- Migration
- From version 5.2.x to 5.3.x
- From version 5.1.x to 5.2.x
- From version 5.1.x to 5.1.10
- From version 5.0.x to 5.1.x
- From version 5.0.1 to 5.0.2
- From version 4.1.x to 5.0.x
- sortStoriesByKind
- Webpack config simplification
- Theming overhaul
- Story hierarchy defaults
- Options addon deprecated
- Individual story decorators
- Addon backgrounds uses parameters
- Addon cssresources name attribute renamed
- Addon viewport uses parameters
- Addon a11y uses parameters, decorator renamed
- New keyboard shortcuts defaults
- New URL structure
- Rename of the
--secure
cli parameter to--https
- Vue integration
- From version 4.0.x to 4.1.x
- From version 3.4.x to 4.0.x
- From version 3.3.x to 3.4.x
- From version 3.2.x to 3.3.x
- From version 3.1.x to 3.2.x
- From version 3.0.x to 3.1.x
- From version 2.x.x to 3.x.x
In storybook 5.3 3 new files for configuration were introduced, that replaced some previous files.
These files are now soft-deprecated, (they still work, but over time we will promote users to migrate):
presets.js
has been renamed tomain.js
.main.js
is the main point of configuration for storybook.config.js
has been renamed topreview.js
.preview.js
configures the "preview" iframe that renders your components.addons.js
has been renamed tomanager.js
.manager.js
configures Storybook's "manager" UI that wraps the preview, and also configures addons panel.
main.js
is now the main point of configuration for Storybook. This is what a basic main.js
looks like:
module.exports = {
stories: ['../**/*.stories.js'],
addons: ['@storybook/addon-knobs'],
};
You remove all "register" import from addons.js
and place them inside the array. You can also safely remove the /register
suffix from these entries, for a cleaner, more readable configuration. If this means addons.js
is now empty for you, it's safe to remove.
Next you remove the code that imports/requires all your stories from config.js
, and change it to a glob-pattern and place that glob in the stories
array. If this means config.js
is empty, it's safe to remove.
If you had a presets.js
file before you can add the array of presets to the main.js file and remove presets.js
like so:
module.exports = {
stories: ['../**/*.stories.js'],
addons: [
'@storybook/preset-create-react-app'
{
name: '@storybook/addon-docs',
options: { configureJSX: true }
}
],
};
By default, adding a package to the addons
array will first try to load its preset
entry, then its register
entry, and finally, it will just assume the package itself is a preset.
If you want to load a specific package entry, for example you want to use @storybook/addon-docs/register
, you can also include that in the addons array and Storybook will do the right thing.
If after migrating the imports/requires of your stories to main.js
you're left with some code in config.js
it's likely the usage of addParameters
& addDecorator
.
This is fine, rename config.js
to preview.js
.
This file can also be used to inject global stylesheets, fonts etc, into the preview bundle.
If you are setting storybook options in config.js
, especially theme
, you should migrate it to manager.js
:
import { addons } from '@storybook/addons';
import { create } from '@storybook/theming/create';
const theme = create({
base: 'light',
brandTitle: 'My custom title',
});
addons.setConfig({
panelPosition: 'bottom',
theme,
});
This makes storybook load and use the theme in the manager directly. This allows for richer theming in the future, and has a much better performance!
You can now move to the new preset for Create React App. The in-built preset for Create React App will be disabled in Storybook 6.0.
Simply install @storybook/preset-create-react-app
and it will be used automatically.
In 5.3 we've changed addon-docs
's Description
doc block's default behavior. Technically this is a breaking change, but MDX was not officially released in 5.2 and we reserved the right to make small breaking changes. The behavior of DocsPage
, which was officially released, remains unchanged.
The old behavior of <Description of={Component} />
was to concatenate the info parameter or notes parameter, if available, with the docgen information loaded from source comments. If you depend on the old behavior, it's still available with <Description of={Component} type='legacy-5.2' />
. This description type will be removed in Storybook 6.0.
The new default behavior is to use the framework-specific description extractor, which for React/Vue is still docgen, but may come from other places (e.g. a JSON file) for other frameworks.
