Snapshot testing is a way to test your APIs without writing actual test cases.
- A snapshot is a single state of your API, saved in a file.
- You have a set of snapshots for your API endpoints.
- Once you add a new feature, you can generate automatically new snapshots for the updated API.
$ pip install snapshottest
from snapshottest import TestCase
class APITestCase(TestCase):
def test_api_me(self):
"""Testing the API for /me"""
my_api_response = api.client.get('/me')
self.assertMatchSnapshot(my_api_response)
If you want to update the snapshots automatically you can use the nosetests --snapshot-update
.
Check the Unittest example.
def test_mything(snapshot):
"""Testing the API for /me"""
my_api_response = api.client.get('/me')
snapshot.assert_match(my_api_response)
If you want to update the snapshots automatically you can use the --snapshot-update
config.
Check the Pytest example.
After cloning this repo, ensure dependencies are installed by running:
pip install -e ".[test]"
After developing, the full test suite can be evaluated by running:
py.test tests --cov=snapshottest
This package is heavily insipired in jest snapshot testing.
Most of this content is taken from the Jest snapshot blogpost.
We want to make it as frictionless as possible to write good tests that are useful. We observed that when engineers are provided with ready-to-use tools, they end up writing more tests, which in turn results in stable and healthy code bases.
However engineers frequently spend more time writing a test than the component itself. As a result many people stopped writing tests altogether which eventually led to instabilities.
A typical snapshot test case for a mobile app renders a UI component, takes a screenshot, then compares it to a reference image stored alongside the test. The test will fail if the two images do not match: either the change is unexpected, or the screenshot needs to be updated to the new version of the UI component.
A similar approach can be taken when it comes to testing your APIs. Instead of rendering the graphical UI, which would require building the entire app, you can use a test renderer to quickly generate a serializable value for your API response.