- From version 7.5.0 to 7.6.0
- From version 7.4.0 to 7.5.0
- From version 7.0.0 to 7.2.0
- From version 6.5.x to 7.0.0
- 7.0 breaking changes
- Dropped support for Node 15 and below
- Default export in Preview.js
- ESM format in Main.js
- Modern browser support
- React peer dependencies required
- start-storybook / build-storybook binaries removed
- New Framework API
- TypeScript: StorybookConfig type moved
- Titles are statically computed
- Framework standalone build moved
- Change of root html IDs
- Stories glob matches MDX files
- Add strict mode
- Importing plain markdown files with
transcludeMarkdown
has changed - Stories field in .storybook/main.js is mandatory
- Stricter global types
- Deploying build artifacts
- 7.0 Core changes
- 7.0 core addons changes
- 7.0 Vite changes
- 7.0 Webpack changes
- 7.0 Framework-specific changes
- Angular: Removed deprecated
component
andpropsMeta
field - Angular: Drop support for Angular < 14
- Angular: Drop support for calling Storybook directly
- Angular: Application providers and ModuleWithProviders
- Angular: Removed legacy renderer
- Next.js: use the
@storybook/nextjs
framework - SvelteKit: needs the
@storybook/sveltekit
framework - Vue3: replaced app export with setup
- Web-components: dropped lit-html v1 support
- Create React App: dropped CRA4 support
- HTML: No longer auto-dedents source code
- Angular: Removed deprecated
- 7.0 Addon authors changes
- 7.0 Docs changes
- Autodocs changes
- MDX docs files
- Unattached docs files
- Doc Blocks
- Configuring Autodocs
- MDX2 upgrade
- Legacy MDX1 support
- Default docs styles will leak into non-story user components
- Explicit
<code>
elements are no longer syntax highlighted - Dropped source loader / storiesOf static snippets
- Removed docs.getContainer and getPage parameters
- Addon-docs: Removed deprecated blocks.js entry
- Dropped addon-docs manual babel configuration
- Dropped addon-docs manual configuration
- Autoplay in docs
- Removed STORYBOOK_REACT_CLASSES global
- 7.0 Deprecations and default changes
- storyStoreV7 enabled by default
Story
type deprecatedComponentStory
,ComponentStoryObj
,ComponentStoryFn
andComponentMeta
types are deprecated- Renamed
renderToDOM
torenderToCanvas
- Renamed
XFramework
toXRenderer
- Renamed
DecoratorFn
toDecorator
- CLI option
--use-npm
deprecated - 'config' preset entry replaced with 'previewAnnotations'
- 7.0 breaking changes
- From version 6.4.x to 6.5.0
- From version 6.3.x to 6.4.0
- From version 6.2.x to 6.3.0
- From version 6.1.x to 6.2.0
- From version 6.0.x to 6.1.0
- From version 5.3.x to 6.0.x
- Hoisted CSF annotations
- Zero config typescript
- Correct globs in main.js
- CRA preset removed
- Core-JS dependency errors
- Args passed as first argument to story
- 6.0 Docs breaking changes
- New addon presets
- Removed babel-preset-vue from Vue preset
- Removed Deprecated APIs
- New setStories event
- Removed renderCurrentStory event
- Removed hierarchy separators
- No longer pass denormalized parameters to storySort
- Client API changes
- Simplified Render Context
- Story Store immutable outside of configuration
- Improved story source handling
- 6.0 Addon API changes
- 6.0 Deprecations
- 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
- Addon centered decorator deprecated
- 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
Using CommonJS in the main
configuration with main.cjs
or main.cts
is deprecated, and will be removed in Storybook 8.0. This is a necessary change because Vite will remove support for CommonJS in an upcoming release.
You can address this by converting your main
configuration file to ESM syntax and renaming it to main.mjs
or main.mts
if your project does not have "type": "module"
in its package.json
. To convert the config file to ESM you will need to replace any CommonJS syntax like require()
, module.exports
, or __dirname
. If you haven't already, you may also consider adding "type": "module"
to your package.json and converting your project to ESM.
In Storybook 7, we inferred if the component accepts any action props,
by checking if it starts with onX
(for example onClick
), or as configured by actions.argTypesRegex
.
If that was the case, we would fill in jest spies for those args automatically.
export default {
component: Button,
};
export const ButtonClick = {
play: async ({ args, canvasElement }) => {
await userEvent.click(within(canvasElement).getByRole('button'));
// args.onClick is a jest spy in 7.0
await expect(args.onClick).toHaveBeenCalled();
},
};
In Storybook 8 this feature will be removed, and spies have to added explicitly:
import { fn } from '@storybook/test';
export default {
component: Button,
args: {
onClick: fn(),
},
};
export const ButtonClick = {
play: async ({ args, canvasElement }) => {
await userEvent.click(within(canvasElement).getByRole('button'));
await expect(args.onClick).toHaveBeenCalled();
},
};
For more context, see this RFC: #23649
To summarize:
- This makes CSF files less magical and more portable, so that CSF files will render the same in a test environment where docgen is not available.
- This allows users and (test) integrators to run or build storybook without docgen, boosting the user performance and allows tools to give quicker feedback.
- This will make sure that we can one day lazy load docgen, without changing how stories are rendered.
We will remove the typescript.skipBabel
option in Storybook 8.0.0. Please use typescirpt.skipCompiler
instead.
The Primary
doc block now also accepts an of
prop as described in the Doc Blocks section. It still accepts being passed name
or no props at all.
Historically the majority of addons have had a peer dependency on React and a handful of Storybook core packages. In most cases this has not been necessary since 7.0 because the Storybook manager makes those available on the global scope. It has created an unnecessary burden for users in non-React projects.
We've migrated all the core addons (except for addon-docs
) to not depend on these packages by:
- Moving
react
,react-dom
and the globalized Storybook packages frompeerDependencies
todevDependencies
- Added the list of globalized packages to the
externals
property in thetsup
configuration, to ensure they are not part of the bundle.
As of Storybook 7.6.0 the list of globalized packages can be imported like this:
// tsup.config.ts
import { globalPackages as globalManagerPackages } from '@storybook/manager/globals';
import { globalPackages as globalPreviewPackages } from '@storybook/preview/globals';
const allGlobalPackages = [...globalManagerPackages, ...globalPreviewPackages];
We recommend checking out the updates we've made to the addon-kit, that can serve as a base for the changes you can do in your own addon. These changes are not necessary for your addon to keep working, but they will remove the need for your users to unnecessary install react
and react-dom
to their projects, and they'll significantly reduce the install size of your addon.
These changes should not be breaking for your users, unless you support Storybook pre-v7.
storyStoreV6
and storiesOf
is deprecated and will be completely removed in Storybook 8.0.0.
If you're using storiesOf
we recommend you migrate your stories to CSF3 for a better story writing experience.
In many cases you can get started with the migration by using two migration scripts:
# 1. convert storiesOf to CSF
npx storybook@latest migrate storiesof-to-csf --glob="**/*.stories.tsx" --parser=tsx
# 2. Convert CSF 2 to CSF 3
npx storybook@latest migrate csf-2-to-3 --glob="**/*.stories.tsx" --parser=tsx
They won't do a perfect migration so we recommend that you manually go through each file afterwards.
Alternatively you can build your own storiesOf
implementation by leveraging the new (experimental) indexer API (documentation, migration). A proof of concept of such an implementation can be seen in this StackBlitz demo. See the demo's README.md
for a deeper explanation of the implementation.
Defining custom indexers for stories has become a more official - yet still experimental - API which is now configured at experimental_indexers
instead of storyIndexers
in main.ts
. storyIndexers
has been deprecated and will be fully removed in version 8.0.0.
The new experimental indexers are documented here. The most notable change from storyIndexers
is that the indexer must now return a list of IndexInput
instead of CsfFile
. It's possible to construct an IndexInput
from a CsfFile
using the CsfFile.indexInputs
getter.
That means you can convert an existing story indexer like this:
// .storybook/main.ts
import { readFileSync } from 'fs';
import { loadCsf } from '@storybook/csf-tools';
export default {
- storyIndexers = (indexers) => {
- const indexer = async (fileName, opts) => {
+ experimental_indexers = (indexers) => {
+ const createIndex = async (fileName, opts) => {
const code = readFileSync(fileName, { encoding: 'utf-8' });
const makeTitle = (userTitle) => {
// Do something with the auto title retrieved by Storybook
return userTitle;
};
// Parse the CSF file with makeTitle as a custom context
- return loadCsf(code, { ...compilationOptions, makeTitle, fileName }).parse();
+ return loadCsf(code, { ...compilationOptions, makeTitle, fileName }).parse().indexInputs;
};
return [
{
test: /(stories|story)\.[tj]sx?$/,
- indexer,
+ createIndex,
},
...(indexers || []),
];
},
};
As an addon author you can support previous versions of Storybook by setting both storyIndexers
and indexers_experimental
, without triggering the deprecation warning.
When registering an addon using @storybook/manager-api
, the addon API is now more type-strict. This means if you use TypeScript to compile your addon before publishing, it might start giving you errors.
The type
property is now a required field, and the id
property should not be set anymore.
Here's a correct example:
import { addons, types } from '@storybook/manager-api';
addons.register('my-addon', () => {
addons.add('my-addon/panel', {
type: types.PANEL,
title: 'My Addon',
render: ({ active }) => (active ? <div>Hello World</div> : null),
});
});
The API: addons.addPanel()
is now deprecated, and will be removed in 8.0.0. Please use addons.add()
instead.
The render
method can now be a React.FunctionComponent
(without the children
prop). Storybook will now render it, rather than calling it as a function.
A number of these changes can be made automatically by the Storybook CLI. To take advantage of these "automigrations", run npx storybook@latest upgrade --prerelease
or pnpx dlx storybook@latest upgrade --prerelease
.
Storybook 7.0 requires Node 16 or above. If you are using an older version of Node, you will need to upgrade or keep using Storybook 6 in the meantime.
Storybook 7.0 supports a default export in .storybook/preview.js
that should contain all of its annotations. The previous format is still compatible, but the default export will be the recommended way going forward.
If your preview.js
file looks like this:
export const parameters = {
actions: { argTypesRegex: '^on[A-Z].*' },
};
Please migrate it to use a default export instead:
const preview = {
parameters: {
actions: { argTypesRegex: '^on[A-Z].*' },
},
};
export default preview;
Additionally, we introduced typings for that default export (Preview), so you can import it in your config file. If you're using Typescript, make sure to rename your file to be preview.ts
.
The Preview
type will come from the Storybook package for the renderer you are using. For example, if you are using Angular, you will import it from @storybook/angular
, or if you're using Vue3, you will import it from @storybook/vue3
:
import { Preview } from '@storybook/react';
const preview: Preview = {
parameters: {
actions: { argTypesRegex: '^on[A-Z].*' },
},
};
export default preview;
In JavaScript projects using preview.js
, it's also possible to use the Preview
type (for autocompletion, not type safety), via the JSDoc @type tag:
/** @type { import('@storybook/react').Preview } */
const preview = {
parameters: {
actions: { argTypesRegex: '^on[A-Z].*' },
},
};
export default preview;
It's now possible to use ESM in .storybook/main.js
out of the box. Storybook 7.0 supports a default export in .storybook/main.js
that should contain all of its configurations. The previous format is still compatible, but the default export will be the recommended way going forward.
If your main.js file looks like this:
module.exports = {
stories: ['../stories/**/*.stories.mdx', '../stories/**/*.stories.@(js|jsx|ts|tsx)'],
framework: { name: '@storybook/react-vite' },
};
Or like this:
export const stories = ['../stories/**/*.stories.mdx', '../stories/**/*.stories.@(js|jsx|ts|tsx)'];
export const framework = { name: '@storybook/react-vite' };
Please migrate it to use a default export instead:
const config = {
stories: ['../stories/**/*.stories.mdx', '../stories/**/*.stories.@(js|jsx|ts|tsx)'],
framework: { name: '@storybook/react-vite' },
};
export default config;
Additionally, we introduced typings for that default export (StorybookConfig), so you can import it in your config file. If you're using Typescript, make sure to rename your file to be main.ts
.
The StorybookConfig
type will come from the Storybook package for the framework you are using, which relates to the package in the "framework" field you have in your main.ts file. For example, if you are using React Vite, you will import it from @storybook/react-vite
:
import { StorybookConfig } from '@storybook/react-vite';
const config: StorybookConfig = {
stories: ['../stories/**/*.stories.mdx', '../stories/**/*.stories.@(js|jsx|ts|tsx)'],
framework: { name: '@storybook/react-vite' },
};
export default config;
In JavaScript projects using main.js
, it's also possible to use the StorybookConfig
type (for autocompletion, not type safety), via the JSDoc @type tag:
/** @type { import('@storybook/react-vite').StorybookConfig } */
const config = {
stories: ['../stories/**/*.stories.mdx', '../stories/**/*.stories.@(js|jsx|ts|tsx)'],
framework: { name: '@storybook/react-vite' },
};
export default config;
Starting in Storybook 7.0, Storybook will no longer support IE11, amongst other legacy browser versions.
