Jest matcher that performs image comparisons using pixelmatch and behaves just like Jest snapshots do! Very useful for visual regression testing.
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?
Send your resume to oneamex.careers@aexp.com
- Take image snapshots of your React components
- Ability to compare snapshots from a baseline
- Update snapshots when you're good with changes
- Customize a difference threshold
- Add a Gaussian blur for noise
- Adjust the diff layout horizontal vs vertical
Given an image (Buffer instance with PNG image data) the toMatchImageSnapshot()
matcher will create a __image_snapshots__
directory in the directory the test is in and will store the baseline snapshot image there on the first run. Note that if customSnapshotsDir
option is given then it will store baseline snapshot there instead.
On subsequent test runs the matcher will compare the image being passed against the stored snapshot.
To update the stored image snapshot run Jest with --updateSnapshot
or -u
argument. All this works the same way as Jest snapshots.
Typically this matcher is used to for visual tests that run on a browser. For example let's say I finish working on a feature and want to write a test to prevent visual regressions:
...
it('renders correctly', async () => {
const page = await browser.newPage();
await page.goto('https://localhost:3000');
const image = await page.screenshot();
expect(image).toMatchImageSnapshot();
});
...
Then after a few days as I finish adding another feature to my component I notice one of my tests failing!
Oh no! I must have introduced a regression! Let's see what the diff looks like to identify what I need to fix:
And now that I know that I broke the card art I can fix it!
Thanks jest-image-snapshot
, that broken header would not have looked good in production!
npm i --save-dev jest-image-snapshot
Please note that Jest
>=20 <=24
is a peerDependency. jest-image-snapshot
will not work with anything below Jest 20.x.x
- Extend Jest's
expect
const { toMatchImageSnapshot } = require('jest-image-snapshot');
expect.extend({ toMatchImageSnapshot });
- Use
toMatchImageSnapshot()
in your tests!
it('should demonstrate this matcher`s usage', () => {
...
expect(image).toMatchImageSnapshot();
});
See the examples for more detailed usage or read about an example use case in the American Express Technology Blog
toMatchImageSnapshot()
takes an optional options object with the following properties:
customDiffConfig
: Custom config passed to pixelmatch (See options section)- By default we have set the
threshold
to 0.01, you can increase that value by passing a customDiffConfig as demonstrated below. - Please note the
threshold
set in thecustomDiffConfig
is the per pixel sensitivity threshold. For example with a source pixel colour of#ffffff
(white) and a comparison pixel colour of#fcfcfc
(really light grey) if you set the threshold to 0 then it would trigger a failure on that pixel. However if you were to use say 0.5 then it wouldn't, the colour difference would need to be much more extreme to trigger a failure on that pixel, say#000000
(black)
- By default we have set the
customSnapshotsDir
: A custom absolute path of a directory to keep this snapshot incustomDiffDir
: A custom absolute path of a directory to keep this diff incustomSnapshotIdentifier
: A custom name to give this snapshot. If not provided one is computed automatically. When a function is provided it is called with an object containingtestPath
,currentTestName
,counter
anddefaultIdentifier
as its first argument. The function must return an identifier to use for the snapshot.diffDirection
: (default:horizontal
) (optionshorizontal
orvertical
) Changes diff image layout directionnoColors
: (defaultfalse
) Removes coloring from console output, useful if storing the results in a filefailureThreshold
: (default0
) Sets the threshold that would trigger a test failure based on thefailureThresholdType
selected. This is different to thecustomDiffConfig.threshold
above, that is the per pixel failure threshold, this is the failure threshold for the entire comparison.failureThresholdType
: (defaultpixel
) (optionspercent
orpixel
) Sets the type of threshold that would trigger a failure.updatePassedSnapshot
: (defaultfalse
) Updates a snapshot even if it passed the threshold against the existing one.blur
: (default0
) Applies Gaussian Blur on compared images, accepts radius in pixels as value. Useful when you have noise after scaling images per different resolutions on your target website, usually setting it's value to 1-2 should be enough to solve that problem.runInProcess
: (defaultfalse
) Runs the diff in process without spawning a child process.
it('should demonstrate this matcher`s usage with a custom pixelmatch config', () => {
...
const customConfig = { threshold: 0.5 };
expect(image).toMatchImageSnapshot({
customDiffConfig: customConfig,
customSnapshotIdentifier: 'customSnapshotName',
noColors: true
});
});
The failure threshold can be set in percent, in this case if the difference is over 1%.
it('should fail if there is more than a 1% difference', () => {
...
expect(image).toMatchImageSnapshot({
failureThreshold: 0.01,
failureThresholdType: 'percent'
});
});
Custom defaults can be set with a configurable extension. This will allow for customization of this module's defaults. For example, a 0% default threshold can be shared across all tests with the configuration below:
const { configureToMatchImageSnapshot } = require('jest-image-snapshot');
const customConfig = { threshold: 0 };
const toMatchImageSnapshot = configureToMatchImageSnapshot({
customDiffConfig: customConfig,
noColors: true,
});
expect.extend({ toMatchImageSnapshot });
Jest supports automatic retries on test failures. This can be useful for browser screenshot tests which tend to have more frequent false positives. Note that when using jest.retryTimes you'll have to use a unique customSnapshotIdentifier as that's the only way to reliably identify snapshots.
Example Image Upload Test Reporter
If you are using jest-image-snapshot in an ephemeral environment (like a Continuous Integration server) where the file system does not persist, you might want a way to retrieve those images for diagnostics or historical reference. This example shows how to use a custom Jest Reporter that will run after every test, and if there were any images created because they failed the diff test, upload those images to an AWS S3 bucket.
To enable this image reporter, add it to your jest.config.js
"reporters" definition:
"reporters": [ "default", "<rootDir>/image-reporter.js" ]
In TypeScript, you can declare toMatchImageSnapshot
like this:
declare global {
namespace jest {
interface Matchers<R> {
toMatchImageSnapshot(): R
}
}
}
Ignoring parts of the image snapshot if using Puppeteer
If you want to to ignore parts of the snapshot (for example some banners or other dynamic blocks) you can find DOM elements with Puppeteer and remove/modify them (setting visibility: hidden on block, if removing it breaks your layout, should help):
async function removeBanners(page){
await page.evaluate(() => {
(document.querySelectorAll('.banner') || []).forEach(el => el.remove());
});
}
...
it('renders correctly', async () => {
const page = await browser.newPage();
await page.goto('https://localhost:3000');
await removeBanners(page);
const image = await page.screenshot();
expect(image).toMatchImageSnapshot();
});
...
npm run lint
Verifies that your code matches the American Express code style defined in eslint-config-amex
.
npm test
Runs unit tests and verifies the format of all commit messages on the current branch.
npm posttest
Runs linting on the current branch.
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