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Pa11y CI is a CI-centric accessibility test runner, built using Pa11y.
CI runs accessibility tests against multiple URLs and reports on any issues. This is best used during automated testing of your application and can act as a gatekeeper to stop a11y issues from making it to live.
This command line tool requires Node.js 8+. You can install through npm:
npm install -g pa11y-ci
Pa11y CI can be used by running it as a command line tool, pa11y-ci
:
Usage: pa11y-ci [options] [<paths>]
Options:
-h, --help output usage information
-V, --version output the version number
-c, --config <path> the path to a JSON or JavaScript config file
-s, --sitemap <url> the path to a sitemap
-f, --sitemap-find <pattern> a pattern to find in sitemaps. Use with --sitemap-replace
-r, --sitemap-replace <string> a replacement to apply in sitemaps. Use with --sitemap-find
-x, --sitemap-exclude <pattern> a pattern to find in sitemaps and exclude any url that matches
-j, --json Output results as JSON
-T, --threshold <number> permit this number of errors, warnings, or notices, otherwise fail with exit code 2
By default, Pa11y CI looks for a config file in the current working directory, named .pa11yci
. This should be a JSON file.
You can use the --config
command line argument to specify a different file, which can be either JSON or JavaScript. The config files should look like this:
{
"urls": [
"http://pa11y.org/",
"http://pa11y.org/contributing"
]
}
Pa11y will be run against each of the URLs in the urls
array and the paths specified as CLI arguments. Paths can be specified as relative, absolute and as glob patterns.
You can specify a default set of pa11y configurations that should be used for each test run. These should be added to a default
object in your config. For example:
{
"defaults": {
"timeout": 1000,
"page": {
"viewport": {
"width": 320,
"height": 480
}
}
},
"urls": [
"http://pa11y.org/",
"http://pa11y.org/contributing"
]
}
Pa11y CI has a few of its own configurations which you can set as well:
concurrency
: The number of tests that should be run in parallel. Defaults to 2
.Each URL in your config file can be an object and specify pa11y configurations which override the defaults too. You do this by using an object instead of a string, and providing the URL as a url
property on that object. This can be useful if, for example, you know that a certain URL takes a while to load or you want to check what the page looked like when the tests were run:
{
"defaults": {
"timeout": 1000
},
"urls": [
"http://pa11y.org/",
{
"url": "http://pa11y.org/contributing",
"timeout": 50000,
"screenCapture": "myDir/my-screen-capture.png"
}
]
}
If you don't wish to specify your URLs in a config file, you can use an XML sitemap that's published somewhere online. This is done with the --sitemap
option:
pa11y-ci --sitemap http://pa11y.org/sitemap.xml
This takes the text content of each <loc>
in the XML and runs Pa11y against that URL. This can also be combined with a config file, but URLs in the sitemap will override any found in your JSON config.
If you'd like to perform a find/replace operation on each URL in a sitemap, e.g. if your sitemap points to your production URLs rather than local ones, then you can use the following flags:
pa11y-ci --sitemap http://pa11y.org/sitemap.xml --sitemap-find pa11y.org --sitemap-replace localhost
The above would ensure that you run Pa11y CI against local URLs instead of the live site.
If there are items in the sitemap that you'd like to exclude from the testing (for example PDFs) you can do so using the --sitemap-exclude
flag.
Here are some useful articles written by Pa11y users and contributors:
There are many ways to contribute to Pa11y CI, we cover these in the contributing guide for this repo.
If you're ready to contribute some code, clone this repo locally and commit your code on a new branch.
Please write unit tests for your code, and check that everything works by running the following before opening a PR:
make ci
You can also run verifications and tests individually:
make verify # Verify all of the code (JSHint/JSCS)
make test # Run all tests
make test-unit # Run the unit tests
make test-unit-coverage # Run the unit tests with coverage
make test-integration # Run the integration tests
Pa11y CI major versions are normally supported for 6 months after their last minor release. This means that patch-level changes will be added and bugs will be fixed. The table below outlines the end-of-support dates for major versions, and the last minor release for that version.
We also maintain a migration guide to help you migrate.
:grey_question: | Major Version | Last Minor Release | Node.js Versions | Support End Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
:heart: | 2 | N/A | 8+ | N/A |
:hourglass: | 1 | 1.3 | 4+ | 2018-04-18 |
If you're opening issues related to these, please mention the version that the issue relates to.
Licensed under the Lesser General Public License (LGPL-3.0).
Copyright © 2016–2017, Team Pa11y
FAQs
Pa11y CI is a CI-centric accessibility test runner, built using Pa11y
The npm package pa11y-ci receives a total of 24,814 weekly downloads. As such, pa11y-ci popularity was classified as popular.
We found that pa11y-ci demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 8 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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