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@applitools/eyes-storybook

Applitools Eyes SDK for [Storybook](http://storybook.js.org).

  • 3.22.1
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Eyes-Storybook

Applitools Eyes SDK for Storybook.

Table of contents

Installation

Install npm package

Install Eyes-Storybook as a local dev dependency in your tested project:

npm install --save-dev @applitools/eyes-storybook

Applitools API key

In order to authenticate via the Applitools server, you need to supply the Eyes-Storybook SDK with the API key you got from Applitools. Read more about how to obtain the API key here.

To do this, set the environment variable APPLITOOLS_API_KEY to the API key before running your tests. For example, on Linux/Mac:

export APPLITOOLS_API_KEY=<your_key>

And on Windows:

set APPLITOOLS_API_KEY=<your_key>

Usage

After completing the installation and defining the API key, you will be able to run Eyes-Storybook from the command line and let it take screenshots of all your stories.

If your project is using the default storybook config folder (i.e. <project_folder>/.storybook), then run the following command:

npx eyes-storybook

Configuring local storybook server

Normally, Eyes-Storybook starts a storybook dev server in an available port between 9000-9010 for the duration of the tests. It's possible to pass arguments to Eyes-Storybook to configure the local storybook server:

  • --storybook-port OR -p: Port to run storybook (passed as -p to start-storybook).
  • --storybook-host OR -h: Host to run storybook (passed as -h to start-storybook).
  • --storybook-config-dir OR -c: Directory where to load Storybook configurations from (passed as -c to start-storybook)
  • --storybook-static-dir OR -s: Directory where to load static files from, comma-separated list (passed as -s to start-storybook)

Standalone server

As noted in the previous section, Eyes-Storybook starts a storybook dev server. If you wish to start the server outside of Eyes-Storybook, or test a production build that's available at a certain URL, then just specify the URL for the storybook in the command line (or in the configuration file, see Advanced configuration below).

For example:

npx eyes-storybook -u http://localhost:6006

Or for a production storybook:

npx eyes-storybook -u http://react.carbondesignsystem.com/

Command line arguments

The full list of command line arguments can be viewed by running npx eyes-storybook --help:

Usage: eyes-storybook.js [options]

Options:
  --help                                            Show help                                                                       [boolean]
  --version, -v                                     Show the version number                                                         [boolean]
  --conf, -f                                        Path to applitools.config.js config file                                         [string]
  --storybook-url, -u                               URL to storybook                                                                 [string]
  --storybookPort, -p, --storybook-port             Port to run Storybook                                                            [number]
  --storybookHost, -h, --storybook-host             Host to run Storybook                                                            [string]
  --storybookConfigDir, -c, --storybook-config-dir  Path to Storybook's config folder (defaults to .storybook)                       [string]
  --storybookStaticDir, --storybook-static-dir      Path to Storybook's static files folder                                          [string]
  --showStorybookOutput, --show-storybook-output    Whether or not you want to see Storybook output                                 [boolean]
  --readStoriesTimeout, --read-stories-timeout      The time to wait until all stories are read, before starting the visual tests    [number]
  --exitcode, -e                                    If tests failed close with non-zero exit code                                   [boolean]

Concurrency

The default level of concurrency for free accounts is 5. This means that only up to 5 visual tests can run in parallel, and therefore the execution might be slow. If your account does support a higher level of concurrency, it's possible to pass a different value by specifying it in the property testConcurrency in the applitools.config.js file (see Advanced configuration section below).

If you are interested in speeding up your visual tests, contact sdr@applitools.com to get a trial account and faster tests with more concurrency.