We now transpile our code with a target of chrome >= 100
and node code is transpiled with a target of node >= 16
.
This means code-features such as (but not limited to) async/await
, arrow-functions, const
,let
, etc will exist in the code at runtime, and thus the runtime environment must support it.
Not just the runtime needs to support it, but some legacy loaders for Webpack or other transpilation tools might need to be updated as well. For example, certain versions of Webpack 4 had parsers that could not parse the new syntax (e.g. optional chaining).
Some addons or libraries might depended on this legacy browser support, and thus might break. You might get an error like:
regeneratorRuntime is not defined
To fix these errors, the addon will have to be re-released with a newer browser-target for transpilation. This often looks something like this (but it's dependent on the build system the addon uses):
// babel.config.js
module.exports = {
presets: [
[
'@babel/preset-env',
{
shippedProposals: true,
useBuiltIns: 'usage',
corejs: '3',
modules: false,
targets: { chrome: '100' },
},
],
],
};
Here's an example PR to one of the Storybook addons: storybookjs/addon-coverage#3 doing just that.
Has automigration
Starting in 7.0, react
and react-dom
are now required peer dependencies of Storybook when using addon-docs (or docs via addon-essentials).
Storybook uses react
in a variety of docs-related packages. In the past, we've done various trickery hide this from non-React users. However, with stricter peer dependency handling by npm8
, npm
, and yarn pnp
those tricks have started to cause problems for those users. Rather than resorting to even more complicated tricks, we are making react
and react-dom
required peer dependencies.
To upgrade manually, add any version of react
and react-dom
as devDependencies using your package manager of choice, e.g.
npm add react react-dom --dev
Has automigration
SB6.x framework packages shipped binaries called start-storybook
and build-storybook
.
In SB7.0, we've removed these binaries and replaced them with new commands in Storybook's CLI: storybook dev
and storybook build
. These commands will look for the framework
field in your .storybook/main.js
config--which is now required--and use that to determine how to start/build your Storybook. The benefit of this change is that it is now possible to install multiple frameworks in a project without having to worry about hoisting issues.
A typical Storybook project includes two scripts in your projects package.json
:
{
"scripts": {
"storybook": "start-storybook <some flags>",
"build-storybook": "build-storybook <some flags>"
}
}
To convert this project to 7.0:
{
"scripts": {
"storybook": "storybook dev <some flags>",
"build-storybook": "storybook build <some flags>"
},
"devDependencies": {
"storybook": "next"
}
}
The new CLI commands remove the following flags:
flag | migration |
---|---|
--modern | No migration needed. All ESM code is modern in SB7. |
Has automigration
Storybook 7 introduces the concept of frameworks
, which abstracts configuration for renderers
(e.g. React, Vue), builders
(e.g. Webpack, Vite) and defaults to make integrations easier. This requires quite a few changes, depending on what your project is using. We recommend you to use the automigrations, but in case the command fails or you'd like to do the changes manually, here's a guide:
Note: All of the following changes can be done automatically either via
npx storybook@latest upgrade --prerelease
or via thenpx storybook@latest automigrate
command. It's highly recommended to use these commands, which will tell you exactly what to do.
In 7.0, frameworks
combine a renderer
and a builder
, with the exception of a few packages that do not contain multiple builders, such as @storybook/angular
, which only has Webpack 5 support.
You have to pick which framework you want to use from the list below, which will depend on your project configuration. If you're using a framework that has multiple builders, you'll have to pick one. For example, if you're using @storybook/react
, you'll have to pick between @storybook/react-vite
and @storybook/react-webpack5
. If you're using a framework that only has one builder (and therefore hasn't changed), you can just use that.
Additionally, there are framework packages which are specific to meta-frameworks, like Next.js and SvelteKit. If you pick them, make sure to also see this section.
The current list of frameworks include:
@storybook/angular
(did not change)@storybook/ember
(did not change)@storybook/html-vite
@storybook/html-webpack5
@storybook/preact-vite
@storybook/preact-webpack5
@storybook/react-vite
@storybook/react-webpack5
@storybook/nextjs
@storybook/server-webpack5
@storybook/svelte-vite
@storybook/svelte-webpack5
@storybook/sveltekit
@storybook/vue-vite
@storybook/vue-webpack5
@storybook/vue3-vite
@storybook/vue3-webpack5
@storybook/web-components-vite
@storybook/web-components-webpack5
You can find more info on the rationale here: Frameworks RFC.
After picking your framework, you'll need to install it as a dev dependency.
Because the new framework package will include the builder as well, you can remove any of the builder packages you were using before:
'@storybook/builder-webpack5',
'@storybook/manager-webpack5',
'@storybook/builder-webpack4',
'@storybook/manager-webpack4',
'@storybook/builder-vite',
'storybook-builder-vite',
Note: if your project is still using Webpack 4, you'll have to upgrade to Webpack 5 as Webpack 4 support was discontinued
In 6.4 we introduced a new main.js
field called framework
. Starting in 7.0, the main.js
file has to include a framework
field and it should be of the package you picked in earlier steps.
Here's an example, in case you picked @storybook/react-vite
:
// .storybook/main.js
export default {
// ... your configuration
framework: {
name: '@storybook/react-vite',
options: {},
},
};
In 7.0, the main.js
fields reactOptions
and angularOptions
have been renamed. They are now options on the framework
field.
For React, what used to be:
export default {
reactOptions: { fastRefresh: true },
framework: {
name: '@storybook/react-webpack5',
options: {},
},
};
Becomes:
export default {
framework: {
name: '@storybook/react-webpack5',
options: { fastRefresh: true },
},
};
For Angular, what used to be:
export default {
angularOptions: { enableIvy: true },
framework: {
name: '@storybook/angular',
options: {},
},
};
Becomes:
export default {
framework: {
name: '@storybook/angular',
options: { enableIvy: true },
},
};
In 7.0, the main.js
fields core.builder
are now removed, in favor of the new frameworks api. The builder is defined as part of the framework package you pick, e.g. @storybook/vue3-vite
. If you had options for your builder, they are now options on the framework.builder
field.
What used to be:
export default {
core: {
builder: {
name: 'webpack5',
options: { lazyCompilation: true }
},
}
framework: {
name: '@storybook/react-webpack5',
options: {},
},
};
Becomes:
export default {
framework: {
name: '@storybook/react-webpack5',
options: {
builder: { lazyCompilation: true },
},
},
};
Note: If after making this change, your
main.js
core
field is empty, just delete it.
If you are using TypeScript you should import the StorybookConfig
type from your framework package.
For example:
import type { StorybookConfig } from '@storybook/react-vite';
const config: StorybookConfig = {
framework: {
name: '@storybook/react-vite',
options: {},
},
// ... your configuration
};
export default config;
Up until version 7.0, it was possible to generate the default export of a CSF story by calling a function, or mixing in variables defined in other ES Modules. For instance:
// Dynamically computed local title
const categories = {
atoms: 'Atoms',
molecules: 'Molecules',
// etc.
}
export default {
title: `${categories.atoms}/MyComponent`
}
// Title returned by a function
import { genDefault } from '../utils/storybook'
export default genDefault({
category: 'Atoms',
title: 'MyComponent',
})
This is no longer possible in Storybook 7.0, as story titles are parsed at build time. In earlier versions, titles were mostly produced manually. Now that CSF3 auto-title is available, optimisations were made that constrain how id
and title
can be defined manually.
As a result, titles cannot depend on variables or functions, and cannot be dynamically computed (even with local variables). Stories must have a static title
property, or a static component
property used by the CSF3 auto-title feature to compute a title.
Likewise, the id
property must be statically defined. The URL defined for a story in the sidebar will be statically computed, so if you dynamically add an id
through a function call like above, the story URL will not match the one in the sidebar and the story will be unreachable.
To opt-out of the old behavior you can set the storyStoreV7
feature flag to false
in main.js
. However, a variety of performance optimizations depend on the new behavior, and the old behavior is deprecated and will be removed from Storybook in 8.0.
module.exports = {
features: {
storyStoreV7: false,
},
};
In 7.0 the location of the standalone node API has moved to @storybook/core-server
.
If you used the React standalone API, for example, you might have written:
const buildStandalone = require('@storybook/react/standalone');
const options = {};
buildStandalone(options).then(() => console.log('done'));
In 7.0, you would now use:
const { build } = require('@storybook/core-server');
const options = {};
build(options).then(() => console.log('done'));
The root ID unto which Storybook renders stories is renamed from root
to #storybook-root
to avoid conflicts with user's code.
If you used a directory based stories glob, in 6.x it would match .stories.js
(and other JS extensions) and .stories.mdx
files. For instance:
// in main.js
export default {
stories: ['../path/to/directory']
};
// or
export default {
stories: [{ directory: '../path/to/directory' }]
};
In 7.0, this pattern will also match .mdx
files (the new extension for docs files - see docs changes below). If you have .mdx
files you don't want to appear in your storybook, either move them out of the directory, or add a files
specifier with the old pattern ("**/*.stories.@(mdx|tsx|ts|jsx|js)"
):
export default {
stories: [{ directory: '../path/to/directory', files: '**/*.stories.@(mdx|tsx|ts|jsx|js)' }],
};
Starting in 7.0, Storybook's build tools add "use strict"
to the compiled JS output.
If user code in .storybook/preview.js
or stories relies on "sloppy" mode behavior, it will need to be updated. As a workaround, it is sometimes possible to move the sloppy mode code inside a script tag in .storybook/preview-head.html
.
The transcludeMarkdown
option in addon-docs
have been removed, and the automatic handling of .md
files in Vite projects have also been disabled.
Instead .md
files can be imported as plain strings by adding the ?raw
suffix to the import, and then passed to the new Markdown
block. In an MDX file that would look like this:
import { Markdown } from '@storybook/blocks';
import ReadMe from './README.md?raw';
...
<Markdown>{ReadMe}</Markdown>
In 6.x, the stories
key field in .storybook/main.js
was optional. In 7.0, it is mandatory.
Please follow up the Configure your Storybook project section to configure your Storybook project.
In 6.x, you could declare and use globals
without declaring their corresponding globalTypes
. We've made this more strict in 7.0, so that the globalTypes
declaration is required, and undeclared globals will be ignored.
Starting with 7.x, we are using modern ECMAScript Modules (ESM).
Those end up as .mjs
files in your static Storybook artifact and need to be served as application/javascript
, indicated by the Content-Type
HTTP header.
For a simple HTTP server to view a Storybook build, you can run npx http-server storybook-static
.
Note that using the serve package will not work.
In 6.x it was possible to open a Storybook build from the file system.
ESM requires loading over HTTP(S), which is incompatible with the browser's CORS settings for file://
URLs.
So you now need to use a web server as described above.
With nginx, you need to extend the MIME type handling in your configuration:
include mime.types;
types {
application/javascript mjs;
}
It would otherwise default to serving the .mjs
files as application/octet-stream
.
In 6.x Storybook literally followed the glob patterns specified in your .storybook/main.js
stories
field. Storybook 7.0 ignores files from node_modules
unless your glob pattern includes the string "node_modules"
.
Given the following main.js
:
export default {
stories: ['../**/*.stories.*'],
};
If you want to restore the previous behavior to include node_modules
, you can update it to:
export default {
stories: ['../**/*.stories.*', '../**/node_modules/**/*.stories.*'],
};
The first glob would have node_modules automatically excluded by Storybook, and the second glob would include all stories that are under a nested node_modules
directory.
Storybook uses temporary feature flags to opt-in to future breaking changes or opt-in to legacy behaviors. For example:
module.exports = {
features: {
emotionAlias: false,
},
};
In 7.0 we've removed the following feature flags:
flag | migration instructions |
---|---|
emotionAlias |
This flag is no longer needed and should be deleted. |
breakingChangesV7 |
This flag is no longer needed and should be deleted. |
previewCsfV3 |
This flag is no longer needed and should be deleted. |
babelModeV7 |
See Babel mode v7 exclusively |
This change modifies the way Storybook prepares stories to avoid reactive args to get lost for fine-grained updates JS frameworks as SolidJS
or Vue
. That's because those frameworks handle args/props as proxies behind the scenes to make reactivity work. So when argType
mapping was done in prepareStory
the Proxies were destroyed and args becomes a plain object again, losing the reactivity.
For avoiding that, this change passes the mapped args instead of raw args at renderToCanvas
so that the proxies stay intact. Also decorators will benefit from this as well by receiving mapped args instead of raw args.
In Storybook 7.0 we have changed the order of decorators being applied to allow you to access context information added by decorators defined in addons/frameworks from decorators defined in preview.js
. To revert the order to the previous behavior, you can set the features.legacyDecoratorFileOrder
flag to true
in your main.js
file:
// main.js
export default {
features: {
legacyDecoratorFileOrder: true,
},
};
The withActions
decorator is no longer automatically added to stories. This is because it is really only used in the html renderer, for all other renderers it's redundant.