The description doc block on DocsPage has also been updated. To see how to configure it in 5.3, please see the updated recipe
Starting from version React Native 0.59, Async Storage is deprecated in React Native itself. The new @react-native-community/async-storage module requires native installation, and we don't want to have it as a dependency for React Native Storybook.
To avoid that now you have to manually pass asyncStorage to React Native Storybook with asyncStorage prop. To notify users we are displaying a warning about it.
Solution:
- Use
require('@react-native-community/async-storage').AsyncStorage
for React Native v0.59 and above. - Use
require('react-native').AsyncStorage
for React Native v0.58 or below. - Use
null
to disable Async Storage completely.
getStorybookUI({
...
asyncStorage: require('@react-native-community/async-storage').AsyncStorage || require('react-native').AsyncStorage || null
});
The benefit of using Async Storage is so that when users refresh the app, Storybook can open their last visited story.
In 5.2, the story parameter displayName
was introduced as a publicly visible (but internal) API. Storybook's Component Story Format (CSF) loader used it to modify a story's display name independent of the story's name
/id
(which were coupled).
In 5.3, the CSF loader decouples the story's name
/id
, which means that displayName
is no longer necessary. Unfortunately, this is a breaking change for any code that uses the story name
field. Storyshots relies on story name
, and the appropriate migration is to simply update your snapshots. Apologies for the inconvenience!
Addon-docs configuration gets simpler in 5.3. In 5.2, each framework had its own preset, e.g. @storybook/addon-docs/react/preset
. Starting in 5.3, everybody should use @storybook/addon-docs/preset
.
We've deprecated the ability to specify the hierarchy separators (how you control the grouping of story kinds in the sidebar). From Storybook 6.0 we will have a single separator /
, which cannot be configured.
If you are currently using using custom separators, we encourage you to migrate to using /
as the sole separator. If you are using |
or .
as a separator currently, we provide a codemod, upgrade-hierarchy-separators
, that can be used to rename all your components.
yarn sb migrate upgrade-hierarchy-separators --glob="*.stories.js"
If you were using |
and wish to keep the "root" behavior, use the showRoots: true
option to re-enable roots:
addParameters({
options: {
showRoots: true,
},
});
NOTE: it is no longer possible to have some stories with roots and others without. If you want to keep the old behavior, simply add a root called "Others" to all your previously unrooted stories.
To give you more control on the Chrome version used when running StoryShots Puppeteer, puppeteer
is no more included in the addon dependencies. So you can now pick the version of puppeteer
you want and set it in your project.
If you want the latest version available just run:
yarn add puppeteer --dev
OR
npm install puppeteer --save-dev
Addon-storysource contains a loader, @storybook/addon-storysource/loader
, which has been deprecated in 5.2. If you use it, you'll see the warning:
@storybook/addon-storysource/loader is deprecated, please use @storybook/source-loader instead.
To upgrade to @storybook/source-loader
, run npm install -D @storybook/source-loader
(or use yarn
), and replace every instance of @storybook/addon-storysource/loader
with @storybook/source-loader
.
The default viewports have been reduced to a smaller set, we think is enough for most use cases.
You can get the old default back by adding the following to your config.js
:
import { INITIAL_VIEWPORTS } from '@storybook/addon-viewport';
addParameters({
viewport: {
viewports: INITIAL_VIEWPORTS,
},
});
The grid feature in the toolbar has been relocated to addon-background, follow the setup intructions on that addon to get the feature again.
This isn't a breaking change per se, because addon-docs
is a new feature. However it's intended to replace addon-info
, so if you're migrating from addon-info
there are a few things you should know:
- Support for only one prop table
- Prop table docgen info should be stored on the component and not in the global variable
STORYBOOK_REACT_CLASSES
as before.
In 5.0.x the global option sortStoriesByKind
option was inadvertently removed. In 5.2 we've introduced a new option, storySort
, to replace it. storySort
takes a comparator function, so it is strictly more powerful than sortStoriesByKind
.