Advanced configuration

In addition to command-line arguments, it's possible to define the following configuration parameteres for tests by using environment variables or the applitools.config.js file:

Property nameDefault valueDescription
storybookUrlundefinedURL to storybook (also available as command-line argument).
storybookPort9000Port to run Storybook (also available as command-line argument).
storybookHostlocalhostHost to run Storybook (also available as command-line argument).
storybookConfigDir.storybookPath to Storybook's config folder (also available as command-line argument).
storybookStaticDirundefinedPath to Storybook's static files folder (also available as command-line argument).
showStorybookOutputundefinedWhether or not you want to see Storybook output (also available as command-line argument).
viewportSize{ width: 1024, height: 600}The size of the puppeteer browser's window. This is the browser window which renders the stories originally (and opens at the size provided in the viewportSize parameter), and then a DOM snapshot is uploaded to the server, which renders this snapshot on all the browsers and sizes provided in the browser parameter.
exitcodefalseIf tests failed close with non-zero exit code (also available as command-line argument).
browser{ width: 800, height: 600, name: 'chrome' }The size and browser of the generated screenshots. For more info and possible values, see the browser section below.
showLogsfalseWhether or not you want to see logs of the Eyes-Storybook plugin.
batchIdrandomProvides ability to group tests into batches. Read more about batches here.
batchNameundefinedProvides a name to the batch.
batchSequenceNameundefinedName for managing batch statistics.
baselineEnvNameundefinedThe name of the environment of the baseline.
envNameundefinedA name for the environment in which the application under test is running.
ignoreCaretfalseWhether to ignore or the blinking caret or not when comparing images.
matchLevelundefinedThe test-wide match level to use when checking application screenshot with the expected output. Possible values are Strict, Exact, Layout and Content. Read more about match levels here.
branchNameundefinedThe name of the branch.
baselineBranchNameundefinedThe name of the baseline branch.
parentBranchNameundefinedSets the branch under which new branches are created.
proxyundefinedSets the proxy settings to be used in network requests to Eyes server. This can be either a string to the proxy URI, or an object containing the URI, username and password.

For example:
{url: 'https://myproxy.com:443', username: 'my_user', password: 'my_password', isHttpOnly: false}
or:
"https://username:password@myproxy.com:443"
saveFailedTestsfalseSet whether or not failed tests are saved by default (saved as baseline).
saveNewTeststrueSet whether or not new tests are saved by default (saved as baseline).
serverUrlDefault Eyes server URLThe URL of Eyes server
compareWithParentBranchfalse
ignoreBaselinefalse
runInDockerfalseIf you are having issues running the SDK in docker, set this flag to true. See more info below
puppeteerOptionsundefinedOptions to send to puppeteer.launch. This is a low-level configuration and should be used with great care. Example use { args: ['--no-sandbox'], headless: false, devtools: true}
jsonFilePathundefinedDirectory path of a results file. If set, then a JSON file is created in this directory, the file is created with the name eyes.json and contains the Eyes test results.
tapFilePathundefinedDirectory path of a results file. If set, then a TAP file is created in this directory, the file is created with the name eyes.tap and contains the Eyes test results.
xmlFilePathundefinedDirectory path of a results file. If set, then a XUnit XML file is created in this directory, the file is created with the name eyes.xml and contains the Eyes test results.
waitBeforeScreenshotundefinedSelector, function or timeout.
If number then the argument is treated as time in milliseconds to wait before all screenshots.
If string then the argument is treated as a selector for elements to wait for before all screenshots.
If function, then the argument is treated as a predicate to wait for before all screenshots.

