/BackstopJS

Catch CSS curve balls.

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#BackstopJS Catch CSS curve balls.

BackstopJS automates CSS regression testing of your responsive web UI by comparing DOM screenshots at various viewport sizes.

Features: Plays nice with multiple config files – Simulate user interactions with CasperJS scripts – Fast inline-CLI reports – detailed in-browser reports – Test html5 elements like webfonts and flexbox – also plays nice with source control.

News

Version 1.2.0 available now

Please file questions, comments or issues here.

Version 1.1 includes reliability fixes plus a handful of improvements to close out the original roadmap.

  • Simplified installation -- just npm install backstopjs and you're ready to go!
  • All Gulp commands have been migrated to npm run <command> format for better compatibility!
  • now add logic and comments to your configs (optional JS based configs)
  • plays nice with other local services (change the BackstopJS port)

####Version 0.9.0

  • Plays nice with multiple config files (setting the config file path)

####Version 0.8.0

  • Simulate user interactions with CasperJS scripts

####Version 0.7.0

  • Fast CLI reporting

####Version 0.6.0

  • configurable screenshot locations. See moving the bitmap directories below.
  • SlimerJS support. See changing the rendering engine below.

Tutorials and Related Links

BackstopJS brochure at http://BackstopJS.org/.

##Heres how it works:

  1. Set up a test config file: specify screen sizes and DOM selectors.
  2. Use BackstopJS to create reference screenshots.
  3. Make some changes to your CSS or add new DOM components.
  4. Run a test. BackstopJS creates a set of test screenshots and compares them with the reference screenshots you made in step 2 above. Any unwanted/unforeseen changes show up in a nice report.

##Backstory: BackstopJS is a useful wrapper around the very fabulous Resemble.js component written by James Cryer. Other implementations of Resemble.js, namely PhantomCSS require writing long form CasperJS tests -- which is of course great for testing complex UI interactions –- but kind of cumbersome for more simple applications like static CMS templates or lots and lots of app states at different screen sizes.

BackstopJS may be just the thing if you develop custom WordPress, Drupal or other CMS templates. Tested on OSX.

BackstopJS was created by Garris Shipon during the Art.com labs years.

Follow @garris

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...

Many many thanks to all the contributors with special thanks to...

BackstopJS uses icons from the Noun Project


##Installation

###BackstopJS package

You can add BackstopJS from the root directory of any project.

$ npm install --save-dev backstopjs

###Installing a develpment version

$ npm install garris/backstopjs#master

##Configuration

If you don't already have a BackstopJS config file. The following command will create a config template file which you can modify in your root directory. Note: this will overwrite any existing backstopjs config file.

From ./node_modules/backstopjs ...

$ npm run genConfig

By default, genConfig will put backstop.json at the project root. Also by default, a backstop_data directory will be created at this same location.

The location of the backstop.json file as well as all resource directories can be specified -- see Setting the config file path below.

A step-by-step tutorial is at css-tricks.com.

{
  "viewports": [
    {
      "name": "phone",
      "width": 320,
      "height": 480
    }, {
      "name": "tablet_v",
      "width": 568,
      "height": 1024
    }, {
      "name": "tablet_h",
      "width": 1024,
      "height": 768
    }
  ],
  "scenarios": [
    {
      "label": "My Homepage",
      "url": "http://getbootstrap.com",
      "hideSelectors": [],
      "removeSelectors": [
        "#carbonads-container"
      ],
      "selectors": [
        "header",
        "main",
        "body .bs-docs-featurette:nth-of-type(1)",
        "body .bs-docs-featurette:nth-of-type(2)",
        "footer",
        "body"
      ],
      "readyEvent": null,
      "delay": 500,
      "onReadyScript": null,
      "onBeforeScript": null
    }
  ],
  "paths": {
    "bitmaps_reference": "../../backstop_data/bitmaps_reference",
    "bitmaps_test": "../../backstop_data/bitmaps_test",
    "compare_data": "../../backstop_data/bitmaps_test/compare.json",
    "casper_scripts": "../../backstop_data/casper_scripts"
  },
  "engine": "phantomjs",
  "report": ["browser", "CLI"],
  "debug": false,
  "port": 3001
}

