⚠️There's a newer version (1.0.7) of this package. Take me there.

vdiffr

vdiffr is an extension to the package testthat that makes it easy to test for visual regressions. It provides a Shiny app to manage failed tests and visually compare a graphic to its expected output.

Important: The CRAN version no longer works properly. Please use the development version which removes the dependency on the system FreeType library.

Installation

Get the development version from github with:

# install.packages("remotes")
remotes::install_github("r-lib/vdiffr")

or the last CRAN release with:

install.packages("vdiffr")

How to use vdiffr

Getting started with vdiffr is a three step process:

  1. Add expectations to by including expect_doppelganger() in your test files.

  2. Run manage_cases() to generate the plots which vdiffr will test against in

the future. This will launch a shiny gadget which will ask you to confirm that each plot is correct.

  1. Run devtools::test() to execute the tests as normal.

When a figure doesn't matched the saved version, vdiffr signals a failure when it is run interactively, or when it is run on Travis or Appveyor. Mismatches do not cause R CMD check to fail on CRAN machines. See the testing versus monitoring section below.

Adding expectations

vdiffr integrates with testthat through the expect_doppelganger() expectation. It takes as arguments:

  • A title. This title is used in two ways. First, the title is standardised (it is converted to lowercase and any character that is not alphanumeric or a space is turned into a dash) and used as filename for storing the figure. Secondly, with ggplot2 figures the title is automatically added to the plot with ggtitle() (only if no ggtitle has been set).

  • A figure. This can be a ggplot object, a recordedplot, a function to be called, or more generally any object with a print method.

  • Optionally, a path where to store the figures, relative to tests/figs/. They are stored in a subfolder according to the current testthat context by default. Supply path to change the subfolder.

For example, the following tests will create figures in tests/figs/histograms/ called base-graphics-histogram.svg and ggplot2-histogram.svg:

context("Histograms")

disp_hist_base <- function() hist(mtcars$disp)
disp_hist_ggplot <- ggplot(mtcars, aes(disp)) + geom_histogram()

vdiffr::expect_doppelganger("Base graphics histogram", disp_hist_base)
vdiffr::expect_doppelganger("ggplot2 histogram", disp_hist_ggplot)

Note that in addition to automatic ggtitles, ggplot2 figures are assigned the minimalistic theme theme_test() (unless they already have been assigned a theme).

Managing the tests

When you have added new test cases or detected regressions, you can manage those from the R command line with the functions collect_cases(), validate_cases(), and delete_orphaned_cases(). However it's easier to run the shiny application manage_cases(). With this app you can:

  • Check how a failed case differs from its expected output using three widgets: Toggle (click to swap the images), Slide and Diff. If you use Github, you may be familiar with the last two.

  • Validate cases. You can do so groupwise (all new cases or all failed cases) or on a case by case basis. When you validate a failed case, the old expected output is replaced by the new one.

  • Delete orphaned cases. During a refactoring of your unit tests, some visual expectations may be removed or renamed. This means that some unused figures will linger in the tests/figs/ folder. These figures appear in the Shiny application under the category "Orphaned" and can be cleaned up from there.

Both manage_cases() and collect_cases() take package as first argument, the path to your package sources. This argument has exactly the same semantics as in devtools. You can use vdiffr tools the same way as you would use devtools::check(), for example. The default is ".", meaning that the package is expected to be found in the current folder.

All validated cases are stored in tests/figs/. This folder may be handy to showcase the different graphs offered in your package. You can also keep track of how your plots change as you tweak their layout and add features by checking the history on Github.

Running tests

You can run the tests the usual way, for example with devtools::test(). New cases for which you just wrote an expectation will be skipped. Failed tests will show as an error.

Testing versus Monitoring

When a figure doesn't match its saved version, it is only reported as a failure under these circumstances:

  • When the NOT_CRAN environment is set. In particular, devtools sets this when running the tests interactively.

  • On Travis, Appveyor, or any environment where the Sys.getenv("CI") is set.

Otherwise, the failure is ignored. The motivation for this is that vdiffr is a monitoring tool and shouldn't cause R CMD check failures on the CRAN machines.

Checking the appearance of a figure is inherently fragile. It is a bit like testing for errors by matching exact error messages. These messages are susceptible to change at any time. Similarly, the appearance of plots depends on a lot of upstream code, such as the way margins and spacing are computed. vdiffr uses a special ggplot2 theme that should change very rarely, but there are just too many upstream factors that could cause breakages. For this reason, figure mismatches are not necessarily representative of actual failures.

Visual testing is not an alternative to writing unit tests for the internal data transformations performed during the creation of your figure. It is more of a monitoring tool that allows you to quickly check how the appearance of your figures changes over time, and to manually assess whether changes reflect actual problems in your packages.

If you want vdiffr to fail on CRAN machines as well, just set the environment variable CI to "true" in a setup-vdiffr.R file in your testthat folder.

RStudio integration

An addin to launch manage_cases() is provided with vdiffr. Use the addin menu to launch the Shiny app in an RStudio dialog.

ESS integration

To use the Shiny app as part of ESS devtools integration with C-c C-w C-v, include something like this in your init file:

(defun ess-r-vdiffr-manage-cases ()
  (interactive)
  (ess-r-package-send-process "vdiffr::manage_cases(%s)\n"
                              "Manage vdiffr cases for %s"))

(define-key ess-r-package-dev-map "\C-v" 'ess-r-vdiffr-manage-cases)

Debugging

It is sometimes difficult to understand the cause of a failure. This usually indicates that the plot is not created deterministically. Potential culprits are:

  • Some of the plot components depend on random variation. Try setting a seed.

  • The plot depends on some system library. For instance sf plots depend on libraries like GEOS and GDAL. It might not be possible to test these plots with vdiffr (which can still be used for manual inspection, add a [testthat::skip()] before the expect_doppelganger() call in that case).

To help you understand the causes of a failure, vdiffr automatically logs the SVG diff of all failures when run under R CMD check. The log is located in tests/vdiffr.Rout.fail and should be displayed on Travis.

You can also set the VDIFFR_LOG_PATH environment variable with Sys.setenv() to unconditionally (also interactively) log failures in the file pointed by the variable.

Implementation

testthat Reporter

vdiffr extends testthat through a custom Reporter. Reporters are classes (R6 classes in recent versions of testthat) whose instances collect cases and output a summary of the tests. While reporters are usually meant to provide output for the end user, you can also use them in functions to interact with testthat.

vdiffr has a special reporter that does nothing but activate a collecter for the visual test cases. collect_cases() calls devtools::test() with this reporter. When expect_doppelganger() is called, it first checks whether the case is new or failed. If that's the case, and if it finds that vdiffr's collecter is active, it calls the collecter, which in turns records the current test case.

This enables the user to run the tests with the usual development tools and get feedback in the form of skipped or failed cases. On the other hand, when vdiffr's tools are called, we collect information about the tests of interest and wrap them in a data structure.

SVG comparison

Comparing SVG files is convenient and should work correctly in most situations. However, SVG is not suitable for tracking really subtle changes and regressions. See vdiffr's issue #1 for a discussion on this. vdiffr may gain additional comparison backends in the future to make the tests more stringent.

Copy Link

Version

Down Chevron

Install

install.packages('vdiffr')

Monthly Downloads

22,948

Version

0.3.0

License

GPL-3 | file LICENSE

Issues

Pull Requests

Stars

Forks

Maintainer

Last Published

January 2nd, 2019

Functions in vdiffr (0.3.0)