@tapjs/snapshot
A default tap plugin that adds snapshot functionality.
USAGE
This plugin is installed with tap by default. If you had
previously removed it, you can tap plugin add @tapjs/snapshot
to
bring it back.
Snapshots are a way to make extremely comprehensive assertions
about a value, and easily keep tests up to date. This is a
powerful technique for testing many kinds of programs (especially
those that generate output), but it comes with some caveats.
Basics of Output Testing
Consider a test program like this:
export default (tag: string, contents: string) =>
`<${tag}>${contents}</${tag}>`
We might have a test like this:
import t from 'tap'
import tagger from './tagger.mjs'
t.equal(tagger('tagName', 'content'), '<tagName>content</tagName>')
This is good for a couple of reasons:
- It's clear reading our test what the expected output is.
- We're unlikely to create a test without thinking carefully about
what exactly it's testing.
However, managing strings like this can become extremely tedious,
especially in cases where the output is long, or there are many cases
to test. If we make an intentional change to the output, then we
need to manually update a large number of large strings, possibly
scattered throughout the test suite. The inevitable result is
that we either make the tests less comprehensive, or even worse,
treat some as "known
failures".
Testing Output with Snapshots
We could also write our test file like this:
import t from 'tap'
import tagger from './tagger.mjs'
t.matchSnapshot(tagger('tagName', 'content'), 'output')
But wait, where is the expected output?
To create the snapshot file, run this command:
$ tap tagger.test.mjs --snapshot
PASS test.js 1 OK 344ms
🌈 SUMMARY RESULTS 🌈
Suites: 1 passed, 1 of 1 completed
Asserts: 1 passed, of 1
Time: 422ms
By setting TAP_SNAPSHOT
in the environment or passing the --snapshot
command line flag, we tell tap to write the output to a special file, and
treat the assertion as automatically passing.
Snapshots will be generated by default if the npm script being run is named
snap
or snapshot
, so you can use this pattern to test and snapshot most
projects:
{
"name": "my-project",
"version": "1.2.3",
"devDependencies": {
"tap": "15"
},
"scripts": {
"test": "tap",
"snap": "tap"
}
}
Then, you can use npm test
to run your tests, or npm run snap
to
update snapshot files.
Snapshot Files
The generated file is designed to be human-readable, but you
should not edit it directly.
$ cat tap-snapshots/tagger.test.mjs.test.cjs
/* IMPORTANT
* This snapshot file is auto-generated, but designed for humans.
* It should be checked into source control and tracked carefully.
* Re-generate by setting TAP_SNAPSHOT=1 and running tests.
* Make sure to inspect the output below. Do not ignore changes!
*/
'use strict'
exports[`tagger.test.mjs TAP > output 1`] = `
<tagName>content</tagName>
If the argument passed to t.matchSnapshot()
isn't a string,
then it will be converted to a string using
tcompare.format.
This is typically pretty easy for humans to understand, but of
course if you prefer to use JSON.stringify
or something else,
you can do so easily enough. The
t.formatSnapshot
can be used to customize this for an entire test.
Caveats
Track Changes
Important: you should check the snapshot file into source control!
When there are changes to it, inspect the diff and make sure that nothing
unexpected happened to change your output.
If you don't check this file into source control, then a significant part
of your test is not checked in. This prevents people from collaborating on
your project.
If you accept changes to it without care, then you can obscure unintended
changes. (Though, even if this happens, git bisect
can track down the
source of the change quite quickly, so it's not the end of the world if
there are occasional mistakes.)
Strip Variables from Output with t.cleanSnapshot
If your output includes data that is known to change from one run to the
next, then these changes should be stripped before matching against a
snapshot.
This includes process IDs, time stamps, and many other system details.
Consider this function:
export const msgTime = msg => {
return msg + ' time=' + Date.now()
}
Since the output will obviously be slightly different every time the
function is tested, we need to strip out the time value.
The best way to do this is with a
t.cleanSnapshot
function. This function takes the formatted snapshot as a string,
and returns a string to be saved or compared against. The default
cleaner is an identity function that returns its input without
any changes.
A test that uses this method:
import t from 'tap'
t.cleanSnapshot = s => s.replace(/ time=[0-9]+$/g, ' time={time}')
const output = msgTime('this is a test')
t.matchSnapshot(output, 'add timestamp to message')
When run with --snapshot
, it generates this snapshot
file:
'use strict'
exports[`msgtime.test.js TAP > add timestamp to message 1`] = `
this is a test time={time}
`
Custom Formatting
Sometimes just modifying the string is not enough, or a special data type
should be stringified differently.
By default, tap uses
tcompare.format
to convert all non-string values into strings for saving and
comparing.
To override this and provide your own behavior, set a function to
t.formatSnapshot
.
Like t.cleanSnapshot
, child tests will copy their parent test's
value at their time of creation.
An example of using t.formatSnapshot
:
import t from 'tap'
import { stringify } from 'tap-yaml'
t.formatSnapshot = object => stringify(object)
t.matchSnapshot({ foo: ['bar', 'baz'] })
This will produce the following snapshot
file:
'use strict'
exports[`yaml.test.js TAP > must match snapshot 1`] = `
foo:
- bar
- baz
`
By default, the snapshot file that TAP uses is set based on the test
filename and any arguments passed to it. This prevents having two test
suites clobber one another's snapshots.
If you would like to specify a different filename for your snapshots, you
can do so by setting the
t.snapshotFile
field. If you set this field in a child test, then the parent
test (and all of its other child tests) will still use its old
snapshot file, but snapshots in the child test (and all its
children) will go to the new file.
But, be advised, this is advanced usage and exposes you to some hazards!
- When generating snapshots, the file is overwritten, so if two tests use
the same snapshot file, they will not be merged. The last one will win.
Make sure that every snapshot file you use is unique to the entire test
run.
- Snapshot files should always be in a folder called
tap-snapshot
, and
should always end in .test.cjs
. This pattern ensures that tap can load
them properly, and that they will not be confused with normal test files.
Example of using a separate snapshot file for subtests:
import t from 'tap'
import { resolve } from 'node:path'
t.matchSnapshot(
'this writes to ./tap-snapshots/test/snappy.js.test.cjs'
)
t.test('foo', async t => {
t.snapshotFile = new URL(
'../tap-snapshots/foo.test.cjs',
import.meta.url
)
t.matchSnapshot('foo')
})
t.test('bar', async t => {
t.snapshotFile = new URL(
'../tap-snapshots/bar.test.cjs',
import.meta.url
)
t.matchSnapshot('bar')
})
t.test('baz', async t => {
t.matchSnapshot('baz')
})
EVEN MORE Advanceder Customization (you're on your own!)
This module works by using a Snapshot
Provider,
which is a class that implements read, save, and snap methods.
You can write your own one of those, and pass the custom class in
the snapshotProvider
option to a test.
With this, you can store snapshots anywhere you like, if for some
reason putting them in a js file is not your desire.