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@percy/cli-command
Advanced tools
@percy/cli-command is a command-line interface (CLI) tool for managing Percy, a visual testing and review platform. It provides commands to interact with Percy services, such as starting and stopping Percy agents, uploading snapshots, and managing projects.
Start Percy Agent
This command starts the Percy agent, which is necessary for capturing visual snapshots during your tests.
npx @percy/cli-command start
Stop Percy Agent
This command stops the Percy agent, which is useful for cleaning up after your tests have completed.
npx @percy/cli-command stop
Upload Snapshots
This command uploads visual snapshots to Percy for comparison and review.
npx @percy/cli-command upload ./path/to/snapshots
Manage Projects
This command creates a new project in Percy, allowing you to organize and manage your visual tests.
npx @percy/cli-command project:create --name 'My Project'
Cypress is a JavaScript end-to-end testing framework that provides a rich set of features for writing and running tests. It includes built-in support for visual testing through plugins like cypress-image-snapshot, which can be used to capture and compare screenshots.
WebdriverIO is a popular testing framework for Node.js that allows you to run tests using the WebDriver protocol. It supports visual regression testing through plugins like wdio-visual-regression-service, which can capture and compare screenshots.
BackstopJS is a tool for visual regression testing that uses headless browsers to capture screenshots of web pages and compare them against baseline images. It provides a CLI for managing tests and generating reports.
Percy CLI command parser and runner.
The command
function accepts a name, definition, and callback and returns a runner function that
accepts an array of command-line arguments.
import command from '@percy/cli-command';
// example command runner
const example = command('example', {
description: 'Example command description',
// positional arguments
args: [
{ name: 'one' }
],
// flags and options
flags: [
{ name: 'foo' }, // boolean by default
{ name: 'bar', type: 'string' }
],
// shows in help output
examples: [
// $0 will be replaced by the command name
'$0 --foo --bar baz qux'
]
}, ({ flags, args }) => {
// see below for other available properties
console.log({ flags, args });
});
// remove the script name from argv
example(process.argv.slice(2));
$ node ./example --foo --bar baz qux
{ flags: { foo: true, bar: 'baz' }, args: { one: 'qux' } }
Only a command name
is required. However, without any other options, a command will only show the
default help output with global flags. A command's callback
will be called when the resulting
command runner is invoked with an array of command-line arguments. How those arguments are
interpreted and parsed is defined by the command's definition
.
name
— The command name shown in help output, also used to match nested commands.definition
— A command definition object defines various options to control help output, the
arguments parser, and other percy options.
description
— The command description shown in help output.usage
— Custom command usage shown in help output.examples
— An array of example strings to show in help output.version
— A version string to display via a -V, --version
flag.commands
— An array or function returning an array of nested subcommands.flags
— Optional flag arguments accepted by the command (see below).args
— Positional arguments accepted by the command (see below).percy
— Enable creation of a core percy instance (see below).config
— Automatic percy config registration (see below).loose
— Push unknown arguments to argv
. A string value will log as a warning when unknown
arguments are first encountered by the parser.exitOnError
— Call process.exit()
if the command encounters an error while running.callback
— The command callback invoked after the runner is called with command-line arguments
and after those arguments are interpreted by the internal parser.The callback
argument can be a function, an async function, or an async generator function. Given
an async generator function, the command becomes cancelable via process interruption and is able to
clean up after itself using traditional try-catch error handling.
The callback
function is invoked with a single argument containing various contextual properties
according to the command definition:
flags
— An object containing key-value pairs of flag arguments interpreted by the parser as
determined by the flag's respective definition (see below).args
— An object containing key-value pairs of positional arguments interpreted by the parser as
determined by the arg's respective definition (see below).argv
— An array of unknown arguments that were not parsed due to either the loose
option or
the presence of an end-of-arguments delimiter (--
).percy
— An instance of @percy/core
only present when a corresponding percy
definition option
is provided (see below).log
— A @percy/logger
group namespaced under the command's name
. The initial loglevel is
optionally determined by various global logging flags (--verbose
, --silent
, --quiet
).exit
— Utility function to stop the execution of a command from within the runner. Accepts
an exit code (default 1
) and an exit reason (default 'EEXIT: ${exitCode}'
). The function will
throw an error which can be handled, or let bubble where the presence of exitOnError
will cause
the process to exit with the provided exit code.Each flag definition must contain either a name
or a short
option. By default, all flags will be
interpreted as boolean flags and will produce an error if a value is provided. Setting the type
option to anything other than 'boolean'
will allow providing command-line values and error if one
is not provided.