For example, here's how to sort by story ID using storySort
:
addParameters({
options: {
storySort: (a, b) =>
a[1].kind === b[1].kind ? 0 : a[1].id.localeCompare(b[1].id, undefined, { numeric: true }),
},
});
SB 5.1.0 added support for project root babel.config.js
files, which was an unintentional breaking change. 5.1.10 fixes this, but if you relied on project root babel.config.js
support, this bugfix is a breaking change. The workaround is to copy the file into your .storybook
config directory. We may add back project-level support in 6.0.
Storybook 5.1 contains a major overhaul of @storybook/react-native
as compared to 4.1 (we didn't ship a version of RN in 5.0 due to timing constraints). Storybook for RN consists of an an UI for browsing stories on-device or in a simulator, and an optional webserver which can also be used to browse stories and web addons.
5.1 refactors both pieces:
@storybook/react-native
no longer depends on the Storybook UI and only contains on-device functionality@storybook/react-native-server
is a new package for those who wish to run a web server alongside their device UI
In addition, both packages share more code with the rest of Storybook, which will reduce bugs and increase compatibility (e.g. with the latest versions of babel, etc.).
As a user with an existing 4.1.x RN setup, no migration should be necessary to your RN app. Upgrading the library should be enough.
If you wish to run the optional web server, you will need to do the following migration:
- Add
babel-loader
as a dev dependency - Add
@storybook/react-native-server
as a dev dependency - Change your "storybook"
package.json
script fromstorybook start [-p ...]
tostart-storybook [-p ...]
And with that you should be good to go!
Storybook 5.1 relies on core-js@^3.0.0
and therefore causes a conflict with Angular 7 that relies on core-js@^2.0.0
. In order to get Storybook running on Angular 7 you can either update to Angular 8 (which dropped core-js
as a dependency) or follow these steps:
- Remove
node_modules/@storybook
npm i core-js@^3.0.0
/yarn add core-js@^3.0.0
- Add the following paths to your
tsconfig.json
{
"compilerOptions": {
"paths": {
"core-js/es7/reflect": ["node_modules/core-js/proposals/reflect-metadata"],
"core-js/es6/*": ["node_modules/core-js/es"]
}
}
}
You should now be able to run Storybook and Angular 7 without any errors.
Reference issue: angular/angular-cli#13954
Following the rest of the JS ecosystem, Storybook 5.1 upgrades CoreJS 2 to 3, which is a breaking change.
This upgrade is problematic because many apps/libraries still rely on CoreJS 2, and many users get corejs-related errors due to bad resolution. To address this, we're using corejs-upgrade-webpack-plugin, which attempts to automatically upgrade code to CoreJS 3.
After a few iterations, this approach seems to be working. However, there are a few exceptions:
- If your app uses
babel-polyfill
, try to remove it
We'll update this section as we find more problem cases. If you have a core-js
problem, please file an issue (preferably with a repro), and we'll do our best to get you sorted.
Exporting an object from your custom webpack config puts storybook in "extend mode".
There was a bad bug in v5.0.0
involving webpack "extend mode" that caused webpack issues for users migrating from 4.x
. We've fixed this problem in v5.0.2
but it means that extend-mode has a different behavior if you're migrating from 5.0.0
or 5.0.1
. In short, 4.x
extended a base config with the custom config, whereas 5.0.0-1
extended the base with a richer config object that could conflict with the custom config in different ways from 4.x
.
We've also deprecated "extend mode" because it doesn't add a lot of value over "full control mode", but adds more code paths, documentation, user confusion etc. Starting in SB6.0 we will only support "full control mode" customization.
To migrate from extend-mode to full-control mode, if your extend-mode webpack config looks like this:
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
/* ... */
],
},
};
In full control mode, you need modify the default config to have the rules of your liking:
module.exports = ({ config }) => ({
...config,
module: {
...config.module,
rules: [
/* your own rules "..." here and/or some subset of config.module.rules */
],
},
});
Please refer to the current custom webpack documentation for more information on custom webpack config and to Issue #6081 for more information about the change.
Storybook 5.0 includes sweeping UI changes as well as changes to the addon API and custom webpack configuration. We've tried to keep backwards compatibility in most cases, but there are some notable exceptions documented below.