If you are using the html renderer and use the handles
parameter, you'll need to manually add the withActions
decorator:
import globalThis from 'global';
+import { withActions } from '@storybook/addon-actions/decorator';
export default {
component: globalThis.Components.Button,
args: {
label: 'Click Me!',
},
parameters: {
chromatic: { disable: true },
},
};
export const Basic = {
parameters: {
handles: [{ click: 'clicked', contextmenu: 'right clicked' }],
},
+ decorators: [withActions],
};
Starting in 7.0 the grid.cellSize
parameter should now be backgrounds.grid.cellSize
. This was deprecated in SB 6.1.
We removed the deprecated withA11y
decorator. This was deprecated in 6.0
The interactions debugger in the panel is now displayed by default. The feature flag is now removed.
// .storybook/main.js
const config = {
features: {
interactionsDebugger: true, // This should be removed!
},
};
export default config;
When using a Vite-based framework, Storybook will automatically use your vite.config.(ctm)js
config file starting in 7.0.
Some settings will be overridden by Storybook so that it can function properly, and the merged settings can be modified using viteFinal
in .storybook/main.js
(see the Storybook Vite configuration docs).
If you were using viteFinal
in 6.5 to simply merge in your project's standard Vite config, you can now remove it.
For Svelte projects this means that the svelteOptions
property in the main.js
config should be omitted, as it will be loaded automatically via the project's vite.config.js
.
Previously, Storybook's Vite builder placed cache files in node_modules/.vite-storybook. However, it's more common for tools to place cached files into node_modules/.cache
, and putting them there makes it quick and easy to clear the cache for multiple tools at once. We don't expect this change will cause any problems, but it's something that users of Storybook Vite projects should know about. It can be configured by setting cacheDir
in viteFinal
within .storybook/main.js
Storybook Vite configuration docs).
SB7.0 no longer supports Webpack4.
Depending on your project specifics, it might be possible to run your Storybook using the webpack5 builder without error.
If you are running into errors, you can upgrade your project to Webpack5 or you can try debugging those errors.
To upgrade:
- If you're configuring Webpack directly, see the Webpack5 release announcement and migration guide.
- If you're using Create React App, see the migration notes to upgrade from V4 (Webpack4) to 5
During the 7.0 dev cycle we will be updating this section with useful resources as we run across them.
Has automigration
Storybook now uses Babel mode v7 exclusively. In 6.x, Storybook provided its own babel settings out of the box. Now, Storybook's uses your project's babel settings (.babelrc
, babel.config.js
, etc.) instead.
Note: If you are using @storybook/react-webpack5 with the @storybook/preset-create-react-app package, you don't need to do anything. The preset already provides the babel configuration you need.
In the new mode, Storybook expects you to provide a configuration file. Depending on the complexity your project, Storybook will fail to run without a babel configuration. If you want a configuration file that's equivalent to the 6.x default, you can run the following command in your project directory:
npx storybook@latest babelrc
This command will create a .babelrc.json
file in your project, containing a few babel plugins which will be installed as dev dependencies.
Storybook 6.x installed postcss by default. In 7.0 built-in support has been removed for Webpack-based frameworks. If you need it, you can add it back using @storybook/addon-postcss
.
Earlier versions of Storybook used Webpack DLLs as a performance crutch. In 6.1, we've removed Storybook's built-in DLLs and have deprecated the command-line parameters --no-dll
and --ui-dll
. In 7.0 those options are removed.
The deprecated fields component
and propsMeta
on the NgStory type have been removed.
Starting in 7.0, we drop support for Angular < 14
Has automigration
In Storybook 6.4 we deprecated calling Storybook directly (e.g. npm run storybook
) for Angular. In Storybook 7.0, we've removed it entirely. Instead, you have to set up the Storybook builder in your angular.json
and execute ng run <your-project>:storybook
to start Storybook.
You can run npx storybook@next automigrate
to automatically fix your configuration, or visit https://github.com/storybookjs/storybook/tree/next/code/frameworks/angular/README.md#how-do-i-migrate-to-an-angular-storybook-builder for instructions on how to set up Storybook for Angular manually.
In Storybook 7.0 we use the new bootstrapApplication API to bootstrap a standalone component to the DOM. The component is configured in a way to respect your configured imports, declarations and schemas, which you can define via the moduleMetadata
decorator imported from @storybook/angular
.
This means also, that there is no root ngModule anymore. Previously you were able to add ModuleWithProviders, likely the result of a 'Module.forRoot()'-style call, to your 'imports' array of the moduleMetadata definition. This is now discouraged. Instead, you should use the applicationConfig
decorator to add your application-wide providers. These providers will be passed to the bootstrapApplication function.
For example, if you want to configure BrowserAnimationModule in your stories, please extract the necessary providers the following way and provide them via the applicationConfig
decorator:
import { BrowserAnimationsModule } from '@angular/platform-browser/animations';
import { importProvidersFrom } from '@angular/core';
import { applicationConfig, Meta, StoryObj } from '@storybook/angular';
import {ExampleComponent} from './example.component';
const meta: Meta = {
title: 'Example',
component: ExampleComponent,
decorators: [
// Define application-wide providers with the applicationConfig decorator
applicationConfig({
providers: [
importProvidersFrom(BrowserAnimationsModule),
// Extract all providers (and nested ones) from a ModuleWithProviders
importProvidersFrom(SomeOtherModule.forRoot()),
],
}
],
};
export default meta;
type Story = StoryObj<typeof ExampleComponent>
export const Default: Story = {
render: () => ({
// Define application-wide providers directly in the render function
applicationConfig: {
providers: [importProvidersFrom(BrowserAnimationsModule)],
}
}),
};
You can also use the provide-style
decorator to provide an application-wide service:
import { provideAnimations } from '@angular/platform-browser/animations';
import { moduleMetadata } from '@storybook/angular';
export default {
title: 'Example',
decorators: [
applicationConfig({
providers: [provideAnimations()],
}),
],
};
Please visit https://angular.io/guide/standalone-components#configuring-dependency-injection for more information.
The parameters.angularLegacyRendering
option is removed. You cannot use the old legacy renderer anymore.
In Storybook 7.0 we introduced a convenient package that provides an out of the box experience for Next.js projects: @storybook/nextjs
. Please see the following resource to get started with it.
In Storybook 7.0 we introduced a convenient package that provides an out of the box experience for SvelteKit projects: @storybook/sveltekit
. Please see the following resource to get started with it.
For existing users, SvelteKit projects need to use the @storybook/sveltekit
framework in the main.js
file. Previously it was enough to just setup Storybook with Svelte+Vite, but that is no longer the case.
// .storybook/main.js
export default {
framework: '@storybook/sveltekit',
};
Also see the note in Vite builder uses Vite config automatically about removing svelteOptions
.
In 6.x @storybook/vue3
exported a Vue application instance called app
. In 7.0, this has been replaced by a setup
function that can be used to initialize the application in your .storybook/preview.js
:
Before:
import { app } from '@storybook/vue3';
import Button from './Button.vue';
app.component('GlobalButton', Button);
After:
import { setup } from '@storybook/vue3';
import Button from './Button.vue';
setup((app) => {
app.component('GlobalButton', Button);
});
In v6.x @storybook/web-components
had a peer dependency on lit-html
v1 or v2. In 7.0 we've dropped support for lit-html
v1 and now uses lit
v2 instead. Please upgrade your project's lit-html
dependency if you're still on 1.x.
Since v7 drops webpack4 support, it no longer supports Create React App < 5.0. If you're using an earlier version of CRA, please upgrade or stay on Storybook 6.x.
The @storybook/html
renderer doesn't dedent the source code when displayed in the "Show Code" source viewer any more.
You can get the same result by setting the parameter parameters.docs.source.format = "dedent"
either on a story level or globally in preview.js
.
Storybook 7 adds 2 new packages for addon authors to use: @storybook/preview-api
and @storybook/manager-api
.
These 2 packages replace @storybook/addons
.
When adding addons to storybook, you can (for example) add panels:
import { addons } from '@storybook/manager-api';
addons.addPanel('my-panel', {
title: 'My Panel',
render: ({ active, key }) => <div>My Panel</div>,
});
Note that this before would import addons
from @storybook/addons
, but now it imports { addons }
from @storybook/manager-api
.
The addons
export is now a named export only, there's no default export anymore, so make sure to update this usage.
The package @storybook/addons
is still available, but it's only for backwards compatibility. It's not recommended to use it anymore.
It's also been used by addon creators to gain access to a few APIs like makeDecorator
.
These APIs are now available in @storybook/preview-api
.
Storybook users have had access to a few storybook-lifecycle hooks such as useChannel
, useParameter
, useStorybookState
;
when these hooks are used in panels, they should be imported from @storybook/manager-api
.
When these hooks are used in decorators/stories, they should be imported from @storybook/preview-api
.
Storybook 7 includes @storybook/addons
shim package that provides the old API and calls the new API under the hood.
This backwards compatibility will be removed in a future release of storybook.
Here's an example of using the new API:
The @storybook/preview-api
is used here, because the useEffect
hook is used in a decorator.
import { useEffect, makeDecorator } from '@storybook/preview-api';
export const withMyAddon = makeDecorator({
name: 'withMyAddon',
parameterName: 'myAddon',
wrapper: (getStory) => {
useEffect(() => {
// do something with the options
}, []);
return getStory(context);
},
});
If you're an addon creator, you'll have to update your addon to use the new APIs.
That means you'll have to release a breaking release of your addon to make it compatible with Storybook 7.
It should no longer depend on @storybook/addons
, but instead on @storybook/preview-api
and/or @storybook/manager-api
.
You might also depend (and use) these packages in your addon's decorators: @storybook/store
, @storybook/preview-web
, @storybook/core-client
, @storybook/client-api
; these have all been consolidated into @storybook/preview-api
.
So if you use any of these packages, please import what you need from @storybook/preview-api
instead.
Storybook 7 will prepare manager-code for the browser using ESbuild (before it was using a combination of webpack + babel). This is a very important change, though it will not affect most addons. It means that when creating custom addons, particularly custom addons within the repo in which they are consumed, you will need to be aware that this code is not passed though babel, and thus will not use your babel config. This can result in errors if you are using experimental JS features in your addon code, not supported yet by ESbuild, or using babel dependent features such as Component selectors in Emotion.
ESbuild also places some constraints on things you can import into your addon's manager code: only woff2 files are supported, and not all image file types are supported. Here's the list of supported file types.
This is not configurable.
If this is a problem for your addon, you need to pre-compile your addon's manager code to ensure it works.
If you addon also introduces preview code (such a decorators) it will be passed though whatever builder + config the user has configured for their project; this hasn't changed.
In both the preview and manager code it's good to remember Storybook now targets modern browser only.
The package @storybook/components
contain a lot of components useful for building addons.
Some of these addons have been moved to a new package @storybook/blocks
.
These components were moved: ColorControl
, ColorPalette
, ArgsTable
, ArgRow
, TabbedArgsTable
, SectionRow
, Source
, Code
.
All of storybook's core addons have been updated and are ready to use with Storybook 7.
We're working with the community to update the most popular addons. But if you're using an addon that hasn't been updated yet, it might not work.
It's possible for example for older addons to use APIs that are no longer available in Storybook 7. Your addon might not show upside of the storybook (manager) UI, or storybook might fail to start entirely.
When this happens to you please open an issue on the addon's repo, and ask the addon author to update their addon to be compatible with Storybook 7. It's also useful for the storybook team to know which addons are not yet compatible, so please open an issue on the storybook repo as well; particularly if the addon is popular and causes a critical failure.
Here's a list of popular addons that are known not to be compatible with Storybook 7 yet:
Though storybook should de-duplicate storybook packages, storybook CLI's upgrade
command will warn you when you have multiple storybook-dependencies, because it is a possibility that this causes addons/storybook to not work, so when running into issues, please run this:
npx sb upgrade
In SB 6.x and earlier, addons exported a register.js
entry point by convention, and users would import this in .storybook/manager.js
. This was deprecated in SB 6.5
In 7.0, most of Storybook's addons now export a manager.js
entry point, which is automatically registered in Storybook's manager when the addon is listed in .storybook/main.js
's addons
field.
If your .manager.js
config references register.js
of any of the following addons, you can remove it: a11y
, actions
, backgrounds
, controls
, interactions
, jest
, links
, measure
, outline
, toolbars
, viewport
.
The default export from @storybook/addons
has been removed. Please use the named exports instead:
import { addons } from '@storybook/addons';
The named export has been available since 6.0 or earlier, so your updated code will be backwards-compatible with older versions of Storybook.
The Storybook manager is no longer built with Webpack. Now it's built with esbuild. Therefore, it's no longer possible to configure the manager. Esbuild comes preconfigured to handle importing CSS, and images.
If you're currently loading files other than CSS or images into the manager, you'll need to make changes so the files get converted to JS before publishing your addon.
