[][src]Crate insta

insta: a snapshot testing library for Rust

What are snapshot tests

Snapshots tests (also sometimes called approval tests) are tests that assert values against a reference value (the snapshot). This is similar to how assert_eq! lets you compare a value against a reference value but unlike simple string assertions snapshot tests let you test against complex values and come with comprehensive tools to review changes.

Snapshot tests are particularly useful if your reference values are very large or change often.

How it operates

This crate exports multiple macros for snapshot testing:

  • assert_snapshot_matches! for comparing basic string snapshots.
  • assert_debug_snapshot_matches! for comparing Debug outputs of values.
  • assert_display_snapshot_matches! for comparing Display outputs of values.
  • assert_yaml_snapshot_matches! for comparing YAML serialized output of types implementing serde::Serialize.
  • assert_ron_snapshot_matches! for comparing RON serialized output of types implementing serde::Serialize.
  • assert_json_snapshot_matches! for comparing JSON serialized output of types implementing serde::Serialize.

Snapshots are stored in the snapshots folder right next to the test file where this is used. The name of the file is <module>__<name>.snap where the name of the snapshot has to be provided to the assertion macro. If no name is provided the name is derived from the test name.

Additionally snapshots can also be stored inline. In that case the cargo-insta tool is necessary. See inline snapshots for more information.

For macros that work with serde::Serialize this crate also permits redacting of partial values. See redactions for more information.

Example

Install insta:

Recommended way if you have cargo-edit installed:

This example is not tested
$ cargo add --dev insta

Alternatively edit your Cargo.toml manually and add insta as manual dependency.

And for an improved review experience also install cargo-insta:

This example is not tested
$ cargo install cargo-insta
This example is not tested
use insta::assert_debug_snapshot_matches;

#[test]
fn test_snapshots() {
    let value = vec![1, 2, 3];
    assert_debug_snapshot_matches!("snapshot_name", value);
}

(If you do not want to provide a name for the snapshot read about unnamed snapshots.)

The recommended flow is to run the tests once, have them fail and check if the result is okay. By default the new snapshots are stored next to the old ones with the extra .new extension. Once you are satisifed move the new files over. You can also use cargo insta review which will let you interactively review them:

This example is not tested
$ cargo test
$ cargo insta review

For more information on updating see Snapshot Updating.

Snapshot files

The committed snapshot files will have a header with some meta information that can make debugging easier and the snapshot:

This example is not tested
---
created: "2019-01-21T22:03:13.792906+00:00"
creator: insta@0.3.0
expression: "&User{id: Uuid::new_v4(), username: \"john_doe\".to_string(),}"
source: tests/test_redaction.rs
---
[
    1,
    2,
    3
]

Snapshot updating

During test runs snapshots will be updated according to the INSTA_UPDATE environment variable. The default is auto which will write all new snapshots into .snap.new files if no CI is detected.

INSTA_UPDATE modes:

  • auto: the default. no for CI environments or new otherwise
  • always: overwrites old snapshot files with new ones unasked
  • new: write new snapshots into .snap.new files.
  • no: does not update snapshot files at all (just runs tests)

When new is used as mode the cargo-insta command can be used to review the snapshots conveniently:

This example is not tested
$ cargo install cargo-insta
$ cargo test
$ cargo insta review

"enter" or "a" accepts a new snapshot, "escape" or "r" rejects, "space" or "s" skips the snapshot for now.

For more information invoke cargo insta --help.

Test assertions

By default the tests will fail when the snapshot assertion fails. However if a test produces more than one snapshot it can be useful to force a test to pass so that all new snapshots are created in one go.

This can be enabled by setting INSTA_FORCE_PASS to 1:

This example is not tested
$ INSTA_FORCE_PASS=1 cargo test --no-fail-fast

A better way to do this is to run cargo insta test --review which will run all tests with force pass and then bring up the review tool:

This example is not tested
$ cargo insta test --review

Redactions

For all snapshots created based on serde::Serialize output insta supports redactions. This permits replacing values with hardcoded other values to make snapshots stable when otherwise random or otherwise changing values are involved.

Redactions can be defined as the third argument to those macros with the syntax { selector => replacement_value }.

The following selectors exist:

  • .key: selects the given key
  • ["key"]: alternative syntax for keys
  • [index]: selects the given index in an array
  • []: selects all items on an array
  • [:end]: selects all items up to end (excluding, supports negative indexing)
  • [start:]: selects all items starting with start
  • [start:end]: selects all items from start to end (end excluding, supports negative indexing).
  • .*: selects all keys on that depth

Example usage:

This example is not tested
#[derive(Serialize)]
pub struct User {
    id: Uuid,
    username: String,
    extra: HashMap<String, String>,
}

assert_yaml_snapshot_matches!("user", &User {
    id: Uuid::new_v4(),
    username: "john_doe".to_string(),
    extra: {
        let mut map = HashMap::new();
        map.insert("ssn".to_string(), "123-123-123".to_string());
        map
    },
}, {
    ".id" => "[uuid]",
    ".extra.ssn" => "[ssn]"
});

Unnamed snapshots

All snapshot assertion functions let you leave out the snapshot name. In that case the snapshot name is derived from the test name. This works because the rust test runner names the thread by the test name and the name is taken from the thread name. In case your test spawns additional threads this will not work and you will need to provide a name explicitly.

Additionally if you have multiple snapshot assertions per test name a counter will be appended:

This example is not tested
#[test]
fn test_something() {
    assert_snapshot_matches!("first value");
    assert_snapshot_matches!("second value");
}

This will create two snapshots: something for the first value and something-2 for the second value. The leading test_ prefix is removed if the function starts with that name.

Inline Snapshots

Additionally snapshots can also be stored inline. In that case the format for the snapshot macros is assert_snapshot_matches!(reference_value, @"snapshot"). The leading at sign (@) indicates that the following string is the reference value. cargo-insta will then update that string with the new value on review.

Example:

This example is not tested
#[derive(Serialize)]
pub struct User {
    username: String,
}

assert_yaml_snapshot_matches!(User {
    username: "john_doe".to_string(),
}, @"");

After the initial test failure you can run cargo insta review to accept the change. The file will then be updated automatically.

Macros

assert_debug_snapshot_matches

Asserts a Debug snapshot.

assert_display_snapshot_matches

Asserts a Display snapshot.

assert_json_snapshot_matches

Asserts a Serialize snapshot in JSON format.

assert_ron_snapshot_matches

Asserts a Serialize snapshot in RON format.

assert_snapshot_matches

Asserts a string snapshot.

assert_yaml_snapshot_matches

Asserts a Serialize snapshot in YAML format.

Structs

MetaData

Snapshot metadata information.

Snapshot

A helper to work with stored snapshots.