This patch adds a reverse proxy in front of novnc and playwright
server inside the container.
As a result:
- container exposes a single HTTP port to the host
- all Playwright clients can connect using this exposed port, e.g.
`http://127.0.0.1:5400`
- navigating to the exposed port in the browser lands on a nice HTML
page
with a link to view container screen
- users can also manually navigate to `http://127.0.0.1:5400/screen` to
view screen
This patch implements a new image comparison function, codenamed
"ssim-cie94". The goal of the new comparison function is to cancel out
browser non-determenistic rendering.
To use the new comparison function:
```ts
await expect(page).toHaveScreenshot({
comparator: 'ssim-cie94',
});
```
As of Nov 30, 2022, we identified the following sources of
non-determenistic rendering for Chromium:
- Anti-aliasing for certain shapes might be different due to the
way skia rasterizes certain shapes.
- Color blending might be different on `x86` and `aarch64`
architectures.
The new function employs a few heuristics to fight these
differences.
Consider two non-equal image pixels `(r1, g1, b1)` and `(r2, g2, b2)`:
1. If the [CIE94] metric is less then 1.0, then we consider these pixels
**EQUAL**. (The value `1.0` is the [just-noticeable difference] for
[CIE94].). Otherwise, proceed to next step.
1. If all the 8 neighbors of the first pixel match its color, or
if the 8 neighbors of the second pixel match its color, then these
pixels are **DIFFERENT**. (In case of anti-aliasing, some of the
direct neighbors have to be blended up or down.) Otherwise, proceed
to next step.
1. If SSIM in some locality around the different pixels is more than
0.99, then consider this pixels to be **EQUAL**. Otherwise, mark them
as **DIFFERENT**. (Local SSIM for anti-aliased pixels turns out to be
very close to 1.0).
[CIE94]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_difference#CIE94
[just-noticeable difference]:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Just-noticeable_difference
Fixes#19169
Note, I'm not sure why it was done this way before — e.g. Why `testDir`
were considered for resolution, but `testFileDir` wasn't.
Looking for guidance on the approach here, because there are still some
template tokens outside `path.resolve`
Co-authored-by: Shubham Kanodia <skanodia@atlassian.com>
The behavior regarding filters (both in config, command line and .only)
is the following:
- if some of tests match and none of setup match then we'll run all
setup files and all matching tests
- otherwise the filters apply to setup files the same way as to regular
tests
Running `npx playwright test file:123` will have the following behavior
- if only test files match then only matching subset of tests will run
but all setup files will run as well
- if only setup files match the filter then only those setup tests will
run
- if both setup and test files match an error will be thrown
This patch stops using `processLauncher` to launch web servers. Process
Launcher
will spawn a new process group which is separate from test runner.
This might result in unexpected behavior, e.g. `kill -sigkill
-<testrunnerpid>` will orphan web server process.
Instead, this patch simply spawns web server and sends `SIGTERM` to it
when ready.
This patch:
- updates documentation to lead users from `TestConfig.snapshotDir` and
`testInfo.snapshotSuffix` to `TestConfig.snapshotPathTemplate` as a
better and more flexible alternative.
- drops `{snapshotSuffix}` from documentation
- stops using `snapshotSuffix = ''` in our own tests and switches us
to the `snapshotPathTemplate`.
- adds `{testName}` token.
This configuration option allows to set a string with template
values for precise control over snapshot path location.
An example of `snapshotPathTemplate` usage:
```ts
// playwright.config.ts
// Notice the `testDir` configuration!
export default {
testDir: './tests',
snapshotPathTemplate: './__screenshots__/{platform}/{projectName}/{testFilePath}/{arg}{ext}',
}
```
Currently supported "magic tokens" inside the `snapshotPathTemplate`
are:
- `{testDir}` - project's `testDir`
- `{snapshotDir}` - project's `snapshotDir`
- `{platform}` - `process.platform`
- `{projectName}` - Project's sanitized name
- `{testFileDir}` - Directories in relative path from `testDir` to test
file path (e.g. `page/` in the example below)
- `{testFileName}` - Test file name (with extension) (e.g.
`page-click.spec.ts` in the example below)
- `{testFilePath}` - Relative path from `testDir` to test file path
(e.g. `page/page-click.spec.ts` in the example below)
- `{ext}` - snapshot extension (with dots)
- `{arg}` - joined snapshot name parts, without extension (e.g.
`foo/bar/baz` in the example below)
- `{snapshotSuffix}` - `testInfo.snapshotSuffix` value.
Consider the following file structure:
```
playwright.config.ts
tests/
└── page/
└── page-click.spec.ts
```
The following `page-click.spec.ts`:
```ts
// page-click.spec.ts
import { test, expect } from '@playwright/test';
test('should work', async ({ page }) => {
await expect(page).toHaveScreenshot(['foo', 'bar', 'baz.png']);
});
```
Fixes#7792