Enforces that a data-test-id
attribute is present on interactive DOM elements to help with UI testing.
- ❌
<button>Download</button>
- ✅
<button data-test-id="download-button">Download</button>
1.3.0
- Add auto-fix capability toonClick
(thank you @bkonuwa and @pixelbandito). (#8)1.1.0
- elements with
disabled
andreadonly
attributes are now ignored by default. See Custom Rules Options to customize this behavior. (fixes #3) plugin:test-selectors/recommended
now emits warnings by default instead of errors. For the old stricter behavior which emits errors, folks can useplugin:test-selectors/recommendedWithErrors
(fixes #4)- Refactoring and cleanup. Readme improvements.
- elements with
1.0.1
- fix bug with inline functions (fixes #1)1.0.0
- initial release
You'll first need to install ESLint, which requires Node.js (note that eslint-plugin-test-selectors
requires Node.js 10+):
$ npm i eslint --save-dev
Next, install eslint-plugin-test-selectors
:
$ npm install eslint-plugin-test-selectors --save-dev
Note: If you installed ESLint globally (using the -g
flag) then you must also install eslint-plugin-test-selectors
globally.
Add test-selectors
to the plugins section of your .eslintrc
configuration file. You can omit the eslint-plugin-
prefix:
{
"plugins": [
"test-selectors"
]
}
If you want to use all the recommended default rules, you can simply add this line to the extends
section of your .eslintrc
configuration:
{
"extends": [
"plugin:test-selectors/recommended"
]
}
By default, this will run all Supported Rules and emit eslint warnings. If you want to be more strict, you can emit eslint errors by instead using plugin:test-selectors/recommendedWithErrors
.
Another option: you can also selectively enable and disable individual rules in the rules
section of your .eslintrc
configuration. For instance, if you only want to enable the test-selectors/button
rule, skip the extends
addition above and simply add the following to the rules
section of your .eslintrc
configuration:
{
"rules": {
"test-selectors/button": ["warn", "always"]
}
}
If you like most of the recommended rules by adding the extends
option above, but find one in particular to be bothersome, you can simply disable it:
{
"rules": {
"test-selectors/anchor": "off"
}
}
Note: see Supported Rules below for a full list.
All tests can be customized individually by passing an object with one or more of the following properties.
The default test attribute expected is data-test-id
, but you can override it with whatever you like. Here is how you would use data-some-custom-attribute
instead:
{
"rules": {
"test-selectors/onChange": ["warn", "always", { "testAttribute": "data-some-custom-attribute" }]
}
}
By default all elements with the disabled
attribute are ignored, e.g. <input disabled />
. If you don't want to ignore this attribute, set ignoreDisabled
to false
:
{
"rules": {
"test-selectors/onChange": ["warn", "always", { "ignoreDisabled": false }]
}
}
By default all elements with the readonly
attribute are ignored, e.g. <input readonly />
. If you don't want to ignore this attribute, set ignoreReadonly
to false
:
{
"rules": {
"test-selectors/onChange": ["warn", "always", { "ignoreReadonly": false }]
}
}
Only supported on button
rule, this option will exempt React components called Button from the rule.
{
"rules": {
"test-selectors/button": ["warn", "always", {"htmlOnly": true}]
}
}
test-selectors/anchor
test-selectors/button
test-selectors/input
test-selectors/onChange
test-selectors/onClick
test-selectors/onKeyDown
test-selectors/onKeyUp
If you don't want these test attributes added in production, you can use something like babel-plugin-jsx-remove-data-test-id
Why data
attributes and not id
or class
? Check out some of the following: