GitLab UI is a UI component library that implements Pajamas, our design system. GitLab UI is written in Vue.js and its objectives are to:
- Create reusable UI components to accelerate frontend development.
- Create UI consistency for all components within GitLab.
See https://gitlab-org.gitlab.io/gitlab-ui/ for documentation.
To use GitLab UI in your project, add it as a dependency:
yarn add @gitlab/ui
Note: Make sure to also install GitLab UI's peer dependencies. Refer to the
package.json
for the list of peer dependencies and their expected versions.
In your main entrypoint before importing or using any component:
import setConfigs from '@gitlab/ui/dist/config'
setConfigs()
This will set the global configs used by GitLab UI.
Import the components as desired:
import { GlButton } from '@gitlab/ui';
GitLab UI is compatible with tree-shaking, you may enable this in your project to reduce bundle sizes.
GitLab UI provides component styles, a utility-class library, and SCSS utilities.
Make sure you have Node 16.x (LTS) and Yarn 1.22 or newer.
# Clone the project
git clone [email protected]:gitlab-org/gitlab-ui.git
# Navigate to the root of the project
cd gitlab-ui
# Install all the dependencies of the project
yarn # or yarn install
# Build and launch storybook to see the components in the browser
yarn storybook
Go to http://localhost:9001/
Components’ unit tests live in the tests/components
. The tests are organized following the same
directory structure used to organize components.
yarn test:unit
runs all unit tests.
yarn test:unit:watch
runs all unit tests in watch mode.
yarn test:unit:debug
runs all unit tests and allow to attach a debugger to the test runner process.
yarn jest [name_pattern]
runs spec files that match the specified name pattern.
yarn jest datepicker
will match all spec files with a name that contains the word datepicker.
yarn jest datepicker -t "when draw event is emitted"
goes a step further and only runs the test
with a description that matches the argument passed to the t
flag.
Even though we try to avoid writing complex SASS code to maintain CSS complexity low, we’ve
implemented some functions that benefit from automated testing. SASS tests live in the tests/scss
directory. GitLab UI uses sass-true to implement these tests, and
jest run them.
yarn jest run_scss_tests
runs all SCSS tests.
GitLab UI uses visual snapshot tests to prevent introducing unexpected regressions with CSS and layout changes on components. The tool we use is storyshots, a storybook addon. Read the project documentation to understand how visual snapshots work.
There is a visual snapshot of every component’s storybook story. To run the tests, use the
yarn test:visual
command. This command runs on the CI environment and will fail if the component
visual appearance changes.
In some occasions, the changes in a component’s appearance are justified. In those cases, we have to update the baseline images to match the new look. See our visual testing documentation for how to do that.
GitLab UI components are a reference implementation of the Pajamas Design System components. These components should conform with the design system specs, and they should look correct in the pajamas website and the GitLab product. Please see Debugging GitLab UI issues with GitLab product CSS for information on how to debug issues with GitLab product CSS in GitLab UI.
Visual difference tests form part of the test suite. Rendered output can vary
from host to host (e.g., due to available fonts and how each platform renders
them), so these can fail when run locally. The easiest way to work around this
is to run a percent-based diff, and to increase the failure threshold with the
FAILURE_THRESHOLD_TYPE
and FAILURE_THRESHOLD
environment variables:
# Sets a 2% threshold
FAILURE_THRESHOLD_TYPE='percent' FAILURE_THRESHOLD=.02 yarn test:visual
FAILURE_THRESHOLD_TYPE
defaults to 'pixel'
and FAILURE_THRESHOLD
defaults to 1
. In the CI
environment, we consider a 1 pixel difference as a false negative that should not fail the test.
Under the hood, those variables are passed to
jest-image-snapshot
's config
Components’ end to end tests live in the cypress/integration
folder. See our
end to end testing documentation for more details.
yarn run cypress open
runs Cypress locally to run end to end tests.
Install with Yarn:
yarn add @gitlab/ui
Install with npm:
npm install @gitlab/ui
GitLab UI requires its styles to be imported to display components properly. We currently have 2
separate stylesheets that both need to be included in your project. The main stylesheet
(gitlab_ui.scss
) contains component-specific styles, while the other one (utilities.scss
)
contains the utility classes library on which some components rely. You might find the utility
classes useful to layout components in your own project.
You have two options to include those stylesheets:
- If you have a SCSS preprocessor setup, include the SCSS files in your own stylesheet:
@import '@gitlab/ui/src/scss/gitlab_ui.scss';
@import '@gitlab/ui/src/scss/utilities.scss';
- If you don't have a SCSS preprocessor setup, you can import the compiled CSS files directly:
@import '@gitlab/ui/dist/index.css';
@import '@gitlab/ui/dist/utility_classes.css';
Please see Updating Gitlab UI Packages for information on how updated packages are included in Gitlab and Pajamas.
Please refer to CONTRIBUTING.md for details on how to add new components and contribute in general to GitLab UI.
Any question? Have a look at our FAQ.md, you might find the answer there.