Playwright JSON Test Results Report
Save Playwright test results as a JSON file
A Playwright JSON test reporter to create test reports that follow the CTRF standard.
Common Test Report Format ensures the generation of uniform JSON test reports, independent of programming languages or test framework in use.
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Features
- Generate JSON test reports that are CTRF compliant
- Customizable output options, minimal or comprehensive reports
- Straightforward integration with Playwright
- Enhanced test insights with detailed test information, environment details, and more.
{
"results": {
"tool": {
"name": "playwright"
},
"summary": {
"tests": 1,
"passed": 1,
"failed": 0,
"pending": 0,
"skipped": 0,
"other": 0,
"start": 1706828654274,
"stop": 1706828655782
},
"tests": [
{
"name": "ctrf should generate the same report with any tool",
"status": "passed",
"duration": 100
}
],
"environment": {
"appName": "MyApp",
"buildName": "MyBuild",
"buildNumber": "1"
}
}
}
Installation
npm install --save-dev playwright-ctrf-json-reporter
Add the reporter to your playwright.config.ts file:
reporter: [
['list'],
['playwright-ctrf-json-reporter', {}]
],
Run your tests:
npx playwright test
You'll find a JSON file named ctrf-report.json
in the ctrf
directory.
Reporter Options
The reporter supports several configuration options:
reporter: [
['playwright-ctrf-json-reporter', {
outputFile: 'custom-name.json',
outputDir: 'custom-directory',
minimal: true,
screenshot: false,
annotations: false,
testType: 'e2e',
appName: 'MyApp',
appVersion: '1.0.0',
osPlatform: 'linux',
osRelease: '18.04',
osVersion: '5.4.0',
buildName: 'MyApp Build',
buildNumber: '100',
buildUrl: "https://ctrf.io",
repositoryName: "ctrf-json",
repositoryUrl: "https://gh.io",
branchName: "main",
testEnvironment: "staging"
}]
],
A comprehensive report is generated by default, with the exception of screenshots, which you must explicitly set to true.
Merge reports
When running tests in parallel, each test shard has its own test report. If you want to have a combined report showing all the test results from all the shards, you can merge them.
The ctrf-cli package provides a method to merge multiple ctrf json files into a single file.
After executing your tests, use the following command:
npx ctrf merge <directory>
Replace directory with the path to the directory containing the CTRF reports you want to merge.
Test Object Properties
The test object in the report includes the following CTRF properties:
Name | Type | Required | Details |
---|
name | String | Required | The name of the test. |
status | String | Required | The outcome of the test. One of: passed , failed , skipped , pending , other . |
duration | Number | Required | The time taken for the test execution, in milliseconds. |
start | Number | Optional | The start time of the test as a Unix epoch timestamp. |
stop | Number | Optional | The end time of the test as a Unix epoch timestamp. |
suite | String | Optional | The suite or group to which the test belongs. |
message | String | Optional | The failure message if the test failed. |
trace | String | Optional | The stack trace captured if the test failed. |
rawStatus | String | Optional | The original playwright status of the test before mapping to CTRF status. |
tags | Array of Strings | Optional | The tags retrieved from the test name |
type | String | Optional | The type of test (e.g., api , e2e ). |
filepath | String | Optional | The file path where the test is located in the project. |
retries | Number | Optional | The number of retries attempted for the test. |
flaky | Boolean | Optional | Indicates whether the test result is flaky. |
browser | String | Optional | The browser used for the test. |
screenshot | String | Optional | A base64 encoded screenshot taken during the test. |
steps | Array of Objects | Optional | Individual steps in the test, especially for BDD-style testing. |
Advanced usage
Some features require additional setup or usage considerations.
Annotations
By setting annotations: true
you can include annotations in the test extra property.
Screenshots
You can include base-64 screenshots in your test report, you'll need to capture and attach screenshots in your Playwright tests:
import { test, expect } from '@playwright/test'
test('basic test', async ({ page }, testInfo) => {
await page.goto('https://playwright.dev')
const screenshot = await page.screenshot({ quality: 50, type: 'jpeg' })
await testInfo.attach('screenshot', {
body: screenshot,
contentType: 'image/jpeg',
})
})
Supported Formats
Both JPEG and PNG formats are supported, only the last screenshot attached from each test will be included in the report.
Size Considerations
Base64-encoded image data can greatly increase the size of your report, it's recommended to use screenshots with a lower quality setting (less than 50%) to reduce file size, particularly if you are generating JPEG images.
Browser
You can include browser information in your test report. You will need to extend Playwright's test object to capture and attach browser metadata for each test:
import { test as _test, expect } from '@playwright/test';
import os from 'os';
export const test = _test.extend<{ _autoAttachMetadata: void }>({
_autoAttachMetadata: [async ({ browser, browserName }, use, testInfo) => {
await testInfo.attach('metadata.json', {
body: JSON.stringify({
name: browserName,
version: browser.version(),
})
})
await use();
}, { auto: true }],
})
export { expect };
Replace the standard Playwright test import with the custom test fixture in your test files:
import { test, expect } from './helpers'
test('example test', async ({ page }) => {
})
The browser metadata file must be called metadata.json and contain properties name and version in the body.
What is CTRF?
CTRF is a universal JSON test report schema that addresses the lack of a standardized format for JSON test reports.
Consistency Across Tools: Different testing tools and frameworks often produce reports in varied formats. CTRF ensures a uniform structure, making it easier to understand and compare reports, regardless of the testing tool used.
Language and Framework Agnostic: It provides a universal reporting schema that works seamlessly with any programming language and testing framework.
Facilitates Better Analysis: With a standardized format, programatically analyzing test outcomes across multiple platforms becomes more straightforward.
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