In Storybook 5.0 we changed a lot of UI related code, and 1 oversight caused the sortStoriesByKind
options to stop working.
We're working on providing a better way of sorting stories for now the feature has been removed. Stories appear in the order they are loaded.
If you're using webpack's require.context
to load stories, you can sort the execution of requires:
var context = require.context('../stories', true, /\.stories\.js$/);
var modules = context.keys();
// sort them
var sortedModules = modules.slice().sort((a, b) => {
// sort the stories based on filename/path
return a < b ? -1 : a > b ? 1 : 0;
});
// execute them
sortedModules.forEach(key => {
context(key);
});
The API for custom webpack configuration has been simplifed in 5.0, but it's a breaking change. Storybook's "full control mode" for webpack allows you to override the webpack config with a function that returns a configuration object.
In Storybook 5 there is a single signature for full-control mode that takes a parameters object with the fields config
and mode
:
module.exports = ({ config, mode }) => { config.module.rules.push(...); return config; }
In contrast, the 4.x configuration function accepted either two or three arguments ((baseConfig, mode)
, or (baseConfig, mode, defaultConfig)
). The config
object in the 5.x signature is equivalent to 4.x's defaultConfig
.
Please see the current custom webpack documentation for more information on custom webpack config.
Theming has been rewritten in v5. If you used theming in v4, please consult the theming docs to learn about the new API.
Storybook's UI contains a hierarchical tree of stories that can be configured by hierarchySeparator
and hierarchyRootSeparator
options.
In Storybook 4.x the values defaulted to null
for both of these options, so that there would be no hierarchy by default.
In 5.0, we now provide recommended defaults:
{
hierarchyRootSeparator: '|',
hierarchySeparator: /\/|\./,
}
This means if you use the characters { |
, /
, .
} in your story kinds it will triggger the story hierarchy to appear. For example storiesOf('UI|Widgets/Basics/Button')
will create a story root called UI
containing a Widgets/Basics
group, containing a Button
component.
If you wish to opt-out of this new behavior and restore the flat UI, set them back to null
in your storybook config, or remove { |
, /
, .
} from your story kinds:
addParameters({
options: {
hierarchyRootSeparator: null,
hierarchySeparator: null,
},
});
In 4.x we added story parameters. In 5.x we've deprecated the options addon in favor of global parameters, and we've also renamed some of the options in the process (though we're maintaining backwards compatibility until 6.0).
Here's an old configuration:
addDecorator(
withOptions({
name: 'Storybook',
url: 'https://storybook.js.org',
goFullScreen: false,
addonPanelInRight: true,
})
);
And here's its new counterpart:
import { create } from '@storybook/theming/create';
addParameters({
options: {
theme: create({
base: 'light',
brandTitle: 'Storybook',
brandUrl: 'https://storybook.js.org',
// To control appearance:
// brandImage: 'http://url.of/some.svg',
}),
isFullscreen: false,
panelPosition: 'right',
isToolshown: true,
},
});
Here is the mapping from old options to new:
Old | New |
---|---|
name | theme.brandTitle |
url | theme.brandUrl |
goFullScreen | isFullscreen |
showStoriesPanel | showNav |
showAddonPanel | showPanel |
addonPanelInRight | panelPosition |
showSearchBox | |
isToolshown |
Storybook v5 removes the search dialog box in favor of a quick search in the navigation view, so showSearchBox
has been removed.
Storybook v5 introduce a new tool bar above the story view and you can show\hide it with the new isToolshown
option.
The behavior of adding decorators to a kind has changed in SB5 (#5781).
In SB4 it was possible to add decorators to only a subset of the stories of a kind.
storiesOf('Stories', module)
.add('noncentered', () => 'Hello')
.addDecorator(centered)
.add('centered', () => 'Hello');
The semantics has changed in SB5 so that calling addDecorator
on a kind adds a decorator to all its stories, no matter the order. So in the previous example, both stories would be centered.