DEV NOTE: If a valid config is not present at the project root (or at the path specified on your CLI), BackstopJS will go into Demo mode and run the default config at... ./node_modules/backstopjs/capture/config.default.json

Usage Notes

Generating (or updating) reference bitmaps

$ npm run reference

This task will create a (or update an existing) bitmaps_reference directory with screen captures from the current project build.

Generating test bitmaps

$ npm run test

This task will create a new set of bitmaps in bitmaps_test/<timestamp>/

Once the test bitmaps are generated, a report comparing the most recent test bitmaps against the current reference bitmaps will run. Significant differences will be detected and shown.

Testing SPAs and AJAX content

It is very common for client-side web apps is to initially download a small chunk of bootstrapping code/content and render it to the screen as soon as it arrives at the browser. Once this has completed, various JS components often take over to progressively load more content.

The problem testing these scenarios is knowing when to take the screenshot. BackstopJS solves this problem with two config properties: readyEvent and delay.

NOTE: Advanced options also include very cool CasperJS features like waitForSelector() and waitUntilVisible() – see adding custom CasperJS scripts for more info...

####Trigger screen capture via console.log()

The readyEvent property enables you to trigger the screen capture by logging a predefined string to the console. For example, the following line will delay screen capture until your web app calls console.log("backstopjs_ready")...

"readyEvent": "backstopjs_ready"

In the above case it would be up to you to wait for all dependencies to complete before calling logging "backstopjs_ready" string to the console.

####Delay screen capture

The delay property enables you to pause screen capturing for a specified duration of time. This delay is applied after readyEvent (if also applied).

"delay": 1000 //delay in ms

In the above case, BackstopJS would wait for one second before taking a screenshot.

In the following case, BackstopJS would wait for one second after the string backstopjs_ready is logged to the console.

{
  ...
  "readyEvent": "backstopjs_ready",
  "delay": 1000 //delay in ms
}

Dealing with dynamic content

For obvious reasons, this screenshot approach is not optimal for testing live dynamic content. The best way to test a dynamic app would be to use a known static content data stub – or ideally many content stubs of varying lengths which, regardless of input length, should produce certain specific bitmap output.

Hiding selectors

That said, for a use case where you are testing a DOM with say an ad banner or a block of dynamic content which retains static dimensions, we have the hideSelectors property in capture/config.json which will set the corresponding DOM to visibility:hidden, thus hiding the content from our Resemble.js analysis but retaining the original layout flow.

  "hideSelectors": [
	"#someFixedSizeDomSelector"
]

Removing selectors

There may also be elements which need to be completely removed during testing. For that we have removeSelectors which sets elements to display:none.

"removeSelectors": [
    "#someUnpredictableSizedDomSelector"
]

Grabbing screens from different environments

Comparing against different environments is easy. (e.g. compare a production environment against a staging environment).

To do this, add a referenceUrl to your scenario configuration. When running $ npm run test BackstopJS will use the url for screen grabs. When running $ npm run reference BackstopJS will check for referenceUrl and use that if it's there. Otherwise it will use url for both.

  "scenarios": [
    {
      "label": "cat meme feed sanity check",
      "url": "http://www.moreCatMemes.com",
      "referenceUrl": "http://staging.moreCatMemes.com:81",
       ...
    }

Running custom CasperJS scripts (version 0.8.0+)

Simulate user actions (click, scroll, hover, wait, etc.) or states (cookie values) by running your own Casper.js script on ready. For each scenario, the custom .js file you specify is imported and run when the BackstopJS ready event is fired.

From your project root, place your scripts in...

./backstop_data/casper_scripts

at the root of your config or in your scenario...

