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Automate Chromatic with Travis CI

Chromatic’s automation can be included as part of your Travis CI job with relative ease.

Setup

To integrate Chromatic with your existing workflow, you’ll need to add the following:

.travis.yml
language: node_js
os: linux
dist: jammy

node_js:
  - 20

before_script:
  # ⚠️ See your package manager's documentation for the correct command to install dependencies in a CI environment.
  - npm ci

cache: npm

branches:
  only:
    - main

jobs:
  include:
    - stage: "Chromatic"
      name: "Run Chromatic"
      script: npx chromatic

We recommend saving the project token as an encrypted environment variable named CHROMATIC_PROJECT_TOKEN for security reasons. When the Chromatic CLI is executed, it will read the environment variable automatically without any additional flags. Refer to the official Travis CI environment variables documentation to learn more about it.

Run Chromatic on specific branches

If you need to customize your workflow to run on specific branches, you can do so. Change your .travis.yml to the following:

.travis.yml
# Other required configuration

branches:
  only: main # 👈 Filters the execution to run only on the main branch

jobs:
  include:
    # Other jobs

    # 👇 Adds Chromatic as a job
    - name: "Run Chromatic"
      script: npx chromatic

Read the official Travis CI conditional build documentation.

Run Chromatic on large projects

Chromatic is prepared to handle large file uploads (with a limit of 5000 files, including stories and assets). If your project exceeds this limit, we recommend adjusting your workflow and run the chromatic command with the --zip flag to compress your build before uploading it. For example:

.travis.yml
# Other required configuration

jobs:
  include:
    # Other jobs

    # 👇 Adds Chromatic as a job
    - name: "Run Chromatic"
      #👇 Runs Chromatic with the flag to compress the build output.
      script: npx chromatic --zip

Run Chromatic on monorepos

Chromatic can be run on monorepos that have multiple subprojects. Each subproject will need it’s own project token stored as an environment variable.

Prerequisites

  1. Ensure that you’re in the correct working directory for the subproject.
  2. Have build-storybook npm script in the subproject’s package.json file OR explicitly name the script using the buildScriptName parameter and make sure the script is listed in the subproject’s package.json file.

If you’ve already built your Storybook in a separate CI step, you can alternatively point the action at the build output using the storybookBuildDir parameter.

.travis.yml
# Other required configuration

# 👇 Runs Chromatic in parallel for each monorepo subproject
jobs:
  include:
    # Other jobs
    - name: "Publish Project 1 to Chromatic"
      before_script:
        # Other steps
        - cd packages/project_1
      script: npx chromatic
      env: CHROMATIC_PROJECT_TOKEN=$CHROMATIC_PROJECT_TOKEN_1
    - name: "Publish Project 2 to Chromatic"
      before_script:
        # Other steps
        - cd packages/project_2
      script: npx chromatic
      env: CHROMATIC_PROJECT_TOKEN=$CHROMATIC_PROJECT_TOKEN_2

Additional parallelization can be achieved when configuring your workflow to run Chromatic on multiple subprojects. Read the official Travis CI build matrix documentation.

Enable TurboSnap

TurboSnap is an advanced Chromatic feature implemented to improve the build time for large projects, disabled by default once you add Chromatic to your CI environment. To enable it, you’ll need to adjust your existing workflow and run the chromatic command with the --only-changed flag as follows:

.travis.yml
# Other required configuration

jobs:
  include:
    # Other jobs

    # 👇 Adds Chromatic as a job
    - name: "Run Chromatic"
      # 👇 Enables Chromatic's TurboSnap feature.
      script: npx chromatic --only-changed

TurboSnap is highly customizable and can be configured to fit your requirements. For more information, read our documentation.

Travis CI like other CI systems offer the option of running builds for various types of events. For instance for commits pushed to a branch in a pull request. Or for “merge” commits between that branch and the base branch (main).

These specific types of commits (merge) don’t persist in the history of your repository. That can cause Chromatic’s baselines to be lost in certain situations.

For internal pull requests (i.e., pull requests that aren’t from forks) we recommend disabling Chromatic on pr build events. Also make sure you have push builds enabled in your settings.

Once these conditions are met, add the following code to your .travis.yml:

.travis.yml
# Other required configuration

jobs:
  include:
    # Other jobs

    # 👇 Adds Chromatic as a job
    - name: "Run Chromatic"
      # 👇 Verifies the build event type or a if it's a forked repository
      if: (type = push OR head_repo != repo )
      script: npx chromatic

For external pull requests (i.e., forked repositories), the above code will ensure Chromatic runs with the pr build event because Travis will not trigger push events for these cases.