name
— The flag name (i.e. --flag-name
).short
— The flag short character (i.e. -s
).type
— The flag type as displayed in help output.default
— The flag's default value when not provided.parse
— A function used to parse any provided flag value.validate
— A function that should throw an error when the provided flag value is invalid.attribute
— A string or function returning a string to set the value at on the callback
argument's flags
property. Defaults to the camelcase name
or short
character.percyrc
— A string to map this flag to percy config options (see below).deprecated
— A boolean, string, or tuple used to warn about a deprecated flag and optionally map
it to an alternate flag (see below).Positional args correspond to their definition index, so the arg definition at index 0
will match
the first provided command-line argument that is not a flag or subcommand. By default, positional
args are optional, but can be configured to be required or have default values.
name
— The arg name shown in help output.required
— Indicate that this flag is required, which causes an error when not provided.default
— The arg's default value when not provided.parse
— A function used to parse the provided argument.validate
— A function that should throw an error when the provided argument is invalid.attribute
— A string or function returning a string to set the value at on the callback
argument's args
property. Defaults to camelcase name
.percyrc
— A string to map this arg to percy config options (see below).deprecated
— A boolean, string, or tuple used to warn about a deprecated arg and optionally map
it to a flag (see below).When the deprecated
option is true
and the flag or positional arg has been provided by
command-line arguments, a deprecation warning will be logged. A string value indicates the version
in which this argument will be removed and is reflected in the deprecation message.
When providing a tuple, the version is the first option of the tuple, while the second option can be
an alternate flag to use, or a recommendation message to display when the deprecation warning is
logged. Given an alternate flag, the value will be automatically mapped to the corresponding flag's
attribute name on the callback
argument's flags
property.
{ name: 'foo', deprecated: true }
// [percy] Warning: The '--foo' option will be removed in a future release.
{ name: 'foo', deprecated: 'v2.0.0' }
// [percy] Warning: The '--foo' option will be removed in v2.0.0.
{ name: 'foo', deprecated: ['v2.0.0', '--bar'] }
// [percy] Warning: The '--foo' option will be removed in v2.0.0. Use '--bar' instead.
{ name: 'foo', deprecated: ['v2.0.0', 'Use the config file option instead.'] }
// [percy] Warning: The '--foo' option will be removed in v2.0.0. Use the config file option instead.
The percy
definition option accepts an object consisting of @percy/core
options. The presence of
this option will add shared percy flags to accepted command-line arguments and provide the command
callback with a percy instance initialized with the provided options.
When the percy
definition option is true
, shared percy flags will not be accepted, but a default
percy instance will still be provided to the command callback when run. Regardless of the percy
option, if the environment variable PERCY_ENABLE
is 0
, the callback will not receive a percy
instance (and can act accordingly).
percy
— Enables creation of a @percy/core
instance initialized with provided options.Acceptable percy config file options can be extended before the file is loaded via
PercyConfig.addSchema()
and PercyConfig.addMigration()
. These functions can be called before the
command is run to achieve the same effect as including them in the command definition. However, the
presence of a percy
definition option will also signal @percy/core
config schemas and migrations
to be automatically registered before the following options are registered.
config
— Percy config schemas and migrations to register while creating the command runner.
schemas
— An array of percy config schemas to automatically register.migrations
— An array of percy config migrations to automatically register.Additionally, flags and positional arguments that define a percyrc
option will have their
associated values mapped to a corresponding percy
property that is used when initializing a
@percy/core
instance. Provided options are validated against config schemas and are made available
on the command callback argument's percy.config
property.
FAQs
Percy CLI command parser and runner.
The npm package @percy/cli-command receives a total of 332,295 weekly downloads. As such, @percy/cli-command popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @percy/cli-command demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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