To allow for a subset of the stories in a kind to be decorated, we've added the ability to add decorators to individual stories using parameters:
storiesOf('Stories', module)
.add('noncentered', () => 'Hello')
.add('centered', () => 'Hello', { decorators: [centered] });
Similarly, @storybook/addon-backgrounds
uses parameters to pass background options. If you previously had:
import { withBackgrounds } from `@storybook/addon-backgrounds`;
storiesOf('Stories', module)
.addDecorator(withBackgrounds(options));
You should replace it with:
storiesOf('Stories', module).addParameters({ backgrounds: options });
You can pass backgrounds
parameters at the global level (via addParameters
imported from @storybook/react
et al.), and the story level (via the third argument to .add()
).
In the options object for @storybook/addon-cssresources
, the name
attribute for each resource has been renamed to id
. If you previously had:
import { withCssResources } from '@storybook/addon-cssresources';
import { addDecorator } from '@storybook/react';
addDecorator(
withCssResources({
cssresources: [
{
name: `bluetheme`, // Previous
code: `<style>body { background-color: lightblue; }</style>`,
picked: false,
},
],
})
);
You should replace it with:
import { withCssResources } from '@storybook/addon-cssresources';
import { addDecorator } from '@storybook/react';
addDecorator(
withCssResources({
cssresources: [
{
id: `bluetheme`, // Renamed
code: `<style>body { background-color: lightblue; }</style>`,
picked: false,
},
],
})
);
Similarly, @storybook/addon-viewport
uses parameters to pass viewport options. If you previously had:
import { configureViewport } from `@storybook/addon-viewport`;
configureViewport(options);
You should replace it with:
import { addParameters } from '@storybook/react'; // or others
addParameters({ viewport: options });
The withViewport
decorator is also no longer supported and should be replaced with a parameter based API as above. Also the onViewportChange
callback is no longer supported.
See the viewport addon README for more information.
Similarly, @storybook/addon-a11y
uses parameters to pass a11y options. If you previously had:
import { configureA11y } from `@storybook/addon-a11y`;
configureA11y(options);
You should replace it with:
import { addParameters } from '@storybook/react'; // or others
addParameters({ a11y: options });
You can also pass a11y
parameters at the component level (via storiesOf(...).addParameters
), and the story level (via the third argument to .add()
).
Furthermore, the decorator checkA11y
has been deprecated and renamed to withA11y
to make it consistent with other Storybook decorators.
See the a11y addon README for more information.
Storybook's keyboard shortcuts are updated in 5.0, but they are configurable via the menu so if you want to set them back you can:
Shorctut | Old | New |
---|---|---|
Toggle sidebar | cmd-shift-X | S |
Toggle addons panel | cmd-shift-Z | A |
Toggle addons position | cmd-shift-G | D |
Toggle fullscreen | cmd-shift-F | F |
Next story | cmd-shift-→ | alt-→ |
Prev story | cmd-shift-← | alt-← |
Next component | alt-↓ | |
Prev component | alt-↑ | |
Search | / |
We've update Storybook's URL structure in 5.0. The old structure used URL parameters to save the UI state, resulting in long ugly URLs. v5 respects the old URL parameters, but largely does away with them.
The old structure encoded selectedKind
and selectedStory
among other parameters. Storybook v5 respects these parameters but will issue a deprecation message in the browser console warning of potential future removal.
The new URL structure looks like:
https://url-of-storybook?path=/story/<storyId>
The structure of storyId
is a slugified <selectedKind>--<selectedStory>
(slugified = lowercase, hyphen-separated). Each storyId
must be unique. We plan to build more features into Storybook in upcoming versions based on this new structure.
Storybook for React Native's start commands & the Web versions' start command were a bit different, for no reason. We've changed the start command for Reactnative to match the other.
This means that when you previously used the --secure
flag like so:
start-storybook --secure
# or
start-storybook --s
You have to replace it with:
start-storybook --https
The Vue integration was updated, so that every story returned from a story or decorator function is now being normalized with Vue.extend
and is being wrapped by a functional component. Returning a string from a story or decorator function is still supported and is treated as a component with the returned string as the template.
Currently there is no recommended way of accessing the component options of a story inside a decorator.
There are are a few migrations you should be aware of in 4.1, including one unintentionally breaking change for advanced addon usage.