For per component configuration see waitBeforeScreenshot.
Note that we use Puppeteer's page.waitFor(), checkout it's API for more details.
includetrueA predicate function, a string or a regular expression specifying which stories should be visually tested.
Visual baselines will be created only for the components specified.
The function receives an object with name, kind, storyTitle and parameters properties.
For example (exclude all stories with a name that start with [SKIP]):
({name, kind, storyTitle, parameters}) => !/^\[SKIP\]/.test(name)
For more information, see per component configuration - include.
variationsundefinedSpecifies additional variations for all or some of the stories. For example, RTL. For more information, see per component configuration - variations.
notifyOnCompletionfalseIf true batch completion notifications are sent.
dontCloseBatchesfalseIf true, batches are not closed for notifyOnCompletion.
testConcurrency5The maximum number of tests that can run concurrently. The default value is the allowed amount for free accounts. For paid accounts, set this number to the quota set for your account.
readStoriesTimeout60000The amount of time (in milliseconds) Eyes-Storybook waits for storybook to load. For old storybook versions 2 and 3, this is also the time it takes for Eyes-Storybook to acknowledge it is working on those versions. So it is recommended to make this value small (e.g. 3000) when working with Storybook version 2 or 3.
ignoreDisplacementsfalseSets whether Test Manager should intially display mismatches for image features that have only been displaced, as opposed to real mismatches. This can also be specified per-story, see per component configuration - ignoreDisplacements
propertiesundefinedAdds custom properties for each test. These show up in Test Manager, and tests can be grouped by custom properties. By default, Eyes-Storybook adds 2 custom properties for each test: the Component name and State of each component. Adding more properties via this config param will not override these two properties.
ignoreRegionsundefinedAn array of regions to ignore when comparing the checkpoint screenshot with the baseline screenshot. For more information, see per component configuration - ignoreRegions
floatingRegionsundefinedAn array of regions to consider as floating when comparing the checkpoint screenshot with the baseline screenshot. For more information, see per component configuration - floatingRegions
layoutRegionsundefinedAn array of regions to consider as match level Layout when comparing the checkpoint screenshot with the baseline screenshot. For more information, see per component configuration - layoutRegions
strictRegionsundefinedAn array of regions to consider as match level Strict when comparing the checkpoint screenshot with the baseline screenshot. For more information, see per component configuration - strictRegions
contentRegionsundefinedAn array of regions to consider as match level Content when comparing the checkpoint screenshot with the baseline screenshot. For more information, see per component configuration - contentRegions
accessibilityRegionsundefinedAn array of regions to validate accessibility when comparing the checkpoint screenshot with the baseline screenshot. Validation is according to the configured accessibilityValidation. For more information, see per component configuration - contentRegions
accessibilityValidationundefinedAn object that specifies the accessibility level and guidelines version to use for the screenshots. Possible values for level are None, AA and AAA, and possible values for guidelinesVersion are WCAG_2_0 and WCAG_2_1. For example: {level: 'AA', guidelinesVersion: 'WCAG_2_0'}. For more information, see per component configuration - accessibilityValidation
enablePatternsfalse
useDomfalse
layoutBreakpointsundefinedWhen set to true, a snapshot of the DOM will be taken once for each browser/device size in the browser configuration. For optimization purposes, an array of numbers can be passed. The DOM snapshot will be taken once for every width in the array. For more information, see per component configuration - layoutBreakpoints

There are 2 ways to specify test configuration:

  1. Environment variables
  2. The applitools.config.js file

The list above is also the order of precedence, which means that if you specify a property as an environment variable, it will override the value defined for the same property in the applitools.config.js file.

Method 1: Environment variables

The name of the corresponding environment variable is in uppercase, with the APPLITOOLS_ prefix, and separating underscores instead of camel case:

APPLITOOLS_APP_NAME
APPLITOOLS_SHOW_LOGS
APPLITOOLS_BATCH_ID
APPLITOOLS_BATCH_NAME
APPLITOOLS_BATCH_SEQUENCE_NAME
APPLITOOLS_PROXY
APPLITOOLS_NOTIFY_ON_COMPLETION
...
// all other configuration variables apply as well..

Method 2: The applitools.config.js file

It's possible to have a file called applitools.config.js at the current working directory (the directory you are at when running the eyes-storybook script). In this file specify the desired configuration, as an exported CommonJS module. For example:

module.exports = {
  appName: 'My app',
  showLogs: true,
  batchName: 'My batch'
  ...
  // all other configuration variables apply
}

Configuring the browser

Eyes-Storybook will take a screenshot of the page as specified in the browser configuration parameter.