"onReadyScript": "filename.js"   // Runs after onReady event on all scenarios -- use for simulating interactions (.js suffix is optional)
"onBeforeScript": "filename.js"  // Runs before each scenario -- use for setting cookies or other env state (.js suffix is optional)
"scenarios": [
    {
      "label": "cat meme feed sanity check",
      "onReadyScript": "filename.js"   //  If found will run instead of onReadyScript set at the root (.js suffix is optional)
      "onBeforeScript": "filename.js" // If found will run instead of onBeforeScript at the root (.js suffix is optional)
       ...
    }

Inside filename.js, structure it like this:

module.exports = function(casper, scenario, vp) {
  // scenario is the current scenario object being run from your backstop config
  // vp is the current viewport object being run from your backstop config
  
  // Example: setting cookies
  casper.echo("Setting cookies");
  casper.then(function(){
    casper.page.addCookie({some: 'cookie'});
  });
  // `casper.thenOpen()` demonstrates a redirect to the original page with your new cookie value.
  // this step is not required if used with _onBeforeScript_
  casper.thenOpen(scenario.url);
  
  // Example: Adding script delays to allow for things like CSS transitions to complete.
  casper.echo( 'Clicking button' );
  casper.click( '.toggle' );
  casper.wait( 250 );
  
  // Example: changing behaivior based on config values
  if (vp.name === 'phone') {
    casper.echo( 'doing stuff for just phone viewport here' );
  }
  
  // ...do other cool stuff here, see Casperjs.org for a full API and many ideas.
}

Setting the base path for custom CasperJS scripts

By default the base path is a folder called scripts inside your BackstopJS installation directory. You can override this by setting the paths.scripts property in your backstop.json file to point to somewhere in your project directory (recommended).

NOTE: SlimerJS currently requires an absolute path -- so be sure to include the full path when using the "engine": "slimer" configuration option.

  "paths": {
    "casper_scripts": "../../backstop_data/scripts"
  }

Reporting workflow tips (version 0.7.0+)

There are two reporting options. The fastest and least obtrusive is the CLI report which gives you a subdued thumbs up or thumbs down for your layout on each run. The other report runs in the in-browser -- this gives you detailed visual feedback for each test case so you can validate why your screen diffs score the way they do.

One testing approach to consider is incorporating BackstopJS into your build process and just let the CLI report run on each build. It's natural for your layout to break while you're in feature development -- refer back to the report when you feel things should be shaping up. Check the in-browser version of the report occasionally as needed when you need deeper information about what's happening in a test case.

CLI Report

Browser Report

Using the report property in backstop.json enable or disable browser or server-side-reporting by including/excluding the respective properties. The following settings will run both reports at the same time.

"report": ["browser", "CLI"]

If you choose the CLI-only reporting you can always enter the following command to see the latest test run report in the browser.

$ npm run openReport

####CLI error handling

When a layout error is found in CLI mode, BackstopJS will let you know in a general report displayed in the console. In addition, BackstopJS will throw an error that will be passed to calling process.

###Using a js based config file (version 1.0.0+)

JSON-based configs cramping your style? Well, here's some good news -- BackstopJS allows you to import all config parameters as a node module (as an option instead of JSON) which allows you to use comments, variables and logic etc. inside of your config.

To use a js module based config file, explicitly specify your config filepath when running a command. e.g.

$ npm run test -- --configPath=../../backstopTests/someTest.js

Remember to add that extra -- after the test command. See the next section for more info on setting the config file path.

Be sure to export your config object as a node module. See test/configExample.js for a simple example.

###Setting the config file path (version 0.9.0+) Often, users have multiple config files to test various different scenarios or even different projects. By default, BackstopJS looks for backstop.json in your project's root directory (in parallel with your node_modules directory). You can override this by passing a --configPath argument when running any command. e.g.

# example 1: run reference generation with absolute path
$ npm run reference -- --configPath=~/backstopTests/someTest.json
# Will capture reference files using scenarios from someTest.json inside backstopTests inside your home folder.