If your Storybook contains custom addons defined that are defined in your app (as opposed to installed from packages) and those addons rely on reconfiguring webpack/babel, Storybook 4.1 may break for you. There's a workaround described in the issue, and we're working on official support in the next release.
Storybook 4.1 supports React 15.x (which had been lost in the 4.0 release). So if you've been blocked on upgrading, we've got you covered. You should be able to upgrade according to the 4.0 migration notes below, or following the 4.0 upgrade guide.
With 4.0 as our first major release in over a year, we've collected a lot of cleanup tasks. Most of the deprecations have been marked for months, so we hope that there will be no significant impact on your project. We've also created a step-by-step guide to help you upgrade.
Storybook uses Emotion for styling which currently requires React 16.3 and above.
If you're using Storybook for anything other than React, you probably don't need to worry about this.
However, if you're developing React components, this means you need to upgrade to 16.3 or higher to use Storybook 4.0.
NOTE: This is a temporary requirement, and we plan to restore 15.x compatibility in a near-term 4.x release.
Also, here's the error you'll get if you're running an older version of React:
core.browser.esm.js:15 Uncaught TypeError: Object(...) is not a function
at Module../node_modules/@emotion/core/dist/core.browser.esm.js (core.browser.esm.js:15)
at **webpack_require** (bootstrap:724)
at fn (bootstrap:101)
at Module../node_modules/@emotion/styled-base/dist/styled-base.browser.esm.js (styled-base.browser.esm.js:1)
at **webpack_require** (bootstrap:724)
at fn (bootstrap:101)
at Module../node_modules/@emotion/styled/dist/styled.esm.js (styled.esm.js:1)
at **webpack_require** (bootstrap:724)
at fn (bootstrap:101)
at Object../node_modules/@storybook/components/dist/navigation/MenuLink.js (MenuLink.js:12)
4.x introduces generic addon decorators that are not tied to specific view layers #3555. So for example:
import { number } from '@storybook/addon-knobs/react';
Becomes:
import { number } from '@storybook/addon-knobs';
4.0 also reversed the order of addon-knob's select
knob keys/values, which had been called selectV2
prior to this breaking change. See the knobs package README for usage.
Addon-knobs no longer updates the URL parameters interactively as you edit a knob. This is a UI change but it shouldn't break any code because old URLs are still supported.
In 3.x, editing knobs updated the URL parameters interactively. The implementation had performance and architectural problems. So in 4.0, we changed this to a "copy" button in the addon which generates a URL with the updated knob values and copies it to the clipboard.
- Addon Panel to
Z
- Stories Panel to
X
- Show Search to
O
- Addon Panel right side to
G
Addon-info
's addWithInfo
has been marked deprecated since 3.2. In 4.0 we've removed it completely. See the package README for the proper usage.
Since storybook version v4.0 packager is removed from storybook. The suggested storybook usage is to include it inside your app.
If you want to keep the old behaviour, you have to start the packager yourself with a different project root.
npm run storybook start -p 7007 | react-native start --projectRoot storybook
Removed cli options: --packager-port --root --projectRoots -r, --reset-cache --skip-packager --haul --platform --metro-config
The @storybook/react-native
had built-in addons (addon-actions
and addon-links
) that have been marked as deprecated since 3.x. They have been fully removed in 4.x. If your project still uses the built-ins, you'll need to add explicit dependencies on @storybook/addon-actions
and/or @storybook/addon-links
and import directly from those packages.
imageSnapshot
test function was extracted fromaddon-storyshots
and moved to a new package -addon-storyshots-puppeteer
that now will be dependant on puppeteer. READMEgetSnapshotFileName
export was replaced with theStories2SnapsConverter
class that now can be overridden for a custom implementation of the snapshot-name generation. README- Storybook that was configured with Webpack's
require.context()
feature will need to add a babel plugin to polyfill this functionality. A possible plugin might be babel-plugin-require-context-hook. README
Storybook now uses webpack 4. If you have a custom webpack config, make sure that all the loaders and plugins you use support webpack 4.
Storybook now uses Babel 7. There's a couple of cases when it can break with your app:
- If you aren't using Babel yourself, and don't have .babelrc, install following dependencies:
npm i -D @babel/core babel-loader@next
- If you're using Babel 6, make sure that you have direct dependencies on
babel-core@6
andbabel-loader@7
and that you have a.babelrc
in your project directory.