Possible values are:

  • chrome
  • firefox
  • edgechromium
  • edgelegacy
  • ie10
  • ie11
  • safari
  • chrome-one-version-back
  • chrome-two-versions-back
  • firefox-one-version-back
  • firefox-two-versions-back
  • safari-one-version-back
  • safari-two-versions-back
  • edgechromium-one-version-back
  • edgechromium-two-versions-back

Previous browser versions

*-one-version-back and *-two-versions-back are relative to the version of the same browser. For example, if chrome refers to version 79, then chrome-one-version-back will be Chrome 78 and chrome-two-versions-back will be Chrome 77.

Getting a screenshot of multiple browsers in parallel

It's also possible to send an array of browsers, for example in the applitools.config.js file:

module.exports = {
  browser: [
    {width: 800, height: 600, name: 'firefox'},
    {width: 1024, height: 768, name: 'chrome'},
    {width: 1024, height: 768, name: 'ie11'}
  ]
}

Device emulation

To enable chrome's device emulation, it's possible to send a device name and screen orientation, for example:

module.exports = {
  browser: {
    deviceName: 'iPhone X',
    screenOrientation: 'landscape',
    name: 'chrome' // optional, just to make it explicit this is browser emulation and not a real device. Only chrome is supported for device emulation.
  }
}

Possible values for screen orientation are landscape and portrait, and if no value is specified, the default is portrait.

The list of device names is available at https://github.com/applitools/eyes.sdk.javascript1/blob/master/packages/eyes-sdk-core/lib/config/DeviceName.js

In addition, it's possible to use chrome's device emulation with custom viewport sizes, pixel density and mobile mode, by passing deviceScaleFactor and mobile in addition to width and height. For example:

module.exports = {
  browser: {
    width: 800,
    height: 600,
    deviceScaleFactor: 3,
    mobile: true,
    name: 'chrome' // optional, just to make it explicit this is browser emulation and not a real device. Only chrome is supported for device emulation.
  }
}

iOS device

module.exports = {
  browser: {
    iosDeviceInfo: {
      deviceName: 'iPhone XR',
      screenOrientation: 'landscape', // optional, default: 'portrait'
      iosVersion: 'latest' // optional, default: undefined (i.e. the default is determined by the Ultrafast grid)
    },
  }
}

The list of devices is available at https://github.com/applitools/eyes.sdk.javascript1/blob/master/packages/eyes-sdk-core/lib/config/IosDeviceName.js

Possible values for iosVersion are:

  • 'latest' - the latest iOS version that's supported by the UFG
  • 'latest-1' - one version prior to the latest version
  • undefined - the UFG's default

Faking IE Browser

Some pages render differently on Internet Explorer and as such, it may be important to take the dom-snapshot while running on a fake IE browser using the ultrafast grid.

Using the fakeIE flag - you can render the stories on a chrome masquerading as IE.

We do this by simulating the userAgent and documentMode of the page - making the page believe it is being rendered on IE.

There is a small performance impact when using fake IE tests - since the browser needs to fake IE for each story it renders.

Per component configuration

Only supported in Storybook version >= 4

There are two ways to provide configuration for a specific story, or a group of stories.

  1. As an argument to the story - It's possible to pass a third argument to storybook's .add function to customize each story. An eyes property on the parameters object can be specified with configuration properties.

  2. In the global configuration file, applitools.config.js - If a function is specified for one of the properties below, it will be called for each story, and will be passed the story's metadata, of the structure {name, kind, parameters}, where name is the name of the component, kind is the string built by storybook for the category, e.g. Forms|Input/Text, and parameters are the third argument to storybook's .add function. The function should return the configuration value for the specific property+story.

Specifying a value locally in the story takes precedence over the global config value.

