gemini plugin for simplifying visual regression testing on React + webpack stack.
WARNING: Right now plugin is pretty much at the proof-of-concept stage, do not use in production.
-
Install plugin using
npm
:npm install gemini-react
-
Enable it in your gemini config file:
system:
plugins:
react:
webpackConfig: <PATH>
hostname: <HOST NAME>
port: <PORT NUMBER> ```
-
webpackConfig
(required) – path to your webpack config. Plugin will use loaders from this file to build test pages. -
listenHost
(default: 127.0.0.1) - hostname to run reference test server on. -
port
(default: 5432) - port to run test server on. -
replaceRootUrl
(default: true) - automatically setsrootUrl
of every browser tohttp://<listenHost>:<port>
. Set tofalse
ifrootUrl
should be something else. -
staticRoot
- directory, which contains your static asset files. Will be mounted by your test server automatically. -
cssFiles
- list of CSS files to include in every test page. RequiresstaticRoot
option to be set. -
jsModules
- list of additional js modules to include in the test pages. Relative to project root. This modules will be included into your client bundle before the rest files. -
customizeServer
- path to js file, used to customize the express server. The file should have a single export, which is function of(app, express)
.Example:
module.exports = function(app, express) { app.use(function myMiddleware(req, res, next) { ... }); }
-
webpackLazyMode
- switches webpack dev middleware to lazy mode, which means javascript will be recompiled on each request.
Use geminiReact
variable instead of gemini
and render(<ReactComponent />)
instead of setUrl
and setCaptureElements
. The rest is the same as vanilla
gemini
:
const MyComponent = require('./path/to/my/component');
geminiReact.suite('my react test', suite => {
suite.render(<MyComponent prop="value" />)
.capture('initial');
});
TIP: To use JSX in your tests, you might need gemini-babel plugin.
You don't need to create the reference pages or run the server, plugin will do everything for you.
If you want to interact with rendered component, use this.renderedComponent
inside your test:
suite.capture('clicked', function(actions) {
actions.click(this.renderedComponent);
});
If you have any test-specific stylesheets, you can include them into the test
page by calling suite.includeCss
:
suite.includeCss('/my-component.css');
By default, geminiReact
will capture rendered at mounting point element.
If you want to add some extra elements, use setExtraCaptureElements
:
suite.setExtraCaptureElements(['.popup']);
If you want to view example pages without actually running the tests, you can use gemini-react-server
binary, provided by this package:
./node_modules/.bin/gemini-react-server
It will run the server on the host and port, specified in plugin configuration in .gemini.yml
.
The url of each example is a series of ulr-encoded suite names. For example, this suite:
geminiReact.suite('parent', () => {
geminiReact.suite('child', () => {
...
});
})
will be served at http://HOST:PORT/parent/child
url.