This means the preset value managerWebpack
is no longer respected, and should be removed from presets and main.js
files.
Addons that run in the manager can depend on react
and @storybook/*
packages directly. They do not need to be peerDependencies.
But very importantly, the build system ensures there will only be 1 version of these packages at runtime. The version will come from the @storybook/ui
package, and not from the addon.
For this reason it's recommended to have these dependencies as devDependencies
in your addon's package.json
.
The full list of packages that Storybook's manager bundler makes available for addons is here: https://github.com/storybookjs/storybook/blob/next/code/lib/ui/src/globals/types.ts
Addons in the manager will no longer be bundled together anymore, which means that if 1 fails, it doesn't break the whole manager. Each addon is imported into the manager as an ESM module that's bundled separately.
For addon authors who use the Icons
component, its API has been updated in Storybook 7.
export interface IconsProps extends ComponentProps<typeof Svg> {
- icon?: IconKey;
- symbol?: IconKey;
+ icon: IconType;
+ useSymbol?: boolean;
}
Full change here: #18809
The addParameters
and addDecorator
APIs to add global decorators and parameters, exported by the various frameworks (e.g. @storybook/react
) and @storybook/client
were deprecated in 6.0 and have been removed in 7.0.
Instead, use export const parameters = {};
and export const decorators = [];
in your .storybook/preview.js
. Addon authors similarly should use such an export in a preview entry file (see Preview entries).
All SB6.x frameworks injected a parameter called framework
indicating to addons which framework is running.
For example, the framework value of @storybook/react
would be react
, @storybook/vue
would be vue
, etc.
Now those packages are called renderers in SB7, so the renderer information is now available in the renderer
parameter.
The information hierarchy of docs in Storybook has changed in 7.0. The main difference is that each docs is listed in the sidebar as a separate entry underneath the component, rather than attached to individual stories. You can also opt-in to a Autodocs entry rather than having one for every component (previously stories).
We've also modernized the API for all the doc blocks (the MDX components you use to write custom docs pages), which we'll describe below.
In 7.0, rather than rendering each story in "docs view mode", Autodocs (formerly known as "Docs Page") operates by adding additional sidebar entries for each component. By default it uses the same template as was used in 6.x, and the entries are entitled Docs
.
You can configure Autodocs in main.js
:
module.exports = {
docs: {
autodocs: true, // see below for alternatives
defaultName: 'Docs', // set to change the name of generated docs entries
},
};
If you are migrating from 6.x your docs.autodocs
option will have been set to true
, which has the effect of enabling docs page for every CSF file. However, as of 7.0, the new default is 'tag'
, which requires opting into Autodocs per-CSF file, with the autodocs
tag on your component export:
export default {
component: MyComponent
// Tags are a new feature coming in 7.1, that we are using to drive this behaviour.
tags: ['autodocs']
}
You can also set autodocs: false
to opt-out of Autodocs entirely. Further configuration of Autodocs is described below.
Parameter changes
We've renamed many of the parameters that control docs rendering for consistency with the blocks (see below). The old parameters are now deprecated and will be removed in 8.0. Here is a full list of changes:
docs.inlineStories
has been renameddocs.story.inline
docs.iframeHeight
has been renameddocs.story.iframeHeight
notes
andinfo
are no longer supported, instead usedocs.description.story | component
Previously .stories.mdx
files were used to both define and document stories. In 7.0, we have deprecated defining stories in MDX files, and consequently have changed the suffix to simply .mdx
. Our default stories
glob in main.js
will now match such files -- if you want to write MDX files that do not appear in Storybook, you may need to adjust the glob accordingly.
If you were using .stories.mdx
files to write stories, we encourage you to move the stories to a CSF file, and attach an .mdx
file to that CSF file to document them. You can use the Meta
block to attach a MDX file to a CSF file, and the Story
block to render the stories:
import { Meta, Story } from '@storybook/blocks';
import * as ComponentStories from './some-component.stories';
<Meta of={ComponentStories} />
<Story of={ComponentStories.Primary} />
(Note the of
prop is only supported if you change your MDX files to plain .mdx
, it's not supported in .stories.mdx
files)
You can create as many docs entries as you like for a given component. By default the docs entry will be named the same as the .mdx
file (e.g. Introduction.mdx
becomes Introduction
). If the docs file is named the same as the component (e.g. Button.mdx
, it will use the default autodocs name ("Docs"
) and override autodocs).
By default docs entries are listed first for the component. You can sort them using story sorting.
In Storybook 6.x, to create a unattached docs MDX file (that is, one not attached to story or a CSF file), you'd have to create a .stories.mdx
file, and describe its location with the Meta
doc block:
import { Meta } from '@storybook/addon-docs';
<Meta title="Introduction" />
In 7.0, things are a little simpler -- you should call the file .mdx
(drop the .stories
). This will mean behind the scenes there is no story attached to this entry. You may also drop the title
and use autotitle (and leave the Meta
component out entirely, potentially).
Additionally to changing the docs information architecture, we've updated the API of the doc blocks themselves to be more consistent and future proof.
General changes
-
Each block now uses
of={}
as a primary API -- where the argument to theof
prop is a CSF or story export. Theof
prop is only supported in plain.mdx
files and not.stories.mdx
files. -
When you've attached to a CSF file (with the
Meta
block, or in Autodocs), you can drop theof
and the block will reference the first story or the CSF file as a whole. -
Most other props controlling rendering of blocks now correspond precisely to the parameters for that block defined for autodocs above.
The primary change of the Meta
block is the ability to attach to CSF files with <Meta of={}>
as described above.
In 6.5 the Description doc block accepted a range of different props, markdown
, type
and children
as a way to customize the content.
The props have been simplified and the block now only accepts an of
prop, which can be a reference to either a CSF file, a default export (meta) or a story export, depending on which description you want to be shown. See TDB DOCS LINK for a deeper explanation of the new prop.
parameters.notes
and parameters.info
have been deprecated as a way to specify descriptions. Instead use JSDoc comments above the default export or story export, or use parameters.docs.description.story | component
directly. See TDB DOCS LINK for a deeper explanation on how to write descriptions.
If you were previously using the Description
block to render plain markdown in your docs, that behavior can now be achieved with the new Markdown
block instead like this:
import { Markdown } from '@storybook/blocks';
import ReadMe from './README.md?raw';
...
<Markdown>{ReadMe}</Markdown>
Notice the ?raw
suffix in the markdown import is needed for this to work.
To reference a story in a MDX file, you should reference it with of
:
import { Meta, Story } from '@storybook/blocks';
import * as ComponentStories from './some-component.stories';
<Meta of={ComponentStories} />
<Story of={ComponentStories.standard} />
You can also reference a story from a different component:
import { Meta, Story } from '@storybook/blocks';
import * as ComponentStories from './some-component.stories';
import * as SecondComponentStories from './second-component.stories';
<Meta of={ComponentStories} />
<Story of={SecondComponentStories.standard} meta={SecondComponentStories} />
Referencing stories by id="xyz--abc"
is deprecated and should be replaced with of={}
as above.
The source block now references a single story, the component, or a CSF file itself via the of={}
parameter.
Referencing stories by id="xyz--abc"
is deprecated and should be replaced with of={}
as above. Referencing multiple stories via ids={["xyz--abc"]}
is now deprecated and should be avoided (instead use two source blocks).
The parameter to transform the source has been consolidated from the multiple parameters of parameters.docs.transformSource
, parameters.docs.source.transformSource
, and parameters.jsx.transformSource
to the single parameters.docs.source.transform
. The behavior is otherwise unchanged.
The Canvas block follows the same changes as the Story block described above.
Previously the Canvas block accepted children (Story blocks) as a way to reference stories. That has now been replaced with the of={}
prop that accepts a reference to a story.
That also means the Canvas block no longer supports containing multiple stories or elements, and thus the props related to that - isColumn
and columns
- have also been deprecated.
- To pass props to the inner Story block use the
story={{ }}
prop - Similarly, to pass props to the inner Source block use the
source={{ }}
prop. - The
mdxSource
prop has been deprecated in favor of usingsource={{ code: '...' }}
- The
withSource
prop has been renamed tosourceState
Here's a full example of the new API:
import { Meta, Canvas } from '@storybook/blocks';
import * as ComponentStories from './some-component.stories';
<Meta of={ComponentStories} />
<Canvas
of={ComponentStories.standard}
story={{
inline: false,
height: '200px'
}}
source={{
language: 'html',
code: 'custom code...'
}}
withToolbar={true}
additionalActions={[...]}
layout="fullscreen"
className="custom-class"
/>
The ArgsTable
block is now deprecated, and two new blocks: ArgTypes
and Controls
should be preferred.
-
<ArgTypes of={storyExports OR metaExports OR component} />
will render a readonly table of args/props descriptions for a story, CSF file or component. Ifof
omitted and the MDX file is attached it will render the arg types defined at the CSF file level. -
<Controls of={storyExports} />
will render the controls for a story (or the primary story ifof
is omitted and the MDX file is attached).
The following props are not supported in the new blocks:
components
- to render more than one component in a single tableshowComponent
to show the component's props as well as the story's args- the
subcomponents
annotation to show more components on the table. of="^"
to reference the meta (just omitof
in that case, forArgTypes
).story="^"
to reference the primary story (just omitof
in that case, forControls
).story="."
to reference the current story (this no longer makes sense in Docs 2).story="name"
to reference a story (useof={}
).
As in 6.x, you can override the docs container to configure docs further. This is the container that each docs entry is rendered inside:
// in preview.js
export const parameters = {
docs: {
container: // your container
}
}
Note that the container must be implemented as a React component.
You likely want to use the DocsContainer
component exported by @storybook/blocks
and consider the following examples:
Overriding theme:
To override the theme, you can continue to use the docs.theme
parameter.
Overriding MDX components
If you want to override the MDX components supplied to your docs page, use the MDXProvider
from @mdx-js/react
:
import { MDXProvider } from '@mdx-js/react';
import { DocsContainer } from '@storybook/blocks';
import * as DesignSystem from 'your-design-system';
export const MyDocsContainer = (props) => (
<MDXProvider
components={{
h1: DesignSystem.H1,
h2: DesignSystem.H2,
}}
>
<DocsContainer {...props} />
</MDXProvider>
);
NOTE: due to breaking changes in MDX2, such override will only apply to elements you create via the MDX syntax, not pure HTML -- ie. ## content
not <h2>content</h2>
.
Storybook 7 Docs uses MDXv2 instead of MDXv1. This means an improved syntax, support for inline JS expression, and improved performance among other benefits.
If you use .stories.mdx
files in your project, you'll probably need to edit them since MDX2 contains breaking changes. In general, MDX2 is stricter and more structured than MDX1.
We've provided an automigration, mdx1to2
that makes a few of these changes automatically. For example, mdx1to2
automatically converts MDX1-style HTML comments into MDX2-style JSX comments to save you time.
Unfortunately, the set of changes from MDX1 to MDX2 is vast, and many changes are subtle, so the bulk of the migration will be manual. You can use the MDX Playground to try out snippets interactively.
If you get stuck with the MDX2 upgrade, we also provide opt-in legacy MDX1 support. This is intended as a temporary solution while you upgrade your Storybook; MDX1 will be discontinued in Storybook 8.0. The MDX1 library is no longer maintained and installing it results in npm audit
security warnings.
To process your .stories.mdx
files with MDX1, first install the @storybook/mdx1-csf
package in your project:
yarn add -D @storybook/mdx1-csf@latest
Then enable the legacyMdx1
feature flag in your .storybook/main.js
file:
export default {
features: {
legacyMdx1: true,
},
};
NOTE: This only affects .(stories|story).mdx
files. Notably, if you want to use Storybook 7's "pure" .mdx
format, you'll need to use MDX2 for that.
Storybook's default styles in docs are now globally applied to any element instead of using classes. This means that any component that you add directly in a docs file will also get the default styles.
To mitigate this you need to wrap any content you don't want styled with the Unstyled
block like this:
import { Unstyled } from '@storybook/blocks';
import { MyComponent } from './MyComponent';
# This is a header
<Unstyled>
<MyComponent />
</Unstyled>
Components that are part of your stories or in a canvas will not need this mitigation, as the Story
and Canvas
blocks already have this built-in.
Due to how MDX2 works differently from MDX1, manually defined <code>
elements are no longer transformed to the Code
component, so it will not be syntax highlighted. This is not the case for markdown ``` code-fences, that will still end up as Code
with syntax highlighting.
Luckily MDX2 supports markdown (like code-fences) inside elements better now, so most cases where you needed a <code>
element before, you can use code-fences instead:
<code>This will now be an unstyled line of code</code>
```js
const a = 'This is still a styled code block.';
```
<div style={{ background: 'red', padding: '10px' }}>
```js
const a = 'MDX2 supports markdown in elements better now, so this is possible.';
```
</div>
In SB 6.x, Storybook Docs used a Webpack loader called source-loader
to help display static code snippets. This was configurable using the options.sourceLoaderOptions
field.