The following properties are supported:

include

global

When provided globally, include is a function that receives the story's kind and name, storyTitle and parameters. All these properties except storyTitle come from storybook and they represent the hierarchy of the stories:

  • kind - The stories directory and section, where applicable. Nested directory structures are allowed in storybook. These will be suffixed by /, while a section - that can hold many directories will be suffixed with a |. For example:
    • Story named Button in the Components directory - its kind will be Components.
    • Story named Button in the Components directory under the App section - its kind will be App|Components.
    • Story named RadioButton in the Radio subdirectory of the Components directory under the App section - its kind will be App|Components/Radio.
  • name - the story name. For example:
    • Story named Button in the Components directory - its name will be Button.
  • parameters - custom parameters that can specified in the story.

storyTitle is generated by the SDK and is used as the test name. Therefore it is easy to find and filter by it.

More information can be found in the Storybook docs - Naming components and hierarchy.

You can filter by kind, name, storyTitle, parameters, a combination of them or any logic that will result in a boolean. For example:

// applitools.config.js
module.exports = {
  ...
  // given the example above
  // visually test only the stories in the 'Radio' subdirectory
  include: ({kind}) => {
    return kind === 'App|Components/Radio'
  }
  ...
}

When passing a storyTitle as a string only this story will be tested. For example:

module.exports = {
...
include: "Button: with text",
...
}

When passing a storyTitle as a Regex only matching stories will be tested. For example:

module.exports = {
...
include: /Button: */,
...
}

NOTE you can use regular expressions or any other method you'd like, as long as you return a boolean from this function

component

When false, the component will not be visually tested. For example:

// This story will not be tested visually
storiesOf('Some kind', module)
  .add(
    'Some story',
    () => <div>I am visually perfect!</div>,
    {eyes: {include: false}}
  )

variations

An array of string values, which specifies which variations to add for this story. For each value, an additional visual test will be executed for the component. It will have the same name only with a [<variation name>] suffix, and when the component is loaded, the URL will have an additional param: eyes-variation=<variation name>.

This can accommodate many use cases, for example RTL (right to left). It's now possible for the component to render its variation version when the relevant URL param is present. For Example, here's a storybook that handles an RTL variation:

const isRTL = new URL(window.location).searchParams.get('eyes-variation') === 'RTL';

if (isRTL) {
  document.documentElement.setAttribute('dir', 'rtl')
}

// 2 visual tests will be created - one for LTR and one for RTL
storiesOf('Components that support RTL', module)
  .add(
    'Some story',
    () => <div>
        <span>I am visually perfect!</span>
        <span>{isRTL ? ' and rendered right to left as well :)' : ''}</span>
      </div>,
    {eyes: {variations: ['RTL']}}
  )

waitBeforeScreenshot

Selector or timeout, see advanced configuration for more details.

storiesOf('Components with a waitBeforeScreenshot', module)
  .add(
    'Some story',
    () => <span id="container" class="loading"></span>,
    {eyes: { waitBeforeScreenshot: '#container.ready' }}
  );

Note that the predicate option for waitBeforeScreenshot is currently not available in the per component configuration.

properties

Adds custom properties for each test. These show up in Test Manager, and tests can be grouped by custom properties. By default, Eyes-Storybook adds 2 custom properties for each test: the Component name and State of each component. Adding more properties via this config param will not override these two properties.

For example:

storiesOf('Components with custom properties', module)
  .add(
    'Some story',
    () => <span id="container" class="loading"></span>,
    {eyes: { properties: [
      {name: 'some prop #1', value: 'some value #1'},
      {name: 'some prop #2', value: 'some value #2'},
    ] }}
  );

ignoreRegions

A single or an array of regions to ignore when checking for visual differences. For example:

storiesOf('Components with ignored region', module)
  .add(
    'Some story',
    () =>
      <div>
        <span>I am visually perfect!</span>
        <span className="ignore-this">this should be ignored</span>
      </div>,
    {eyes: {
      ignoreRegions: [
        {selector: '.ignore-this'}, // by css selector
        {left: 10, top: 20, width: 200, height: 80} // by absolute coordinates
      ]}
    }
  )

floatingRegions

An array of regions to consider as floating when comparing the checkpoint screenshot with the baseline screenshot. For example:

storiesOf('Components with floating region', module)
  .add(
    'Some story',
    () =>
      <div>
        <span>I am visually perfect!</span>
        <span className="floating-region">this should be floating</span>
      </div>,
    {eyes: {
      floatingRegions: [
        { // by selector
          selector: '.floating-region',
          maxUpOffset: 10,
          maxDownOffset: 20,
          maxLeftOffset: 30,
          maxRightOffset: 40,
        },
        { // by absolute coordinates
          left: 10,
          top: 20,
          width: 200,
          height: 80,
          maxUpOffset: 10,
          maxDownOffset: 20,
          maxLeftOffset: 30,
          maxRightOffset: 40,
        }
      ]}
    }
  )

layoutRegions

An array of regions to consider as match level Layout when comparing the checkpoint screenshot with the baseline screenshot. For example:

storiesOf('Components with layout region', module)
  .add(
    'Some story',
    () =>
      <div>
        <span>I am visually perfect!</span>
        <span className="layout-region">this should be compared with layout match level</span>
      </div>,
    {eyes: {
      layoutRegions: [
        {selector: '.layout-region'}, // by css selector
        {left: 10, top: 20, width: 200, height: 80} // by absolute coordinates
      ]}
    }
  )

contentRegions

An array of regions to consider as match level Content when comparing the checkpoint screenshot with the baseline screenshot. For example:

storiesOf('Components with content region', module)
  .add(
    'Some story',
    () =>
      <div>
        <span>I am visually perfect!</span>
        <span className="content-region">this should be compared with content match level</span>
      </div>,
    {eyes: {
      contentRegions: [
        {selector: '.content-region'}, // by css selector
        {left: 10, top: 20, width: 200, height: 80} // by absolute coordinates
      ]}
    }
  )

strictRegions

An array of regions to consider as match level Strict when comparing the checkpoint screenshot with the baseline screenshot. For example:

storiesOf('Components with strict region', module)
  .add(
    'Some story',
    () =>
      <div>
        <span>I am visually perfect!</span>
        <span className="strict-region">this should be compared with strict match level</span>
      </div>,
    {eyes: {
      strictRegions: [
        {selector: '.strict-region'}, // by css selector
        {left: 10, top: 20, width: 200, height: 80} // by absolute coordinates
      ]}
    }
  )

accessibilityRegions

A single or an array of regions for accessibility checking. For example:

storiesOf('Components with accessibility regions', module)
  .add(
    'Some story',
    () =>
      <div>
        <span>I am visually perfect!</span>
        <span className="check-me">this should be tested for accessibility</span>
      </div>,
    {eyes: {
      accessibilityRegions: [
        {accessibilityType: 'RegularText', selector: '.check-me'}, // by css selector
        {accessibilityType: 'RegularText', left: 10, top: 20, width: 200, height: 80} // by absolute coordinates
      ]
    }}
  )
});

Possible accessibilityType values are: IgnoreContrast,RegularText,LargeText,BoldText and GraphicalObject.

accessibilityValidation

The level and guidelines version that should be used when validation accesibility regions. For example:

storiesOf('Components with accessibility regions', module)
  .add(
    'Some story',
    () => <div>
      <span>I am visually perfect!</span>
      <span className="check-me">this should be tested for accessibility</span>
    </div>,
    {eyes: {
      accessibilityValidation: {
        level: 'AA',
        guidelinesVersion: 'WCAG_2_0'
      }
    }}
  )
});

Possible values for level are: AA and AAA. Possible values for guidelinesVersion are: WCAG_2_0 and WCAG_2_1.

ignoreDisplacements

Sets whether Test Manager should intially display mismatches for image features that have only been displaced, as opposed to real mismatches. For example:

storiesOf('Components with ignoreDisplacements', module)
  .add(
    'Some story',
    () => <div>
      <span>I am visually perfect!</span>
    </div>,
    {eyes: {
      ignoreDisplacements: true
    }}
  )
});

Parameters that cannot be set as an Advanced configuration

runBefore

An asynchronous function that will be evaluated before the story's screenshot is taken. This is the place to perform any interaction with the story using DOM API's.

