- Use file path, not content to calculate the attachment hash.
- Always cleanup fixture from the list on teardown, to avoid reporting
teardown error multiple times: from the test, and from the cleanup.
Previously, reporter would look for a stack frame directly in the test file.
Often times, that is not a top stack frame, especially when the test uses
some helper functions.
This changes error snippets and locations to use the top frame. When top
frame does not match the test file, we additionally show the location
to avoid confusion:
```
1) a.spec.ts:7:7 › foobar ========================================================================
Error: oh my
at helper.ts:5
3 |
4 | export function ohMy() {
> 5 | throw new Error('oh my');
| ^
6 | }
7 |
at ohMy (.../reporter-base-should-print-codeframe-from-a-helper/helper.ts:5:15)
at .../reporter-base-should-print-codeframe-from-a-helper/a.spec.ts:8:9
at FixtureRunner.resolveParametersAndRunHookOrTest (.../src/fixtures.ts:281:12)
```
This changes previous layout shift attempt (see #9546)
to account for more valid usecases:
- On the first event that is intercepted we enforce the hit target. This
is similar to the current mode that checks hit target before the action,
but is better timed.
- On subsequent events we assume that everything is fine. This covers more
scenarios like react rerender, glass pane on mousedown, detach on mouseup.
This check is enabled by default, with `process.env.PLAYWRIGHT_NO_LAYOUT_SHIFT_CHECK`
to opt out.
This patch introduces 109 "#smoke" tests - a subset of tests that makes
sure that basic Playwright functionality works. This set is loosely
defined; feel free to add/remove tests to the set. The only goal is to
keep this set minimal & fast to run.
I tried to pick tests so that various parts of Playwright functionality
are exercised.
Textual snapshot diffs were previously broken in the HTML Report. The strikethrough'd text extended beyond the intended region.
HTML Report Before:
<img width="693" alt="Screen Shot 2021-12-27 at 4 43 35 PM" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/11915034/147518750-a60f9002-6eed-48a1-a412-20fabd076fa6.png">
HTML Report After:
<img width="206" alt="Screen Shot 2021-12-27 at 4 48 37 PM" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/11915034/147518762-19a4c8f9-ccc3-4a3c-a962-5a42edc6fc5d.png">
This now matches what's expected and shown in the terminal (which has always been correct):
<img width="1384" alt="Screen Shot 2021-12-27 at 4 36 29 PM" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/11915034/147518799-f538259e-5a45-4d6f-916c-a12ccb620c5b.png">
NB: This MR is a workaround, but not a root cause fix. It works, but I never fully got to the root cause so a bug upstream may be required. It's unclear whether it's (1) in [`colors`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/colors), (2) in [`ansi-to-html`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ansi-to-html), or (3) Playwright's use of the two. Since the terminal output is correct, I suspect it is in `ansi-to-html`. For example:
```js
const colors = require("colors");
const Convert = require('ansi-to-html');
const convert = new Convert();
// original (strike incorrectly wraps everything in the HTML)
console.log(convert.toHtml(colors.strikethrough("crossed out") + ' ' + colors.red("red")))
// prints: <strike>crossed out <span style="color:#A00">red<span style="color:#FFF"></span></span></strike>
// workaround
console.log(convert.toHtml(colors.reset(colors.strikethrough("crossed out")) + ' ' + colors.red("red")))
// prints: <strike>crossed out</strike> <span style="color:#A00">red<span style="color:#FFF"></span></span>
```
Fixes#11116
This prepares for beforeAll/afterAll hooks to be handled in the same way.
Since we do not know in advance whether a hook will run, we must create
TestResults lazily.
When configuring a proxy, Chromium requires a magic tokens to get some
local network requests to go through the proxy. This has tripped up a
few users, so we make the behavior default to the expected: proxy
everything including the local requests. This matches the other vendors
as well.
NB: This can be disabled via
`PLAYWRIGHT_DISABLE_FORCED_CHROMIUM_PROXIED_LOOPBACK=1`
Supercedes: #8345Fixes: #10631
There were two issues:
- we did not find VDom roots inside shadow DOM
- we incorrectly relied on DOM's `contain` method to determine if
VDom's rendered node belongs to requested scope.
Fixes#10123
feat(api): add explicit async testInfo.attach
We add an explicit async API for attaching file paths (and Buffers) to
tests that can be awaited to help users ensure they are attaching files
that actually exist at both the time of the invocation and later when
reporters (like the HTML Reporter) run and package up test artifacts.
This is intended to help surface attachment issues as soon as possible
so you aren't silently left with a missing attachment
minutes/days/months later when you go to debug a suddenly breaking test
expecting an attachment to be there.
NB: The current implemntation incurs an extra file copy compared to
manipulating the raw attachments array. If users encounter performance
issues because of this, we can consider an option parameter that uses
rename under the hood instead of copy. However, that would need to be
used with care if the file were to be accessed later in the test.
1. Fixtures defined in test.extend() can now have `{ option: true }` configuration that makes them overridable in the config. Options support all other properties of fixtures - value/function, scope, auto.
```
const test = base.extend<MyOptions>({
foo: ['default', { option: true }],
});
```
2. test.declare() and project.define are removed.
3. project.use applies overrides to default option values and nothing else. Any test.extend() and test.use() calls take priority over config options.
Required user changes: if someone used to define fixture options with test.extend(), overriding them in config will stop working. The solution is to add `{ option: true }`.
```
// Old code
export const test = base.extend<{ myOption: number, myFixture: number }>({
myOption: 123,
myFixture: ({ myOption }, use) => use(2 * myOption),
});
// New code
export const test = base.extend<{ myOption: number, myFixture: number }>({
myOption: [123, { option: true }],
myFixture: ({ myOption }, use) => use(2 * myOption),
});
```
Makes it easier to understand that expect does indeed have a separate timeout.
```
Error: expect(received).toHaveCount(expected) // deep equality
Expected: 0
Received: 1
Call log:
- expect.toHaveCount with timeout 500ms
- waiting for selector "span"
- selector resolved to 1 element
- unexpected value "1"
- selector resolved to 1 element
- unexpected value "1"
- selector resolved to 1 element
- unexpected value "1"
```