In SB 7.0, we've moved to a faster, simpler alternative called csf-plugin
that only supports CSF. It is configurable using the options.csfPluginOptions
field.
If you're using storiesOf
and want to restore the previous behavior, you can add source-loader
by hand to your Webpack config using the following snippet in main.js
:
module.exports = {
webpackFinal: (config) => {
config.module.rules.push({
test: /\.stories\.[tj]sx?$/,
use: [
{
loader: require.resolve('@storybook/source-loader'),
options: {} /* your sourceLoaderOptions here */,
},
],
enforce: 'pre',
});
return config;
},
};
It is no longer possible to set parameters.docs.getContainer()
and getPage()
. Instead use parameters.docs.container
or parameters.docs.page
directly.
Removed @storybook/addon-docs/blocks
entry. Import directly from @storybook/blocks
instead. This was deprecated in SB 6.3.
Addon-docs previously accepted configureJsx
and mdxBabelOptions
options, which allowed full customization of the babel options used to process markdown and mdx files. This has been simplified in 7.0, with a new option, jsxOptions
, which can be used to customize the behavior of @babel/preset-react
.
Storybook Docs 5.x shipped with instructions for how to manually configure Webpack and Storybook without the use of Storybook's "presets" feature. Over time, these docs went out of sync. Now in Storybook 7 we have removed support for manual configuration entirely.
Running play functions in docs is generally tricky, as they can steal focus and cause the window to scroll. Consequently, we've disabled play functions in docs by default.
If your story depends on a play function to render correctly, and you are confident the function autoplaying won't mess up your docs, you can set parameters.docs.autoplay = true
to have it auto play.
This was a legacy global variable from the early days of react docgen. If you were using this variable, you can instead use docgen information which is added directly to components using .__docgenInfo
.
SB6.4 introduced Story Store V7, an optimization which allows code splitting for faster build and load times. This was an experimental, opt-in change and you can read more about it in the migration notes below. TLDR: you can't use the legacy storiesOf
API or dynamic titles in CSF.
Now in 7.0, Story Store V7 is the default. You can opt-out of it by setting the feature flag in .storybook/main.js
:
module.exports = {
features: {
storyStoreV7: false,
},
};
During the 7.0 dev cycle we will be preparing recommendations and utilities to make it easier for storiesOf
users to upgrade.
In 6.x you were able to do this:
import type { Story } from '@storybook/react';
export const MyStory: Story = () => <div />;
But this will produce a deprecation warning in 7.0 because Story
has been deprecated.
To fix the deprecation warning, use the StoryFn
type:
import type { StoryFn } from '@storybook/react';
export const MyStory: StoryFn = () => <div />;
This change is part of our move to CSF3, which uses objects instead of functions to represent stories. You can read more about the CSF3 format here: https://storybook.js.org/blog/component-story-format-3-0/
The type of StoryObj and StoryFn have been changed in 7.0 so that both the "component" as "the props of the component" will be accepted as the generic parameter.
import type { Story } from '@storybook/react';
import { Button, ButtonProps } from './Button';
// This works in 7.0, making the ComponentX types redundant.
const meta: Meta<typeof Button> = { component: Button };
export const CSF3Story: StoryObj<typeof Button> = { args: { label: 'Label' } };
export const CSF2Story: StoryFn<typeof Button> = (args) => <Button {...args} />;
CSF2Story.args = { label: 'Label' };
// Passing props directly still works as well.
const meta: Meta<ButtonProps> = { component: Button };
export const CSF3Story: StoryObj<ButtonProps> = { args: { label: 'Label' } };
export const CSF2Story: StoryFn<ButtonProps> = (args) => <Button {...args} />;
CSF2Story.args = { label: 'Label' };
The "rendering" function that renderers (ex-frameworks) must export (renderToDOM
) has been renamed to renderToCanvas
to acknowledge that some consumers of frameworks/the preview do not work with DOM elements.
In 6.x you could import XFramework types:
import type { ReactFramework } from '@storybook/react';
import type { VueFramework } from '@storybook/vue';
import type { SvelteFramework } from '@storybook/svelte';
// etc.
Those are deprecated in 7.0 as they are renamed to:
import type { ReactRenderer } from '@storybook/react';
import type { VueRenderer } from '@storybook/vue';
import type { SvelteRenderer } from '@storybook/svelte';
// etc.
In 6.x you could import the type DecoratorFn
:
import type { DecoratorFn } from '@storybook/react';
This type is deprecated in 7.0, instead you can use the type Decorator
, which is now available for all renderers:
import type { Decorator } from '@storybook/react';
// or
import type { Decorator } from '@storybook/vue';
// or
import type { Decorator } from '@storybook/svelte';
// etc.
The type Decorator
accepts a generic parameter TArgs
. This can be used like this:
import type { Decorator } from '@storybook/react';
import { LocaleProvider } from './locale';
const withLocale: Decorator<{ locale: 'en' | 'es' }> = (Story, { args }) => (
<LocaleProvider lang={args.locale}>
<Story />
</LocaleProvider>
);
If you want to use Decorator
in a backwards compatible way to DecoratorFn
, you can use:
import type { Args, Decorator } from '@storybook/react';
// Decorator<Args> behaves the same as DecoratorFn (without generic)
const withLocale: Decorator<Args> = (Story, { args }) => // args has type { [name: string]: any }
With increased support for more package managers (pnpm), we have introduced the --package-manager
CLI option. Please use --package-manager=npm
to force NPM to be used to install dependencies when running Storybook CLI commands. Other valid options are pnpm
, yarn1
, and yarn2
(yarn2
is for versions 2 and higher).
The preset field 'config'
has been replaced with 'previewAnnotations'
. 'config'
is now deprecated and will be removed in Storybook 8.0.
Additionally, the internal field 'previewEntries'
has been removed. If you need a preview entry, just use a 'previewAnnotations'
file and don't export anything.
Storybook 6.5 supports Vue 3 out of the box when you install it fresh. However, if you're upgrading your project from a previous version, you'll need to follow the steps for opting-in to webpack 5.
React 18 introduces a new root API. Starting in 6.5, Storybook for React will auto-detect your react version and use the new root API automatically if you're on React18.
If you wish to opt out of the new root API, set the reactOptions.legacyRootApi
flag in your .storybook/main.js
config:
module.exports = {
reactOptions: { legacyRootApi: true },
};
Storybook's manager API has deprecated the isToolshown
option (to show/hide the toolbar) and renamed it to showToolbar
for consistency with other similar UI options.
Example:
// .storybook/manager.js
import { addons } from '@storybook/addons';
addons.setConfig({
showToolbar: false,
});
Prior to SB6.5, addon-actions
provided an option called addDecorators
. In SB6.5, decorators are applied always. This is technically a breaking change, so if this affects you please file an issue in Github and we can consider reverting this in a patch release.
SB6.5 renames Storybook's Vite builder from storybook-builder-vite
to @storybook/builder-vite
. This move is part of a larger effort to improve Vite support in Storybook.
Storybook's automigrate
command can migrate for you. To manually migrate:
- Remove
storybook-builder-vite
from yourpackage.json
dependencies - Install
@storybook/builder-vite
- Update your
core.builder
setting in.storybook/main.js
to@storybook/builder-vite
.
SB6.5 moves framework specializations (e.g. ArgType inference, dynamic snippet rendering) out of @storybook/addon-docs
and into the specific framework packages to which they apply (e.g. @storybook/react
).
This change should not require any specific migrations on your part if you are using the docs addon as described in the documentation. However, if you are using react-docgen
or react-docgen-typescript
information in some custom way outside of addon-docs
, you should be aware of this change.
In SB6.4, @storybook/react
added react-docgen
to its babel settings and react-docgen-typescript
to its Webpack settings. In SB6.5, this only happens if you are using addon-docs
or addon-controls
, either directly or indirectly through addon-essentials
. If you're not using either of those addons, but require that information for some other addon, please configure that manually in your .storybook/main.js
configuration. You can see the docs configuration here: https://github.com/storybookjs/storybook/blob/next/code/presets/react-webpack/src/framework-preset-react-docs.ts
SB6.5 adds experimental opt-in support for MDXv2. To install:
yarn add @storybook/mdx2-csf -D
Then add the previewMdx2
feature flag to your .storybook/main.js
config:
module.exports = {
features: {
previewMdx2: true,
},
};
SB 6.4 introduced experimental "auto-title", in which a story's location in the sidebar (aka title
) can be automatically inferred from its location on disk. For example, the file atoms/Button.stories.js
might result in the title Atoms/Button
.
We've made two improvements to Auto-title based on user feedback:
- Auto-title preserves filename case
- Auto-title removes redundant filenames from the path
SB 6.4's implementation of auto-title ran startCase
on each path component. For example, the file atoms/MyButton
would be transformed to Atoms/My Button
.
We've changed this in SB 6.5 to preserve the filename case, so that instead it the same file would result in the title atoms/MyButton
. The rationale is that this gives more control to users about what their auto-title will be.
This might be considered a breaking change. However, we feel justified to release this in 6.5 because:
- We consider it a bug in the initial auto-title implementation
- CSF3 and the auto-title feature are experimental, and we reserve the right to make breaking changes outside of semver (tho we try to avoid it)
If you want to restore the old titles in the UI, you can customize your sidebar with the following code snippet in .storybook/manager.js
:
import { addons } from '@storybook/addons';
import startCase from 'lodash/startCase';
addons.setConfig({
sidebar: {
renderLabel: ({ name, type }) => (type === 'story' ? name : startCase(name)),
},
});
The heuristic failed in the common scenario in which each component gets its own directory, e.g. atoms/Button/Button.stories.js
, which would result in the redundant title Atoms/Button/Button
. Alternatively, atoms/Button/index.stories.js
would result in Atoms/Button/Index
.
To address this problem, 6.5 introduces a new heuristic to removes the filename if it matches the directory name or index
. So atoms/Button/Button.stories.js
and atoms/Button/index.stories.js
would both result in the title Atoms/Button
(or atoms/Button
if autoTitleFilenameCase
is set, see above).
Since CSF3 is experimental, we are introducing this technically breaking change in a minor release. If you desire the old structure, you can manually specify the title in file. For example:
// atoms/Button/Button.stories.js
export default { title: 'Atoms/Button/Button' };
When the user provides a prefix
in their main.js
stories
field, it now prefixes all titles to matching stories, whereas in 6.4 and earlier it only prefixed auto-titles.
Consider the following example:
// main.js
module.exports = {
stories: [{ directory: '../src', titlePrefix: 'Custom' }]
}
// ../src/NoTitle.stories.js
export default { component: Foo };
// ../src/Title.stories.js
export default { component: Bar, title: 'Bar' }
In 6.4, the final titles would be:
NoTitle.stories.js
=>Custom/NoTitle
Title.stories.js
=>Bar
In 6.5, the final titles would be:
NoTitle.stories.js
=>Custom/NoTitle
Title.stories.js
=>Custom/Bar
In ancient versions of Storybook, addons were registered by referring to addon-name/register.js
. This is going away in SB7.0. Instead you should just add addon-name
to the addons
array in .storybook/main.js
.
Before:
module.exports = { addons: ['my-addon/register.js'] };
After:
module.exports = { addons: ['my-addon'] };
Automigrate is a new 6.4 feature that provides zero-config upgrades to your dependencies, configurations, and story files.
Each automigration analyzes your project, and if it's is applicable, propose a change alongside relevant documentation. If you accept the changes, the automigration will update your files accordingly.
For example, if you're in a webpack5 project but still use Storybook's default webpack4 builder, the automigration can detect this and propose an upgrade. If you opt-in, it will install the webpack5 builder and update your main.js
configuration automatically.
You can run the existing suite of automigrations to see which ones apply to your project. This won't update any files unless you accept the changes:
npx sb@latest automigrate
The automigration suite also runs when you create a new project (sb init
) or when you update Storybook (sb upgrade
).
Storybook 6.3 supports CRA5 out of the box when you install it fresh. However, if you're upgrading your project from a previous version, you'll need to upgrade the configuration. You can do this automatically by running:
npx sb@latest automigrate
Or you can do the following steps manually to force Storybook to use Webpack 5 for building your project:
yarn add @storybook/builder-webpack5 @storybook/manager-webpack5 --dev
# Or
npm install @storybook/builder-webpack5 @storybook/manager-webpack5 --save-dev
Then edit your .storybook/main.js
config:
module.exports = {
core: {
builder: 'webpack5',
},
};
SB6.3 introduced a feature flag, features.previewCsfV3
, to opt-in to experimental CSF3 syntax support. In SB6.4, CSF3 is supported regardless of previewCsfV3
's value. This should be a fully backwards-compatible change. The previewCsfV3
flag has been deprecated and will be removed in SB7.0.
In SB6.3 and earlier, component titles were required in CSF default exports. Starting in 6.4, they are optional. If you don't specify a component file, it will be inferred from the file's location on disk.