# example 2: run test with absolute path
$ npm run test -- --configPath=~/backstopTests/someTest.json
# Will run tests using scenarios from `someTest.json` inside `backstopTests` inside your home folder.

# example 3: run test with relative path
$ npm run test -- --configPath=../../backstopTests/someTest.json
# Will run tests using scenarios from `someTest.json` inside `backstopTests` inside your project root folder.

# example 4: run test with relative path and JS module
$ npm run test -- --configPath=../../backstopTests/someTest.js
# You can also specify your config parameters as a node module. This will import `someTest.js` from `backstopTests` inside your project root folder.

NOTES:

  • all paths are relative to the location of the BackstopJS install directory (which is either inside your project's node_modules or bower_components depending on how BackstopJS was installed).
  • Remember to add that extra -- after the npm run test and npm run reference commands.

Setting the bitmap and script directory paths (version 0.6.0+)

By default, BackstopJS saves its screenshots into ./backstopjs/bitmaps_reference/ and ./backstopjs/bitmaps_test/ in parallel with your ./backstop.js config file. The location of these directories are configurable so they can easily be moved inside or outside your source control or file sharing environment.

The compare.json file contains file mappings between reference and test files. This file tells the comparison module what comparisons to run. It is probably best kept inside the bitmaps_test directory.

If you are using custom casper_scripts -- that directory can be specified too.

Please note: these file paths are relative to your ./node_modules/backstopjs/ directory.

  "paths": {
    "bitmaps_reference": "../../backstop_data/bitmaps_reference",
    "bitmaps_test": "../../backstop_data/bitmaps_test",
    "compare_data": "../../backstop_data/bitmaps_test/compare.json",
    "casper_scripts": "../../backstop_data/scripts"
  }

Changing the rendering engine (version 0.6.0+)

BackstopJS supports using PhantomJS or SlimerJS (With thanks to CasperJS for doing the heavy lifting here.)

PhantomJS, the default rendering engine, does not correctly interpret flexbox and web fonts -- so if you are using those things in your app you will be way more happy using SlimerJS. Here is how to do that...

First, install SlimerJS. From your root directory run...

$ sudo npm install -g slimerjs

Then, in your backstop.json config file, update the engine property to...

  "engine": "slimerjs"

Thats it.

Changing the reporting server port

The default port used by BackstopJS is 3001. You can change it by setting the port parameter in the backstop.json file.

Setting Casper command-line flags (version 0.9.0+)

This is for you if for some reason you find yourself needing advanced configuration access to CasperJS. You can set CasperJS flags via casperFlags like so...

"casperFlags": [
  "--engine=slimerjs",
  "--proxy-type=http",
  "--proxy=proxyIp:port",
  "--proxy-auth=user:pass"
]

Troubleshooting

####The dreaded command-not-found error...

If this happens then you may not be in the right directory – try...

cd node_modules/backstopjs/

Then try running your BackstopJS command again.

####Debugging To enable verbose console output when running your tests set the debug property to true in backstop.json.

  "debug": true

Viewing response contents

Sometimes it also helps to verify that BackstopJS is receiving the correct response. Enabling the debug property (see Debugging above) will output this data to the console whenever a test is run.

For a sanity check you can also use the following command -- it will output your requested file contents to the console.

Please note: this will check your scenario url only. It does not check for a referenceUrl property.

From ./node_modules/backstopjs ...

$ npm run echo

Running the report server

The test comparison report was written in Angular.js and requires a running HTTP server instance. This instance is auto-started after a test is run. The server is also auto-stopped after 15 minutes so you don't have to go worrying about node processes running all over the place.

You can manually start the server optionally passing your own timeout parameter (in minutes). Passing 0 will disable the timeout feature and run the server until you manually stop it.

From ./node_modules/backstopjs ...

$ npm run start -- -t 0

To manually stop the server, from ./node_modules/backstopjs ...

$ npm run stop

fin.