For performing various DOM interactions, we recommend checking out dom-testing-library. It provides utilities to interact, query and wait for conditions on the DOM.

For example, a component that renders a popover could trigger the opening of the popover and wait for content to appear:

// these are utilities from dom-testing-library
import {wait, within, fireEvent} from '@testing-library/dom';

// <Popover /> is a component in your UI library.
// The assumption in this example is that it is opened by an element with the text 'Open',
// and then that element's text changes to 'Close':
storiesOf('UI components', module)
  .add('Popover', () => <Popover />, {
    eyes: {
      runBefore({rootEl, story}) {
        fireEvent.click(within(rootEl).getByText('Open'))
        return wait(() => within(rootEl).getByText('Close'))
      }
    },
  })

runAfter

An asynchronous function that is evaluated after the story's screenshot is taken. This is the place to perform any clean ups that could change the way the next story renders.

For example, reverting back to the original background color that was changed by a previous component:

.add('background color', () => (
  <div style={{fontSize: '30px'}}>Component with runBefore hook that modifies the background color</div>
  ), {
  eyes: {
    runBefore({rootEl, story}) {
     window.originalBackgoundColor = document.querySelector("html").style.backgroundColor;
     document.querySelector("html").style.backgroundColor = 'fuchsia';
    },
    runAfter({rootEl, story}){
     document.querySelector("html").style.backgroundColor = window.originalBackgoundColor;
     delete window.originalBackgoundColor;
    }
  }
})

scriptHooks

A set of scripts to be run by the browser during the rendering. It is intended to be used as a means to alter the page's state and structure at the time of rendering. An object with the following properties:

beforeCaptureScreenshot

A script that runs after the page is loaded but before taking the screenshot. For example:

storiesOf('Components', module)
  .add(
    'Some story',
    () =>
      <div>Some Story</div>, { 
        eyes: { 
          scriptHooks: {
            beforeCaptureScreenshot: "document.body.style.backgroundColor = 'gold'"
          }
        }
      })

layoutBreakpoints

  storiesOf('Components', module)
    .add(
      'Some story with breakpoints for all browser and device sizes',
      () =>
        <div>Some Story</div>, { 
          eyes: { 
            layoutBreakpoints: true
          }
        })
    .add(
      'Some story with breakpoints for desktop and mobile',
      () =>
        <div>Some Story</div>, { 
          eyes: { 
            layoutBreakpoints: [500, 1200]
          }
        })

Running Eyes-Storybook in Docker

When running the SDK in docker, there might be issues related to properly launching the internal chrome browser via puppeteer. If you seem to have such issues, set runInDocker: true in your config file. This will pass the internal chrome browser special arguments, as described here.

If you still have issues, you might need to follow the instructions to use your own chromium browser in the docker container, and point that to the SDK's puppeteer. Follow the instructions here and set the executablePath via the puppeteerOptions. For example, applitools.config.js:

module.exports = {
  puppeteerOptions: {
    executablePath: '/usr/bin/chromium-browser'
  }
}

Dealing with dynamic data

Sometimes components render dynamic data, such as dates, or random data. This creates a challenge when testing these components. The way we recommend to address this issue is to insert code into your storybook which normalizes the data (uses fixed dates, or a specific seed), when it is being run in an automated environment.

Eyes storybook makes it possible for components to be aware that they are being tested. There will be a specific query parameter on the URL of the story's iframe: ?eyes-storybook=true.

This way it's possible to write a story like this:

const isBeingTested =
    new URL(window.location).searchParams.get('eyes-storybook')

const SOME_FIXED_DATE = 354060000000

const date = new Date(isBeingTested ? SOME_FIXED_DATE : undefined)

storiesOf('Some kind', module).add('Date', () => <div>{date}</div>)

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Package last updated on 05 May 2021

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