Consider a project configuration /path/to/project/.storybook/main.js
containing:
module.exports = { stories: ['../src/**/*.stories.*'] };
And the file /path/to/project/src/components/Button.stories.tsx
containing the default export:
import { Button } from './Button';
export default { component: Button };
// named exports...
The inferred title of this file will be components/Button
based on the stories glob in the configuration file.
We will provide more documentation soon on how to configure this.
Starting in 6.4 CSF component titles are optional. However, if you do specify titles, title handing is becoming more strict in V7 and is limited to string literals.
Earlier versions of Storybook supported story titles that are dynamic Javascript expressions
// ✅ string literals 6.3 OK / 7.0 OK
export default {
title: 'Components/Atoms/Button',
};
// ✅ undefined 6.3 OK / 7.0 OK
export default {
component: Button,
};
// ❌ expressions: 6.3 OK / 7.0 KO
export default {
title: foo('bar'),
};
// ❌ template literals 6.3 OK / 7.0 KO
export default {
title: `${bar}`,
};
The TypeScript type for CSF3 story objects is StoryObj
, and this will become the default in Storybook 7.0. In 6.x, the StoryFn
type is the default, and Story
is aliased to StoryFn
.
If you are migrating to experimental CSF3, the following is compatible with 6.4 and requires the least amount of change to your code today:
// CSF2 function stories, current API, will break in 7.0
import type { Story } from '@storybook/<framework>';
// CSF3 object stories, will persist in 7.0
import type { StoryObj } from '@storybook/<framework>';
The following is compatible with 6.4 and also forward-compatible with anticipated 7.0 changes:
// CSF2 function stories, forward-compatible mode
import type { StoryFn } from '@storybook/<framework>';
// CSF3 object stories, using future 7.0 types
import type { Story } from '@storybook/<framework>/types-7-0';
SB6.4 introduces an opt-in feature flag, features.storyStoreV7
, which loads stories in an "on demand" way (that is when rendered), rather than up front when the Storybook is booted. This way of operating will become the default in 7.0 and will likely be switched to opt-out in that version.
The key benefit of the on demand store is that stories are code-split automatically (in builder-webpack4
and builder-webpack5
), which allows for much smaller bundle sizes, faster rendering, and improved general performance via various opt-in Webpack features.
The on-demand store relies on the "story index" data structure which is generated in the server (node) via static code analysis. As such, it has the following limitations:
- Does not work with
storiesOf()
- Does not work if you use dynamic story names or component titles.
However, the autoTitle
feature is supported.
The key behavioral differences of the v7 store are:
SET_STORIES
is not emitted on boot up. Instead the manager loads the story index independently.- A new event
STORY_PREPARED
is emitted when a story is rendered for the first time, which contains metadata about the story, such asparameters
. - All "entire" store APIs such as
extract()
need to be proceeded by an async call toloadAllCSFFiles()
which fetches all CSF files and processes them.
In earlier versions of Storybook, each framework package (e.g. @storybook/react
) provided its own start-storybook
and build-storybook
binaries, which automatically filled in various settings.
In 7.0, we're moving towards a model where the user specifies their framework in main.js
.
module.exports = {
// ... your existing config
framework: '@storybook/react', // OR whatever framework you're using
};
Each framework must export a renderToDOM
function and parameters.framework
. We'll be adding more documentation for framework authors in a future release.
To activate the v7 mode set the feature flag in your .storybook/main.js
config:
module.exports = {
// ... your existing config
framework: '@storybook/react', // OR whatever framework you're using
features: {
storyStoreV7: true,
},
};
NOTE: features.storyStoreV7
implies features.buildStoriesJson
and has the same limitations.
If you've written a custom storySort
function, you'll need to rewrite it for V7.
SB6.x supports a global story function specified in .storybook/preview.js
. It accepts two arrays which each contain:
- The story ID
- A story object that contains the name, title, etc.
- The component's parameters
- The project-level parameters
SB 7.0 streamlines the story function. It now accepts a StoryIndexEntry
which is
an object that contains only the story's id
, title
, name
, and importPath
.
Consider the following example, before and after:
// v6-style sort
function storySort(a, b) {
return a[1].kind === b[1].kind
? 0
: a[1].id.localeCompare(b[1].id, undefined, { numeric: true });
},
And the after version using title
instead of kind
and not receiving the full parameters:
// v7-style sort
function storySort(a, b) {
return a.title === b.title
? 0
: a.id.localeCompare(b.id, undefined, { numeric: true });
},
NOTE: v7-style sorting is statically analyzed by Storybook, which puts a variety of constraints versus v6:
- Sorting must be specified in the user's
.storybook/preview.js
. It cannot be specified by an addon or preset. - The
preview.js
export should not be generated by a function. storySort
must be a self-contained function that does not reference external variables.
The behavior of the default storySort
function has also changed in v7 thanks to #18423, which gives better control over hierarchical sorting.
In 6.x, the following configuration would sort any story/doc containing the title segment Introduction
to the top of the sidebar, so this would match Introduction
, Example/Introduction
, Very/Nested/Introduction
, etc.
// preview.js
export default {
parameters: {
options: {
storySort: {
order: ['Introduction', '*'],
},
},
},
};
In 7.0+, the targeting is more precise, so the preceding example would match Introduction
, but not anything nested. If you wanted to sort Example/Introduction
first, you'd need to specify that:
storySort: {
order: ['*', ['Introduction', '*']],
}
This would sort */Introduction
first, but not Introduction
or Very/Nested/Introduction
. If you want to target Introduction
stories/docs anywhere in the hierarchy, you can do this with a custom sort function.
The Story Store in v7 mode is async, so synchronous story loading APIs no longer work. In particular:
store.fromId()
has been replaced bystore.loadStory()
, which is async (i.e. returns aPromise
you will need to await).store.raw()/store.extract()
and friends that list all stories require a prior call tostore.cacheAllCSFFiles()
(which is async). This will load all stories, and isn't generally a good idea in an addon, as it will force the whole store to load.
Storyshots is not currently compatible with the v7 store. However, you can use the following workaround to opt-out of the v7 store when running storyshots; in your main.js
:
module.exports = {
features: {
storyStoreV7: !global.navigator?.userAgent?.match?.('jsdom'),
},
};
There are some caveats with the above approach:
- The code path in the v6 store is different to the v7 store and your mileage may vary in identical behavior. Buyer beware.
- The story sort API changed between the stores. If you are using a custom story sort function, you will need to ensure it works in both contexts (perhaps using the check
global.navigator.userAgent.match('jsdom')
).
Now that the web is moving to Emotion 11 for styling, popular libraries like MUI5 and ChakraUI are breaking with Storybook 6.3 which only supports emotion@10.
Unfortunately we're unable to upgrade Storybook to Emotion 11 without a semver major release, and we're not ready for that. So, as a workaround, we've created a feature flag which opts-out of the previous behavior of pinning the Emotion version to v10. To enable this workaround, add the following to your .storybook/main.js
config:
module.exports = {
features: {
emotionAlias: false,
},
};
Setting this should unlock theming for emotion11-based libraries in Storybook 6.4.
SB6.4 introduces an opt-in feature flag, features.babelModeV7
, that reworks the way Babel is configured in Storybook to make it more consistent with the Babel is configured in your app. This breaking change will become the default in SB 7.0, but we encourage you to migrate today.
NOTE: CRA apps using
@storybook/preset-create-react-app
use CRA's handling, so the new flag has no effect on CRA apps.
In SB6.x and earlier, Storybook provided its own default configuration and inconsistently handled configurations from the user's babelrc file. This resulted in a final configuration that differs from your application's configuration AND is difficult to debug.
In babelModeV7
, Storybook no longer provides its own default configuration and is primarily configured via babelrc file, with small, incremental updates from Storybook addons.
In 6.x, Storybook supported a .storybook/babelrc
configuration option. This is no longer supported and it's up to you to reconcile this with your project babelrc.
To activate the v7 mode set the feature flag in your .storybook/main.js
config:
module.exports = {
// ... your existing config
features: {
babelModeV7: true,
},
};
In the new mode, Storybook expects you to provide a configuration file. If you want a configuration file that's equivalent to the 6.x default, you can run the following command in your project directory:
npx sb@latest babelrc
This will create a .babelrc.json
file. This file includes a bunch of babel plugins, so you may need to add new package devDependencies accordingly.
In 6.4 the behavior of loaders when arg changes occurred was tweaked so loaders do not re-run. Instead the previous value of the loader is passed to the story, irrespective of the new args.
Since SB6.3, Storybook for Angular supports a builder configuration in your project's angular.json
. This provides an Angular-style configuration for running and building your Storybook. An example builder configuration is now part of the get started documentation page.
If you want to know all the available options, please checks the builders' validation schemas :
Angular 13 introduces breaking changes that require updating your Storybook configuration if you are migrating from a previous version of Angular.
Most notably, the documented way of including global styles is no longer supported by Angular13. Previously you could write the following in your .storybook/preview.js
config:
import '!style-loader!css-loader!sass-loader!./styles.scss';
If you use Angular 13 and above, you should use the builder configuration instead:
"my-default-project": {
"architect": {
"build": {
"builder": "@angular-devkit/build-angular:browser",
"options": {
"styles": ["src/styles.css", "src/styles.scss"],
}
}
},
},
If you need storybook-specific styles separate from your app, you can configure the styles in the SB Angular builder, which completely overrides your project's styles:
"storybook": {
"builder": "@storybook/angular:start-storybook",
"options": {
"browserTarget": "my-default-project:build",
"styles": [".storybook/custom-styles.scss"],
},
}
Then, once you've set this up, you should run Storybook through the builder:
ng run my-default-project:storybook
ng run my-default-project:build-storybook
In SB6.3 and earlier, the default.component
metadata was implemented as a parameter, meaning that stories could set parameters.component
to override the default export. This was an internal implementation that was never documented, but it was mistakenly used in some Angular examples.
If you have Angular stories of the form:
export const MyStory = () => ({ ... })
SomeStory.parameters = { component: MyComponent };
You should rewrite them as:
export const MyStory = () => ({ component: MyComponent, ... })
In 6.4 we've replaced the --static-dir
CLI flag with the staticDirs
field in .storybook/main.js
. Note that the CLI directories are relative to the current working directory, whereas the staticDirs
are relative to the location of main.js
.
Before:
start-storybook --static-dir ./public,./static,./foo/assets:/assets
After:
// .storybook/main.js
module.exports = {
staticDirs: ['../public', '../static', { from: '../foo/assets', to: '/assets' }],
};
The --static-dir
flag has been deprecated and will be removed in Storybook 7.0.
Storybook 6.3 brings opt-in support for building both your project and the manager UI with webpack 5. To do so, there are two ways:
1 - Upgrade command
If you're upgrading your Storybook version, run this command, which will both upgrade your dependencies but also detect whether you should migrate to webpack5 builders and apply the changes automatically:
npx sb upgrade
2 - Automigrate command
If you don't want to change your Storybook version but want Storybook to detect whether you should migrate to webpack5 builders and apply the changes automatically:
npx sb automigrate
3 - Manually
If either methods did not work or you just want to proceed manually, do the following steps:
Install the dependencies:
yarn add @storybook/builder-webpack5 @storybook/manager-webpack5 --dev
# Or
npm install @storybook/builder-webpack5 @storybook/manager-webpack5 --save-dev
Then edit your .storybook/main.js
config:
module.exports = {
core: {
builder: 'webpack5',
},
};
NOTE: If you're using
@storybook/preset-create-react-app
make sure to update it to version 4.0.0 as well.
Storybook 6.2 introduced experimental webpack5 support for building user components. Storybook 6.3 also supports building the manager UI in webpack 5 to avoid strange hoisting issues.
If you're upgrading from 6.2 and already using the experimental webpack5 feature, this might be a breaking change (hence the 'experimental' label) and you should try adding the manager builder:
yarn add @storybook/manager-webpack5 --dev
# Or
npm install @storybook/manager-webpack5 --save-dev
Because Storybook uses webpack@4
as the default, it's possible for the wrong version of webpack to get hoisted by your package manager. If you receive an error that looks like you might be using the wrong version of webpack, install webpack@5
explicitly as a dev dependency to force it to be hoisted:
yarn add webpack@5 --dev
# Or
npm install webpack@5 --save-dev
Alternatively or additionally you might need to add a resolution to your package.json to ensure that a consistent webpack version is provided across all of storybook packages. Replacing the {app} with the app (react, vue, etc.) that you're using:
// package.json
...
resolutions: {
"@storybook/{app}/webpack": "^5"
}
...
Storybook 6.3 supports Angular 12 out of the box when you install it fresh. However, if you're upgrading your project from a previous version, you'll need to follow the steps for opting-in to webpack 5.
Storybook 6.3 introduces Lit 2 support in a non-breaking way to ease migration from lit-html
/lit-element
to lit
.