If you are using create-react-app
(aka CRA), you may need to do some manual steps to upgrade, depending on the setup.
create-react-app@1
may require manual migrations.- If you're adding storybook for the first time:
sb init
should add the correct dependencies. - If you're upgrading an existing project, your
package.json
probably already uses Babel 6, making it incompatible with@storybook/react@4
which uses Babel 7. There are two ways to make it compatible, each of which is spelled out in detail in the next section:- Upgrade to Babel 7 if you are not dependent on Babel 6-specific features.
- Migrate Babel 6 if you're heavily dependent on some Babel 6-specific features).
- If you're adding storybook for the first time:
create-react-app@2
should be compatible as is, since it uses babel 7.
yarn remove babel-core babel-runtime
yarn add @babel/core babel-loader --dev
yarn add babel-loader@7
Also, make sure you have a .babelrc
in your project directory. You probably already do if you are using Babel 6 features (otherwise you should consider upgrading to Babel 7 instead). If you don't have one, here's one that works:
{
"presets": ["env", "react"]
}
If you're using start-storybook
on CI, you may need to opt out of this using the new --ci
flag.
We've deprecated the getstorybook
CLI in 4.0. The new way to install storybook is sb init
. We recommend using npx
for convenience and to make sure you're always using the latest version of the CLI:
npx -p @storybook/cli sb init
Storybook 4 introduces story parameters, a more convenient way to configure how addons are configured.
storiesOf('My component', module)
.add('story1', withNotes('some notes')(() => <Component ... />))
.add('story2', withNotes('other notes')(() => <Component ... />));
Becomes:
// config.js
addDecorator(withNotes);
// Component.stories.js
storiesOf('My component', module)
.add('story1', () => <Component ... />, { notes: 'some notes' })
.add('story2', () => <Component ... />, { notes: 'other notes' });
This example applies notes globally to all stories. You can apply it locally with storiesOf(...).addDecorator(withNotes)
.
The story parameters correspond directly to the old withX arguments, so it's less demanding to migrate your code. See the parameters documentation for the packages that have been upgraded:
There are no expected breaking changes in the 3.4.x release, but 3.4 contains a major refactor to make it easier to support new frameworks, and we will document any breaking changes here if they arise.
It wasn't expected that there would be any breaking changes in this release, but unfortunately it turned out that there are some. We're revisiting our release strategy to follow semver more strictly.
Also read on if you're using addon-knobs
: we advise an update to your code for efficiency's sake.
babel-core
is now a peer dependency (#2494)
This affects you if you don't use babel in your project. You may need to add babel-core
as dev dependency:
yarn add babel-core --dev
This was done to support different major versions of babel.
Base webpack config now contains vital plugins (#1775)
This affects you if you use custom webpack config in Full Control Mode while not preserving the plugins from storybookBaseConfig
. Before 3.3
, preserving them was a recommendation, but now it became a requirement.
Knobs users: there was a bug in 3.2.x where using the knobs addon imported all framework runtimes (e.g. React and Vue). To fix the problem, we refactored knobs. Switching to the new style is only takes one line of code.
In the case of React or React-Native, import knobs like this:
import { withKnobs, text, boolean, number } from '@storybook/addon-knobs/react';
In the case of Vue: import { ... } from '@storybook/addon-knobs/vue';
In the case of Angular: import { ... } from '@storybook/addon-knobs/angular';
NOTE: technically this is a breaking change, but only if you use TypeScript. Sorry people!
TypeScript users: we've moved the rest of our addons type definitions into DefinitelyTyped. Starting in 3.2.0 make sure to use the right addons types:
yarn add @types/storybook__addon-notes @types/storybook__addon-options @types/storybook__addon-knobs @types/storybook__addon-links --dev
See also TypeScript definitions in 3.1.x.
We're in the process of upgrading our addons APIs. As a first step, we've upgraded the Info and Notes addons. The old API will still work with your existing projects but will be deprecated soon and removed in Storybook 4.0.