UI Test and UI Review

UI Tests and UI Review rely on branch and baseline detection to keep track of snapshots. We recommend the following configuration.

Command exit code for “required” checks

If you are using pull request statuses as required checks before merging, you may not want your Travis build to fail if test snapshots render without errors (but with changes). To achieve this, pass the flag --exit-zero-on-changes to the chromatic command, and your job will continue in such cases. For example:

.travis.yml
# Other required configuration

jobs:
  include:
    # Other jobs

    # 👇 Adds Chromatic as a job
    - name: "Run Chromatic"
      # 👇 Runs Chromatic with the flag to prevent workflow failure
      script: npx chromatic --exit-zero-on-changes

When using --exit-zero-on-changes your build will still stop and fail if your Storybook contains stories that error. If you’d prefer Chromatic never to block the build, you can use npx chromatic || true.

Re-run failed builds after verifying UI test results

Builds that contain visual changes need to be verified. They will fail if you are not using --exit-zero-on-changes. Once you accept all the changes, re-run the build and the Run Chromatic job will pass.

If you deny any change, you will need to make the necessary code changes to fix the test (and thus start a new build) to get Chromatic to pass again.

Maintain a clean “main” branch

A clean main branch is a development best practice and highly recommended for Chromatic. This means testing your main branch to ensure builds are passing. It’s important to note that baselines will not persist through branching and merging unless you test your main branch.

If the builds are a result of direct commits to main, you will need to accept changes to keep the main branch clean. If they’re merged from feature-branches, you will need to make sure those branches are passing before you merge into main.

Squash/rebase merge and the “main” branch

We use GitHub, GitLab, and Bitbucket APIs respectively to detect squashing and rebasing so your baselines match your expectations no matter your Git workflow (see Branching and Baselines for more details).

If you’re using this functionality but notice the incoming changes were not accepted as baselines in Chromatic, then you’ll need to adjust the workflow and include a new Chromatic job with the --auto-accept-changes flag. For example:

.travis.yml
# Other configuration here

jobs:
  include:
    # 👇 Checks if the branch is not main and runs Chromatic
    - name: "Run Chromatic"
      if: branch != main
      script: npx chromatic
      # 👇 Checks if the branch is main and runs Chromatic with the flag to accept all changes
    - name: "Run Chromatic and auto accepts changes"
      if: branch = main
      script: npx chromatic --auto-accept-changes

Including the --auto-accept-changes flag ensures all incoming changes will be accepted as baselines. Additionally, you’ll maintain a clean main branch.

If you want to test the changes introduced by the rebased branch, you can adjust your workflow and include a new step with the ignore-last-build-on-branch flag. For example:

.travis.yml
# .travis.yml

# Other required configuration

jobs:
  include:
    # Other jobs

    # 👇 Adds Chromatic as a job
    - name: "Run Chromatic"
      # 👇 Option to skip the last build on target branch
      script: npx chromatic --ignore-last-build-on-branch=my-branch

Including the --ignore-last-build-on-branch flag ensures the latest build for the specific branch is not used as a baseline.

Run Chromatic on external forks of open source projects

You can enable PR checks for external forks by sharing your project token where you configured the Chromatic command (often in package.json or in the pipeline step).

Sharing project tokens allows contributors and others to run Chromatic builds on your project, consuming your snapshot quota. They cannot access your account, settings, or accept baselines. This can be an acceptable tradeoff for open source projects that value community contributions.

Skipping builds for certain branches

Sometimes you might want to skip running a build for a certain branch, but still have Chromatic mark the latest commit on that branch as “passed”. Otherwise pull requests could be blocked due to required checks that remain pending. To avoid this issue, you can run chromatic with the --skip flag. This flag accepts a branch name or glob pattern.

One use case for this feature is skipping builds for branches created by a bot. For instance, Dependabot automatically updates a projects dependencies. Although some dependencies can result in UI changes, you might not find it worthwhile to run Chromatic for every single dependency update. Instead, you could rely on Chromatic running against the main or develop branch.

To skip builds for dependabot branches, use the following:

npx chromatic --skip 'dependabot/**'

To apply this to multiple branches, use an “extended glob”. See the globs guide for details.

npx chromatic --skip '@(renovate/**|dependabot/**)'