To do so, it relies on helpers added in the latest minor versions of lit-html
/lit-element
. So when upgrading to Storybook 6.3, please ensure your project is using lit-html
1.4.x or lit-element
2.5.x.
According to the package manager you are using, it can be handled automatically when updating Storybook or can require to manually update the versions and regenerate the lockfile.
Previously, unset args
were set to the argType.defaultValue
if set or inferred from the component's prop types (etc.). In 6.3 we no longer infer default values and instead set arg values to undefined
when unset, allowing the framework to supply the default value.
If you were using argType.defaultValue
to fix issues with the above inference, it should no longer be necessary, you can remove that code.
If you were using argType.defaultValue
or relying on inference to set a default value for an arg, you should now set a value for the arg at the component level:
export default {
component: MyComponent,
args: {
argName: 'default-value',
},
};
To manually configure the value that is shown in the ArgsTable doc block, you can configure the table.defaultValue
setting:
export default {
component: MyComponent,
argTypes: {
argName: {
table: { defaultValue: { summary: 'SomeType<T>' } },
},
},
};
We are replacing @storybook/addon-knobs
with @storybook/addon-controls
.
In 6.3, we changed doc block imports from @storybook/addon-docs/blocks
to @storybook/addon-docs
. This makes it possible for bundlers to automatically choose the ESM or CJS version of the library depending on the context.
To update your code, you should be able to global replace @storybook/addon-docs/blocks
with @storybook/addon-docs
. Example:
// before
import { Meta, Story } from '@storybook/addon-docs/blocks';
// after
import { Meta, Story } from '@storybook/addon-docs';
Several URL params to control the manager layout have been deprecated and will be removed in 7.0:
addons=0
: usepanel=false
insteadpanelRight=1
: usepanel=right
insteadstories=0
: usenav=false
instead
Additionally, support for legacy URLs using selectedKind
and selectedStory
will be removed in 7.0. Use path
instead.
In 6.2 files ending in stories.mdx
or story.mdx
are now processed with Storybook's MDX compiler. Previously it only applied to files ending in .stories.mdx
or .story.mdx
. See more here: #13996.
We've updated the Angular storyshots format in 6.2, which is technically a breaking change. Apologies to semver purists: if you're using storyshots, you'll need to update your snapshots.
The new format hides the implementation details of @storybook/angular
so that we can evolve its renderer without breaking your snapshots in the future.
Storybook 6.2 for Angular uses parameters.component
as the preferred way to specify your stories' components. The previous method, in which the component was a return value of the story, has been deprecated.
Consider the existing story from 6.1 or earlier:
export default { title: 'Button' };
export const Basic = () => ({
component: Button,
props: { label: 'Label' },
});
From 6.2 this should be rewritten as:
export default { title: 'Button', component: Button };
export const Basic = () => ({
props: { label: 'Label' },
});
The new convention is consistent with how other frameworks and addons work in Storybook. The old way will be supported until 7.0. For a full discussion see #8673.
We've rewritten the Angular renderer in Storybook 6.2. It's meant to be entirely backwards compatible, but if you need to use the legacy renderer it's still available via a parameter. To opt out of the new renderer, add the following to .storybook/preview.ts
:
export const parameters = {
angularLegacyRendering: true,
};
Please also file an issue if you need to opt out. We plan to remove the legacy renderer in 7.0.
When the new Angular renderer is used, all Angular Story components must either have a selector, or be added to the entryComponents
array of the story's moduleMetadata
. If the component has any Input
s or Output
s to be controlled with args
, a selector should be added.
Many Storybook packages are now available as ESModules in addition to CommonJS. If your jest tests stop working, this is likely why. One common culprit is doc blocks, which is fixed in 6.3. In 6.2, you can configure jest to transform the packages like so (more info):
// In your jest config
transformIgnorePatterns: ['/node_modules/(?!@storybook)']
Previously, @storybook/core
would automatically add the postcss-loader
to your preview. This caused issues for consumers when PostCSS upgraded to v8 and tools, like Autoprefixer and Tailwind, starting requiring the new version. Implicitly adding postcss-loader
will be removed in Storybook 7.0.
Instead of continuing to include PostCSS inside the core library, it has been moved to @storybook/addon-postcss
. This addon provides more fine-grained customization and will be upgraded more flexibly to track PostCSS upgrades.
If you require PostCSS support, please install @storybook/addon-postcss
in your project, add it to your list of addons inside .storybook/main.js
, and configure a postcss.config.js
file.
Further information is available at #12668 and #13669.
If you're not using Postcss and you don't want to see the warning, you can disable it by adding the following to your .storybook/main.js
:
module.exports = {
features: {
postcss: false,
},
};
When relying on the implicit PostCSS loader, it would also add autoprefixer v9 and postcss-flexbugs-fixes v4 plugins to the postcss-loader
configuration when you didn't have a PostCSS config file (such as postcss.config.js
) within your project.
They will no longer be applied when switching to @storybook/addon-postcss
and the implicit PostCSS features will be removed in Storybook 7.0.
If you depend upon these plugins being applied, install them and create a postcss.config.js
file within your project that contains:
module.exports = {
plugins: [
require('postcss-flexbugs-fixes'),
require('autoprefixer')({
flexbox: 'no-2009',
}),
],
};
Config options for the sidebar are now under the sidebar
namespace. The showRoots
option should be set as follows:
addons.setConfig({
sidebar: {
showRoots: false,
},
// showRoots: false <- this is deprecated
});
The top-level showRoots
option will be removed in Storybook 7.0.
Possible options
for a radio/check/select controls has been moved up to the argType level, and no longer accepts an object. Instead, you should specify options
as an array. You can use control.labels
to customize labels. Additionally, you can use a mapping
to deal with complex values.
argTypes: {
answer:
options: ['yes', 'no'],
mapping: {
yes: <Check />,
no: <Cross />,
},
control: {
type: 'radio',
labels: {
yes: 'да',
no: 'нет',
}
}
}
}
Keys in control.labels
as well as in mapping
should match the values in options
. Neither object has to be exhaustive, in case of a missing property, the option value will be used directly.
If you are currently using an object as value for control.options
, be aware that the key and value are reversed in control.labels
.
Storybook HTML components are now exported directly from '@storybook/components' for better ESM and Typescript compatibility. The old entry point will be removed in SB 7.0.
// before
import { components } from '@storybook/components/html';
// after
import { components } from '@storybook/components';
In 6.1 we introduced an unintentional breaking change to addon-backgrounds
.
The addon uses decorators which are set up automatically by a preset. The required preset is ignored if you register the addon in main.js
with the /register
entry point. This used to be valid in v6.0.x
and earlier:
module.exports = {
stories: ['../**/*.stories.js'],
addons: ['@storybook/addon-backgrounds/register'],
};
To fix it, just replace @storybook/addon-backgrounds/register
with @storybook/addon-backgrounds
:
module.exports = {
stories: ['../**/*.stories.js'],
addons: ['@storybook/addon-backgrounds'],
};
Stories which have no siblings (i.e. the component has only one story) and which name exactly matches the component name will now be hoisted up to replace their parent component in the sidebar. This means you can have a hierarchy like this:
DESIGN SYSTEM [root]
- Atoms [group]
- Button [component]
- Button [story]
- Checkbox [component]
- Checkbox [story]
This will then be visually presented in the sidebar like this:
DESIGN SYSTEM [root]
- Atoms [group]
- Button [story]
- Checkbox [story]
See Naming components and hierarchy for details.
Starting in 6.1, react
and react-dom
are required peer dependencies of @storybook/react
, meaning that if your React project does not have dependencies on them, you need to add them as devDependencies
. If you don't you'll see errors like this:
Error: Cannot find module 'react-dom/package.json'
They were also peer dependencies in earlier versions, but due to the package structure they would be installed by Storybook if they were not required by the user's project. For more discussion: #13269
Earlier versions of Storybook used Webpack DLLs as a performance crutch. In 6.1, we've removed Storybook's built-in DLLs and have deprecated the command-line parameters --no-dll
and --ui-dll
. They will be removed in 7.0.
Each item in the story store contains a field called storyFn
, which is a fully decorated story that's applied to the denormalized story parameters. Starting in 6.0 we've stopped using this API internally, and have replaced it with a new field called unboundStoryFn
which, unlike storyFn
, must passed a story context, typically produced by applyLoaders
;
Before:
const { storyFn } = store.fromId('some--id');
console.log(storyFn());
After:
const { unboundStoryFn, applyLoaders } = store.fromId('some--id');
const context = await applyLoaders();
console.log(unboundStoryFn(context));
If you're not using loaders, storyFn
will work as before. If you are, you'll need to use the new approach.
NOTE: If you're using
@storybook/addon-docs
, this deprecation warning is triggered by the Docs tab in 6.1. It's safe to ignore and we will be providing a proper fix in a future release. You can track the issue at #13074.
The @storybook/addon-docs
previously accepted a jsx
option called onBeforeRender
, which was unfortunately named as it was called after the render.
We've renamed it transformSource
and also allowed it to receive the StoryContext
in case source rendering requires additional information.
Previously when using @storybook/addon-backgrounds
if you wanted to customize the grid, you would define a parameter like this:
export const Basic = () => <Button />
Basic.parameters: {
grid: {
cellSize: 10
}
},
As grid is not an addon, but rather backgrounds is, the grid configuration was moved to be inside backgrounds
parameter instead. Also, there are new properties that can be used to further customize the grid. Here's an example with the default values:
export const Basic = () => <Button />
Basic.parameters: {
backgrounds: {
grid: {
disable: false,
cellSize: 20,
opacity: 0.5,
cellAmount: 5,
offsetX: 16, // default is 0 if story has 'fullscreen' layout, 16 if layout is 'padded'
offsetY: 16, // default is 0 if story has 'fullscreen' layout, 16 if layout is 'padded'
}
}
},
Like Deprecated disabled parameter. The disabled
parameter has been deprecated, please use disable
instead.
For more information, see the the related documentation.
Storybook 6 introduces hoisted CSF annotations and deprecates the StoryFn.story
object-style annotation.
In 5.x CSF, you would annotate a story like this:
export const Basic = () => <Button />
Basic.story = {
name: 'foo',
parameters: { ... },
decorators: [ ... ],
};
In 6.0 CSF this becomes:
export const Basic = () => <Button />
Basic.storyName = 'foo';
Basic.parameters = { ... };
Basic.decorators = [ ... ];
- The new syntax is slightly more compact/ergonomic compared the old one
- Similar to React's
displayName
,propTypes
,defaultProps
annotations - We're introducing a new feature, Storybook Args, where the new syntax will be significantly more ergonomic
To help you upgrade your stories, we've created a codemod:
npx @storybook/cli@latest migrate csf-hoist-story-annotations --glob="**/*.stories.js"
For more information, see the documentation.
Storybook has built-in Typescript support in 6.0. That means you should remove your complex Typescript configurations from your .storybook
config. We've tried to pick sensible defaults that work out of the box, especially for nice prop table generation in @storybook/addon-docs
.
To migrate from an old setup, we recommend deleting any typescript-specific webpack/babel configurations in your project. You should also remove @storybook/preset-typescript
, which is superceded by the built-in configuration.
If you want to override the defaults, see the typescript configuration docs.
In 5.3 we introduced the main.js
file with a stories
property. This property was documented as a "glob" pattern. This was our intention, however the implementation allowed for non valid globs to be specified and work. In fact, we promoted invalid globs in our documentation and CLI templates.
We've corrected this, the CLI templates have been changed to use valid globs.
We've also changed the code that resolves these globs, so that invalid globs will log a warning. They will break in the future, so if you see this warning, please ensure you're specifying a valid glob.
Example of an invalid glob:
stories: ['./**/*.stories.(ts|js)']
Example of a valid glob:
stories: ['./**/*.stories.@(ts|js)']
The built-in create-react-app preset, which was previously deprecated, has been fully removed.
If you're using CRA and migrating from an earlier Storybook version, please install @storybook/preset-create-react-app
if you haven't already.
Some users have experienced core-js
dependency errors when upgrading to 6.0, such as:
Module not found: Error: Can't resolve 'core-js/modules/web.dom-collections.iterator'
We think this comes from having multiple versions of core-js
installed, but haven't isolated a good solution (see #11255 for discussion).
For now, the workaround is to install core-js
directly in your project as a dev dependency:
npm install core-js@^3.0.1 --save-dev
Starting in 6.0, the first argument to a story function is an Args object. In 5.3 and earlier, the first argument was a StoryContext, and that context is now passed as the second argument by default.
This breaking change only affects you if your stories actually use the context, which is not common. If you have any stories that use the context, you can either (1) update your stories, or (2) set a flag to opt-out of new behavior.
Consider the following story that uses the context:
export const Dummy = ({ parameters }) => <div>{JSON.stringify(parameters)}</div>;
Here's an updated story for 6.0 that ignores the args object:
export const Dummy = (_args, { parameters }) => <div>{JSON.stringify(parameters)}</div>;
Alternatively, if you want to opt out of the new behavior, you can add the following to your .storybook/preview.js
config:
export const parameters = {
passArgsFirst: false,
};
In SB 5.2, each framework had its own preset, e.g. @storybook/addon-docs/react/preset
. In 5.3 we unified this into a single preset: @storybook/addon-docs/preset
. In 6.0 we've removed the deprecated preset.
