode API since they always fail with snapshot testing while using react-test-renderer see here
If you'd like to only run a subset of the stories for your snapshot tests based on the story's name:
import initStoryshots from '@storybook/addon-storyshots';
initStoryshots({
storyNameRegex: /buttons/,
});
If you are running tests from outside of your app's directory, storyshots' detection of which framework you are using may fail. Pass "react"
or "react-native"
to short-circuit this.
Run a custom test function for each story, rather than the default (a vanilla snapshot test).
Setting test
will take precedence over the renderer
option.
You can still overwrite what renderer is used for the test function:
import initStoryshots, { renderWithOptions } from '@storybook/addon-storyshots';
import { mount } from 'enzyme';
initStoryshots({
test: renderWithOptions({
renderer: mount,
}),
});
Pass a custom renderer (such as enzymes mount
) to record snapshots.
This may be necessary if you want to use React features that are not supported by the default test renderer,
such as ref or Portals.
Note that setting test
overrides renderer
.
import initStoryshots from '@storybook/addon-storyshots';
import { mount } from 'enzyme';
initStoryshots({
renderer: mount,
});
If you are using enzyme, you need to make sure jest knows how to serialize rendered components.
For that, you can pass an enzyme-compatible snapshotSerializer (like enzyme-to-json, jest-serializer-enzyme etc.) with the snapshotSerializer
option (see below).
Pass an array of snapshotSerializers to the jest runtime that serializes your story (such as enzyme-to-json).
import initStoryshots from '@storybook/addon-storyshots';
import { createSerializer } from 'enzyme-to-json';
initStoryshots({
renderer: mount,
snapshotSerializers: [createSerializer()],
});
This option needs to be set if either:
- the multiSnapshot function is used to create multiple snapshot files (i.e. one per story), since it ignores any serializers specified in your jest config.
- serializers not specified in your jest config should be used when snapshotting stories.
Pass a custom serializer (such as enzyme-to-json) to serialize components to snapshot-comparable data. The functionality of this option is completely covered by snapshotSerializers which should be used instead.
import initStoryshots from '@storybook/addon-storyshots';
import toJSON from 'enzyme-to-json';
initStoryshots({
renderer: mount,
serializer: toJSON,
});
This option only needs to be set if the default snapshotSerializers
is not set in your jest config.
This parameter should be an instance of the Stories2SnapsConverter
(or a derived from it) Class that is used to convert story-file name to snapshot-file name and vice versa.
By default, the instance of this class is created with these default options:
{
snapshotsDirName: '__snapshots__',
snapshotExtension: '.storyshot',
storiesExtensions: ['.js', '.jsx', '.ts', '.tsx'],
}
This class might be overridden to extend the existing conversion functionality or instantiated to provide different options:
import initStoryshots, { Stories2SnapsConverter } from '@storybook/addon-storyshots';
initStoryshots({
stories2snapsConverter: new Stories2SnapsConverter({
snapshotExtension: '.storypuke',
storiesExtensions: ['.foo'],
}),
});
Apart from the default export (initStoryshots
), Storyshots also exports some named test functions (see the test
option above):
The default, render the story as normal and take a Jest snapshot.
Just render the story, don't check the output at all. This is useful as a low-effort way of smoke testing your components to ensure they do not error.
Like the default, but allows you to specify a set of options for the test renderer. See for example here.
Like the default, but allows you to specify a set of options for the renderer, just like snapshotWithOptions
.
Like snapshotWithOptions
, but generate a separate snapshot file for each stories file rather than a single monolithic file (as is the convention in Jest). This makes it dramatically easier to review changes. If you'd like the benefit of separate snapshot files, but don't have custom options to pass, you can pass an empty object.
If you use Component Story Format, you may also need to add an additional Jest transform to automate detecting story file names:
// jest.config.js
module.exports = {
transform: {
'^.+\\.stories\\.jsx?$': '@storybook/addon-storyshots/injectFileName',
'^.+\\.jsx?$': 'babel-jest',
},
};
This option is useful when running test with multiSnapshotWithOptions(options)
in order to track snapshots are matching the stories. (disabled by default).
The value is a settings to a glob
object, that searches for the snapshot files.
initStoryshots({
integrityOptions: { cwd: __dirname }, // it will start searching from the current directory
test: multiSnapshotWithOptions(),
});
Take a snapshot of a shallow-rendered version of the component. Note that this option will be overridden if you pass a renderer
option.
This is a class that generates snapshot's name based on the story (kind, story & filename) and vice versa.
Let's say we wanted to create a test function for shallow && multi-file snapshots:
import initStoryshots, { Stories2SnapsConverter } from '@storybook/addon-storyshots';
import { shallow } from 'enzyme';
import toJson from 'enzyme-to-json';
const converter = new Stories2SnapsConverter();
initStoryshots({
test: ({ story, context }) => {
const snapshotFileName = converter.getSnapshotFileName(context);
const storyElement = story.render();
const shallowTree = shallow(storyElement);
if (snapshotFileName) {
expect(toJson(shallowTree)).toMatchSpecificSnapshot(snapshotFileName);
}
},
});
Enables Jest done()
callback in the StoryShots tests for async testing. See StoryShots for async rendered components for more info.
Some stories are difficult or impossible to snapshot, such as those covering components that use external DOM-modifying libraries, and those that deliberately throw errors. It is possible to skip stories like these by giving them a parameter of storyshots: {disable: true}
. There is also a shorthand for this, storyshots: false
.
export const Exception = () => {
throw new Error('storyFn threw an error! WHOOPS');
};
Exception.storyName = 'story throws exception';
Exception.parameters = {
storyshots: { disable: true },
};