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Aria snapshots

Overview

In Playwright, aria snapshots provide a YAML representation of the accessibility tree of a page. These snapshots can be stored and compared later to verify if the page structure remains consistent or meets defined expectations.

The YAML format describes the hierarchical structure of accessible elements on the page, detailing roles, attributes, values, and text content. The structure follows a tree-like syntax, where each node represents an accessible element, and indentation indicates nested elements.

Following is a simple example of an aria snapshot for the playwright.dev homepage:

- banner:
- heading /Playwright enables reliable/ [level=1]
- link "Get started"
- link "Star microsoft/playwright on GitHub"
- main:
- img "Browsers (Chromium, Firefox, WebKit)"
- heading "Any browser • Any platform • One API"

Each accessible element in the tree is represented as a YAML node:

- role "name" [attribute=value]
  • role: Specifies the ARIA or HTML role of the element (e.g., heading, list, listitem, button).
  • "name": Accessible name of the element. Quoted strings indicate exact values, /patterns/ are used for regular expression.
  • [attribute=value]: Attributes and values, in square brackets, represent specific ARIA attributes, such as checked, disabled, expanded, level, pressed, or selected.

These values are derived from ARIA attributes or calculated based on HTML semantics. To inspect the accessibility tree structure of a page, use the Chrome DevTools Accessibility Pane.

Snapshot matching

The expect(locator).toMatchAriaSnapshot() assertion method in Playwright compares the accessible structure of the locator scope with a predefined aria snapshot template, helping validate the page's state against testing requirements.

For the following DOM:

<h1>title</h1>

You can match it using the following snapshot template:

await expect(page.locator('body')).toMatchAriaSnapshot(`
- heading "title"
`);

When matching, the snapshot template is compared to the current accessibility tree of the page:

  • If the tree structure matches the template, the test passes; otherwise, it fails, indicating a mismatch between expected and actual accessibility states.
  • The comparison is case-sensitive and collapses whitespace, so indentation and line breaks are ignored.
  • The comparison is order-sensitive, meaning the order of elements in the snapshot template must match the order in the page's accessibility tree.

Partial matching

You can perform partial matches on nodes by omitting attributes or accessible names, enabling verification of specific parts of the accessibility tree without requiring exact matches. This flexibility is helpful for dynamic or irrelevant attributes.

<button>Submit</button>

aria snapshot

- button

In this example, the button role is matched, but the accessible name ("Submit") is not specified, allowing the test to pass regardless of the button’s label.


For elements with ARIA attributes like checked or disabled, omitting these attributes allows partial matching, focusing solely on role and hierarchy.

<input type="checkbox" checked>

aria snapshot for partial match

- checkbox

In this partial match, the checked attribute is ignored, so the test will pass regardless of the checkbox state.


Similarly, you can partially match children in lists or groups by omitting specific list items or nested elements.

<ul>
<li>Feature A</li>
<li>Feature B</li>
<li>Feature C</li>
</ul>

aria snapshot for partial match

- list
- listitem: Feature B

Partial matches let you create flexible snapshot tests that verify essential page structure without enforcing specific content or attributes.

Matching with regular expressions

Regular expressions allow flexible matching for elements with dynamic or variable text. Accessible names and text can support regex patterns.

<h1>Issues 12</h1>

aria snapshot with regular expression

- heading /Issues \d+/

Generating snapshots

Creating aria snapshots in Playwright helps ensure and maintain your application’s structure. You can generate snapshots in various ways depending on your testing setup and workflow.

1. Generating snapshots with the Playwright code generator

If you’re using Playwright’s Code Generator, generating aria snapshots is streamlined with its interactive interface:

  • "Assert snapshot" Action: In the code generator, you can use the "Assert snapshot" action to automatically create a snapshot assertion for the selected elements. This is a quick way to capture the aria snapshot as part of your recorded test flow.
  • "Aria snapshot" Tab: The "Aria snapshot" tab within the code generator interface visually represents the aria snapshot for a selected locator, letting you explore, inspect, and verify element roles, attributes, and accessible names to aid snapshot creation and review.

2. Updating snapshots with @playwright/test and the --update-snapshots flag

When using the Playwright test runner (@playwright/test), you can automatically update snapshots by running tests with the --update-snapshots flag:

npx playwright test --update-snapshots

This command regenerates snapshots for assertions, including aria snapshots, replacing outdated ones. It’s useful when application structure changes require new snapshots as a baseline. Note that Playwright will wait for the maximum expect timeout specified in the test runner configuration to ensure the page is settled before taking the snapshot. It might be necessary to adjust the --timeout if the test hits the timeout while generating snapshots.

Empty template for snapshot generation

Passing an empty string as the template in an assertion generates a snapshot on-the-fly:

await expect(locator).toMatchAriaSnapshot('');

Note that Playwright will wait for the maximum expect timeout specified in the test runner configuration to ensure the page is settled before taking the snapshot. It might be necessary to adjust the --timeout if the test hits the timeout while generating snapshots.

Snapshot patch files

When updating snapshots, Playwright creates patch files that capture differences. These patch files can be reviewed, applied, and committed to source control, allowing teams to track structural changes over time and ensure updates are consistent with application requirements.

3. Using the Locator.ariaSnapshot method

The locator.ariaSnapshot() method allows you to programmatically create a YAML representation of accessible elements within a locator’s scope, especially helpful for generating snapshots dynamically during test execution.

Example:

const snapshot = await page.locator('body').ariaSnapshot();
console.log(snapshot);

This command outputs the aria snapshot within the specified locator’s scope in YAML format, which you can validate or store as needed.

Accessibility tree examples

Headings with level attributes

Headings can include a level attribute indicating their heading level.

<h1>Title</h1>
<h2>Subtitle</h2>

aria snapshot

- heading "Title" [level=1]
- heading "Subtitle" [level=2]

Text nodes

Standalone or descriptive text elements appear as text nodes.

<div>Sample accessible name</div>

aria snapshot

- text: Sample accessible name

Inline multiline text

Multiline text, such as paragraphs, is normalized in the aria snapshot.

<p>Line 1<br>Line 2</p>

aria snapshot

- paragraph: Line 1 Line 2

Links display their text or composed content from pseudo-elements.

<a href="#more-info">Read more about Accessibility</a>

aria snapshot

- link "Read more about Accessibility"

Text boxes

Input elements of type text show their value attribute content.

<input type="text" value="Enter your name">

aria snapshot

- textbox: Enter your name

Lists with items

Ordered and unordered lists include their list items.

<ul aria-label="Main Features">
<li>Feature 1</li>
<li>Feature 2</li>
</ul>

aria snapshot

- list "Main Features":
- listitem: Feature 1
- listitem: Feature 2

Grouped elements

Groups capture nested elements, such as <details> elements with summary content.

<details>
<summary>Summary</summary>
<p>Detail content here</p>
</details>

aria snapshot

- group: Summary

Attributes and states

Commonly used ARIA attributes, like checked, disabled, expanded, level, pressed, and selected, represent control states.

Checkbox with checked attribute

<input type="checkbox" checked>

aria snapshot

- checkbox [checked]

Button with pressed attribute

<button aria-pressed="true">Toggle</button>

aria snapshot

- button "Toggle" [pressed=true]