pytest-insta

A practical snapshot testing plugin for pytest


Keywords
pytest-plugin, pytest, testing, snapshot, snapshot-testing
License
MIT
Install
pip install pytest-insta==0.3.0

Documentation

pytest-insta

Build Status PyPI PyPI - Python Version Code style: black

A practical snapshot testing plugin for pytest.

assert snapshot() == "awesome!"

Introduction

Snapshot testing makes it easy to monitor and approve changes by comparing the result of an operation against a previous reference value.

This project borrows from a lot of other implementations to provide a pythonic, batteries included snapshot testing solution. It also tries to feel as native to pytest as possible with its integrated review tool.

Features

  • Expressive and familiar assertion syntax
  • Can format text, binary, hexdump, json and pickle snapshots out-of-the-box
  • Can be extended with custom snapshot formats
  • Interactive review tool for inspecting and approving changes

Credits

  • insta (rust)

    Armin's work was the initial motivation for this project and inspired the reviewing workflow.

  • jest (javascript)

    Jest enabled the mass adoption of snapshot testing throughout the JavaScript ecosystem and now basically stands as the reference when it comes to what snapshot testing is supposed to look like.

Installation

The package can be installed with pip.

$ pip install pytest-insta

Getting Started

The snapshot fixture is a function that returns the current value of a snapshot.

def test_hello_world(snapshot):
    assert snapshot() == "hello"
$ pytest
...
CREATE snapshots/<prefix>__hello_world__0.txt

Running this test will create a new text file in the snapshots directory. The next time pytest runs, the test will load the snapshot and compare it to the actual value.

The return value of the snapshot function can be assigned to a variable and used multiple times.

def test_hello_world(snapshot):
    expected = snapshot()
    assert expected == "hello"
    assert expected.upper() == "HELLO"

By default, each invocation of the snapshot function will generate its own snapshot.

def test_hello_world(snapshot):
    assert snapshot() == "hello"
    assert snapshot() == "world"
$ pytest
...
CREATE snapshots/<prefix>__hello_world__0.txt
CREATE snapshots/<prefix>__hello_world__1.txt

You can also name snapshots explicitly. This makes it possible to load a snapshot multiple times during the same test.

def test_hello_world(snapshot):
    assert snapshot("message.txt") == "hello"
    assert snapshot("message.txt") == "hello"
$ pytest
...
CREATE snapshots/<prefix>__hello_world__message.txt

Snapshot Formats

By default, the snapshot fixture will store snapshots as .txt files. By providing a filename or just a specific file extension, you can create snapshots using various formats supported out-of-the-box.

def test_hello_world(snapshot):
    assert snapshot("json") == {"hello": "world"}
    assert snapshot("expected.json") == {"hello": "world"}
$ pytest
...
CREATE snapshots/<prefix>__hello_world__0.json
CREATE snapshots/<prefix>__hello_world__expected.json

Note that the plugin doesn't diff the snapshot files themselves but actually loads snapshots back into the interpreter and performs comparisons on live python objects. This makes it possible to use snapshot formats that aren't directly human-readable like pure binary files and pickle.

Built-in Formats Extension Supported Types
Plain text .txt str
Binary .bin bytes
Hexdump .hexdump bytes
Json .json Any object serializable by the json module
Pickle .pickle Any object serializable by the pickle module

The built-in formats should get you covered most of the time but you can also really easily implement your own snapshot formats.

from dataclasses import dataclass
from pathlib import Path

from pytest_insta import Fmt

@dataclass
class Point:
    x: int
    y: int

class FmtPoint(Fmt[Point]):
    extension = ".pt"

    def load(self, path: Path) -> Point:
        return Point(*map(int, path.read_text().split()))

    def dump(self, path: Path, value: Point):
        path.write_text(f"{value.x} {value.y}")

def test_hello_world(snapshot):
    assert snapshot("pt") == Point(4, 2)

You can create a custom formatter by inheriting from the Fmt class and defining custom load and dump methods. The extension attribute associates the custom formatter to the specified file extension.

Custom formatters can be defined anywhere in your test suite but it's recommended to keep them in conftest.py if they're meant to be used across multiple files.

Command-line Options

The plugin extends the pytest cli with a new --insta option that accommodates the snapshot-testing workflow. The option can be set to one of the following strategies:

  • update - Record and update differing snapshots
  • update-new - Record and create snapshots that don't already exist
  • update-none - Don't record or update anything
  • record - Record and save differing snapshots to be reviewed later
  • review - Record and save differing snapshots then bring up the review tool
  • review-only - Don't run tests and only bring up the review tool
  • clear - Don't run tests and clear all the snapshots to review

If the option is not specified, the strategy will default to update-none if pytest is running in a CI environment and update-new otherwise. This makes sure that your pipeline properly catches any snapshot you might forget to push while keeping the development experience seamless by automatically creating snapshots as you're writing tests.

The record option is useful if you're in the middle of something and your snapshots keep changing. Differing snapshots won't cause tests to fail and will instead be recorded and saved.

$ pytest --insta record
...
RECORD .pytest_cache/d/insta/<prefix>__hello_world__0.txt

NOTICE 1 snapshot to review

When you're done making changes you can use the review option to bring up the review tool after running your tests. Each differing snapshot will display a diff and let you inspect the new value and the old value in a python repl.

$ pytest --insta review
...
_____________________________ [1/1] _____________________________

old: snapshots/example_hello_world__0.txt
new: .pytest_cache/d/insta/example_hello_world__0.txt

>       assert old == new
E       assert 'hello' == 'world'
E         - world
E         + hello

test_example.py:1: test_hello_world

a: accept, r: reject, s: skip
>>>

Finally, the update option will let you update any differing snapshot according to the current test run, without going through the review tool.

$ pytest --insta update
...
UPDATE snapshots/<prefix>__hello_world__0.txt

It's worth mentioning that the updating, recording and reviewing strategies take into account any filter you might specify with the -k or -m options.

Caveats

The snapshot fixture hijacks equality checks to record changes. This keeps assertions expressive and readable but introduces two caveats that you need to be aware of.

  • Right-sided snapshots ❌

    If an object's __eq__ method doesn't return NotImplemented when its type doesn't match the compared object, the snapshot won't be able to record the updated value if it's placed on the right side of the comparison.

    Explanation

    Strings return NotImplemented when compared to non-string objects so the following test will behave as expected.

    def test_bad(snapshot):
        assert "hello" == snapshot()  # This works

    However, dataclasses return False when compared to objects of different types and won't let the snapshot record any changes when placed on the left-side of the comparison.

    from dataclasses import dataclass
    from pathlib import Path
    
    from pytest_insta import Fmt
    
    @dataclass
    class Point:
        x: int
        y: int
    
    class FmtPoint(Fmt[Point]):
        extension = ".pt"
    
        def load(self, path: Path) -> Point:
            return Point(*map(int, path.read_text().split()))
    
        def dump(self, path: Path, value: Point):
            path.write_text(f"{value.x} {value.y}")
    
    def test_bad(snapshot):
        assert Point(4, 2) == snapshot("pt")  # This doesn't work

    Recommendation ✅

    To avoid confusion and keep things consistent, always put snapshots on the left-side of the comparison.

    def test_good(snapshot):
        assert snapshot() == "hello"
    def test_good(snapshot):
        assert snapshot("pt") == Point(4, 2)
  • Not comparing snapshots ❌

    Snapshots should first be compared to their actual value before being used in other expressions and assertions.

    Explanation

    The comparison records the current value if the snapshot doesn't exist yet. In the following example, the test will fail before the actual comparison and the snapshot will not be generated.

    def test_bad(snapshot):
        expected = snapshot()
        assert expected.upper() == "HELLO"  # This doesn't work
        assert expected == "hello"
    $ pytest
    ...
    >       assert expected.upper() == "HELLO"
    E       AttributeError: 'SnapshotNotfound' object has no attribute 'upper'

    Recommendation ✅

    Always compare the snapshot to its actual value first and only perform additional operations afterwards.

    def test_good(snapshot):
        expected = snapshot()
        assert expected == "hello"
        assert expected.upper() == "HELLO"

Contributing

Contributions are welcome. Make sure to first open an issue discussing the problem or the new feature before creating a pull request. The project uses poetry.

$ poetry install

You can run the tests with poetry run pytest.

$ poetry run pytest

The project must type-check with pyright. If you're using VSCode the pylance extension should report diagnostics automatically. You can also install the type-checker locally with npm install and run it from the command-line.

$ npm run watch
$ npm run check

The code follows the black code style. Import statements are sorted with isort.

$ poetry run isort pytest_insta tests
$ poetry run black pytest_insta tests
$ poetry run black --check pytest_insta tests

License - MIT