Here's an example of using Notes and Info in 3.2 with the new API.
storiesOf('composition', module).add(
'new addons api',
withInfo('see Notes panel for composition info')(
withNotes({ text: 'Composition: Info(Notes())' })(context => (
<MyComponent name={context.story} />
))
)
);
It's not beautiful, but we'll be adding a more convenient/idiomatic way of using these withX primitives in Storybook 3.3.
NOTE: technically this is a breaking change and should be a 4.0.0 release according to semver. However, we're still figuring things out and didn't think this change necessitated a major release. Please bear with us!
TypeScript users: we are in the process of moving our typescript definitions into DefinitelyTyped. If you're using TypeScript, starting in 3.1.0 you need to make sure your type definitions are installed:
yarn add @types/node @types/react @types/storybook__react --dev
We have deprecated the use of head.html
for including scripts/styles/etc. into stories, though it will still work with a warning.
Now we use:
preview-head.html
for including extra content into the preview pane.manager-head.html
for including extra content into the manager window.
Read our docs for more details.
This major release is mainly an internal restructuring. Upgrading requires work on behalf of users, this was unavoidable. We're sorry if this inconveniences you, we have tried via this document and provided tools to make the process as easy as possible.
Storybook will now use webpack 2 (and only webpack 2).
If you are using a custom webpack.config.js
you need to change this to be compatible.
You can find the guide to upgrading your webpack config on webpack.js.org.
All our packages have been renamed and published to npm as version 3.0.0 under the @storybook
namespace.
To update your app to use the new package names, you can use the cli:
npx -p @storybook/cli sb init
Details
If the above doesn't work, or you want to make the changes manually, the details are below:
We have adopted the same versioning strategy that has been adopted by babel, jest and apollo. It's a strategy best suited for ecosystem type tools, which consist of many separately installable features / packages. We think this describes storybook pretty well.
The new package names are:
old | new |
---|---|
getstorybook |
@storybook/cli |
@kadira/getstorybook |
@storybook/cli |
@kadira/storybook |
@storybook/react |
@kadira/react-storybook |
@storybook/react |
@kadira/react-native-storybook |
@storybook/react-native |
storyshots |
@storybook/addon-storyshots |
@kadira/storyshots |
@storybook/addon-storyshots |
@kadira/storybook-ui |
@storybook/ui |
@kadira/storybook-addons |
@storybook/addons |
@kadira/storybook-channels |
@storybook/channels |
@kadira/storybook-channel-postmsg |
@storybook/channel-postmessage |
@kadira/storybook-channel-websocket |
@storybook/channel-websocket |
@kadira/storybook-addon-actions |
@storybook/addon-actions |
@kadira/storybook-addon-links |
@storybook/addon-links |
@kadira/storybook-addon-info |
@storybook/addon-info |
@kadira/storybook-addon-knobs |
@storybook/addon-knobs |
@kadira/storybook-addon-notes |
@storybook/addon-notes |
@kadira/storybook-addon-options |
@storybook/addon-options |
@kadira/storybook-addon-graphql |
@storybook/addon-graphql |
@kadira/react-storybook-decorator-centered |
@storybook/addon-centered |
If your codebase is small, it's probably doable to replace them by hand (in your codebase and in package.json
).
But if you have a lot of occurrences in your codebase, you can use a codemod we created for you.
A codemod makes automatic changed to your app's code.
You have to change your package.json
, prune old and install new dependencies by hand.
npm prune
will remove all dependencies from node_modules
which are no longer referenced in package.json
.
We used to ship 2 addons with every single installation of storybook: actions
and links
. But in practice not everyone is using them, so we decided to deprecate this and in the future, they will be completely removed. If you use @storybook/react/addons
you will get a deprecation warning.
If you are using these addons, it takes two steps to migrate:
- add the addons you use to your
package.json
. - update your code:
change
addons.js
like so:changeimport '@storybook/addon-actions/register'; import '@storybook/addon-links/register';
x.story.js
like so:import React from 'react'; import { storiesOf } from '@storybook/react'; import { action } from '@storybook/addon-actions'; import { linkTo } from '@storybook/addon-links';