In 6.0 we renamed Preview
to Canvas
, Props
to ArgsTable
. The change should be otherwise backwards-compatible.
In 6.0, you should theme Storybook Docs with the docs.theme
parameter.
In 5.x, the Storybook UI and Storybook Docs were themed using the same theme object. However, in 5.3 we introduced a new API, addons.setConfig
, which improved UI theming but broke Docs theming. Rather than trying to keep the two unified, we introduced a separate theming mechanism for docs, docs.theme
. Read about Docs theming here.
In SB5.2, we introduced the concept of DocsPage slots for customizing the DocsPage.
In 5.3, we introduced docs.x
story parameters like docs.prepareForInline
which get filled in by frameworks and can also be overwritten by users, which is a more natural/convenient way to make global customizations.
We also introduced Custom DocsPage, which makes it possible to add/remove/update DocBlocks on the page.
These mechanisms are superior to slots, so we've removed slots in 6.0. For each slot, we provide a migration path here:
Slot | Slot function | Replacement |
---|---|---|
Title | titleSlot |
Custom DocsPage |
Subtitle | subtitleSlot |
Custom DocsPage |
Description | descriptionSlot |
docs.extractComponentDescription parameter |
Primary | primarySlot |
Custom DocsPage |
Props | propsSlot |
docs.extractProps parameter |
Stories | storiesSlot |
Custom DocsPage |
Props handling in React has changed in 6.0 and should be much less error-prone. This is not a breaking change per se, but documenting the change here since this is an area that has a lot of issues and we've gone back and forth on it.
Starting in 6.0, we have zero-config typescript support. The out-of-box experience should be much better now, since the default configuration is designed to work well with addon-docs
.
There are also two typescript handling options that can be set in .storybook/main.js
. react-docgen-typescript
(default) and react-docgen
. This is discussed in detail in the docs.
In SB 6.0, the Storybook Docs preset option configureJSX
is now set to true
for all React projects. It was previously false
by default for React only in 5.x). This configureJSX
option adds @babel/plugin-transform-react-jsx
, to process the output of the MDX compiler, which should be a safe change for all projects.
If you need to restore the old JSX handling behavior, you can configure .storybook/main.js
:
module.exports = {
addons: [
{
name: '@storybook/addon-docs',
options: { configureJSX: false },
},
],
};
In SB 6.0, the Storybook Docs no longer applies the user's babelrc by default when processing MDX files. It caused lots of hard-to-diagnose bugs.
To restore the old behavior, or pass any MDX-specific babel options, you can configure .storybook/main.js
:
module.exports = {
addons: [
{
name: '@storybook/addon-docs',
options: { mdxBabelOptions: { babelrc: true, configFile: true } },
},
],
};
In 6.0, you can customize a component description using the docs.description.component
parameter, and a story description using docs.description.story
parameter.
Example:
import { Button } from './Button';
export default {
title: 'Button'
parameters: { docs: { description: { component: 'some component **markdown**' }}}
}
export const Basic = () => <Button />
Basic.parameters = { docs: { description: { story: 'some story **markdown**' }}}
In 5.3 you customized a story description with the docs.storyDescription
parameter. This has been deprecated, and support will be removed in 7.0.
The following frameworks now render stories inline on the Docs tab by default, rather than in an iframe: react
, vue
, web-components
, html
.
To disable inline rendering, set the docs.stories.inline
parameter to false
.
In Storybook 5.3 we introduced a declarative main.js configuration, which is now the recommended way to configure Storybook. Part of the change is a simplified syntax for registering addons, which in 6.0 automatically registers many addons using a preset, which is a slightly different behavior than in earlier versions.
This breaking change currently applies to: addon-a11y
, addon-actions
, addon-knobs
, addon-links
, addon-queryparams
.
Consider the following main.js
config for addon-knobs
:
module.exports = {
stories: ['../**/*.stories.js'],
addons: ['@storybook/addon-knobs'],
};
In earlier versions of Storybook, this would automatically call @storybook/addon-knobs/register
, which adds the knobs panel to the Storybook UI. As a user you would also add a decorator:
import { withKnobs } from '../index';
addDecorator(withKnobs);
Now in 6.0, addon-knobs
comes with a preset, @storybook/addon-knobs/preset
, that does this automatically for you. This change simplifies configuration, since now you don't need to add that decorator.
If you wish to disable this new behavior, you can modify your main.js
to force it to use the register
logic rather than the preset
:
module.exports = {
stories: ['../**/*.stories.js'],
addons: ['@storybook/addon-knobs/register'],
};
If you wish to selectively disable knobs
checks for a subset of stories, you can control this with story parameters:
export const MyNonCheckedStory = () => <SomeComponent />;
MyNonCheckedStory.story = {
parameters: {
knobs: { disable: true },
},
};
babel-preset-vue
is not included by default anymore when using Storybook with Vue.
This preset is outdated and caused problems with more modern setups.
If you have an older Vue setup that relied on this preset, make sure it is included in your babel config
(install babel-preset-vue
and add it to the presets).
{
"presets": ["babel-preset-vue"]
}
However, please take a moment to review why this preset is necessary in your setup.
One usecase used to be to enable JSX in your stories. For this case, we recommend to use @vue/babel-preset-jsx
instead.
In 6.0 we removed a number of APIs that were previously deprecated.
See the migration guides for further details:
- Addon a11y uses parameters, decorator renamed
- Addon backgrounds uses parameters
- Source-loader
- Unified docs preset
- Addon centered decorator deprecated
The setStories
/SET_STORIES
event has changed and now denormalizes global and kind-level parameters. The new format of the event data is:
{
globalParameters: { p: 'q' },
kindParameters: { kind: { p: 'q' } },
stories: /* as before but with only story-level parameters */
}
If you want the full denormalized parameters for a story, you can do something like:
import { combineParameters } from '@storybook/api';
const story = data.stories[storyId];
const parameters = combineParameters(
data.globalParameters,
data.kindParameters[story.kind],
story.parameters
);
The story store no longer emits renderCurrentStory
/RENDER_CURRENT_STORY
to tell the renderer to render the story. Instead it emits a new declarative CURRENT_STORY_WAS_SET
(in response to the existing SET_CURRENT_STORY
) which is used to decide to render.
We've removed the ability to specify the hierarchy separators (how you control the grouping of story kinds in the sidebar). From Storybook 6.0 we have a single separator /
, which cannot be configured.
If you are currently 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 your components. Note: the codemod will not work for .mdx
components, you will need to make the changes by hand.
npx sb@latest migrate upgrade-hierarchy-separators --glob="*/**/*.stories.@(tsx|jsx|ts|js)"
We also now default to showing "roots", which are non-expandable groupings in the sidebar for the top-level groups. If you'd like to disable this, set the showRoots
option in .storybook/manager.js
:
import { addons } from '@storybook/addons';
addons.setConfig({
showRoots: false,
});
The storySort
function (set via the parameters.options.storySort
parameter) previously compared two entries [storyId, storeItem]
, where storeItem
included the full "denormalized" set of parameters of the story (i.e. the global, kind and story parameters that applied to that story).
For performance reasons, we now store the parameters uncombined, and so pass the format: [storyId, storeItem, kindParameters, globalParameters]
.
In 6.0 we removed a set of APIs from the underlying StoryStore
(which wasn't publicly accessible):
getStories
,getStoryFileName
,getStoryAndParameters
,getStory
,getStoryWithContext
,hasStoryKind
,hasStory
,dumpStoryBook
,size
,clean
Although these were private APIs, if you were using them, you could probably use the newer APIs (which are still private): getStoriesForKind
, getRawStory
, removeStoryKind
, remove
.
You can no longer add decorators and parameters globally after you added your first story, and you can no longer add decorators and parameters to a kind after you've added your first story to it.
It's unclear and confusing what would happened if you did. If you want to disable a decorator for certain stories, use a parameter to do so:
export StoryOne = ...;
StoryOne.story = { parameters: { addon: { disable: true } } };
If you want to use a parameter for a subset of stories in a kind, simply use a variable to do so:
const commonParameters = { x: { y: 'z' } };
export StoryOne = ...;
StoryOne.story = { parameters: { ...commonParameters, other: 'things' } };
NOTE: also the use of
addParameters
andaddDecorator
at arbitrary points is also deprecated, see the deprecation warning.
There have been a few rationalizations of parameter handling in 6.0 to make things more predictable and fit better with the intention of parameters:
All parameters are now merged recursively to arbitrary depth.
In 5.3 we sometimes merged parameters all the way down and sometimes did not depending on where you added them. It was confusing. If you were relying on this behaviour, let us know.
Array parameters are no longer "merged".
If you override an array parameter, the override will be the end product. If you want the old behaviour (appending a new value to an array parameter), export the original and use array spread. This will give you maximum flexibility:
import { allBackgrounds } from './util/allBackgrounds';
export StoryOne = ...;
StoryOne.story = { parameters: { backgrounds: [...allBackgrounds, '#zyx' ] } };
You cannot set parameters from decorators
Parameters are intended to be statically set at story load time. So setting them via a decorator doesn't quite make sense. If you were using this to control the rendering of a story, chances are using the new args
feature is a more idiomatic way to do this.
You can only set storySort globally
If you want to change the ordering of stories, use export const parameters = { options: { storySort: ... } }
in preview.js
.
The RenderContext
that is passed to framework rendering layers in order to render a story has been simplified, dropping a few members that were not used by frameworks to render stories. In particular, the following have been removed:
selectedKind
/selectedStory
-- replaced bykind
/name
configApi
storyStore
channel
clientApi
You can no longer change the contents of the StoryStore outside of a configure()
call. This is to ensure that any changes are properly published to the manager. If you want to add stories "out of band" you can call store.startConfiguring()
and store.finishConfiguring()
to ensure that your changes are published.
The story source code handling has been improved in both addon-storysource
and addon-docs
.
In 5.x some users used an undocumented internal API, mdxSource
to customize source snippetization in addon-docs
. This has been removed in 6.0.
The preferred way to customize source snippets for stories is now:
export const Example = () => <Button />;
Example.story = {
parameters: {
storySource: {
source: 'custom source',
},
},
};
The MDX analog:
<Story name="Example" parameters={{ storySource: { source: 'custom source' } }}>
<Button />
</Story>
If you use .storybook/main.js
config and have locally-defined addons in your project, you need to update your file paths.
In 5.3, addons
paths were relative to the project root, which was inconsistent with stories
paths, which were relative to the .storybook
folder. In 6.0, addon paths are now relative to the config folder.
So, for example, if you had:
module.exports = { addons: ['./.storybook/my-local-addon/register'] };
You'd need to update this to:
module.exports = { addons: ['./my-local-addon/register'] };
We've deprecated the setAddon
method of the storiesOf
API and plan to remove it in 7.0.
Since early versions, Storybook shipped with a setAddon
API, which allows you to extend storiesOf
with arbitrary code. We've removed this from all core addons long ago and recommend writing stories in Component Story Format rather than using the internal Storybook API.
Starting in 6.0.17, we've renamed the disabled
parameter to disable
to resolve an inconsistency where disabled
had been used to hide the addon panel, whereas disable
had been used to disable an addon's execution. Since disable
was much more widespread in the code, we standardized on that.
So, for example:
Story.parameters = { actions: { disabled: true } }
Should be rewritten as:
Story.parameters = { actions: { disable: true } }
Leveraging the new preset @storybook/addon-actions
uses parameters to pass action options. If you previously had:
import { withActions } from `@storybook/addon-actions`;
export StoryOne = ...;
StoryOne.story = {
decorators: [withActions('mouseover', 'click .btn')],
}
You should replace it with:
export StoryOne = ...;
StoryOne.story = {
parameters: { actions: ['mouseover', 'click .btn'] },
}
In 6.0 we removed the actions addon decorate API. Actions handles can be configured globally, for a collection of stories or per story via parameters. The ability to manipulate the data arguments of an event is only relevant in a few frameworks and is not a common enough usecase to be worth the complexity of supporting.
In 6.0 we removed the withA11y
decorator. The code that runs accessibility checks is now directly injected in the preview.
To configure a11y now, you have to specify configuration using story parameters, e.g. in .storybook/preview.js
:
export const parameters = {
a11y: {
element: '#storybook-root',
config: {},
options: {},
manual: true,
},
};
In 6.0, addon-essentials
doesn't configure addons if the user has already configured them in main.js
. In 5.3 it previously checked to see whether the package had been installed in package.json
to disable configuration. The new setup is preferably because now users' can install essential packages and import from them without disabling their configuration.
Starting in 6.0, the backgrounds addon now receives an object instead of an array as parameter, with a property to define the default background.
Consider the following example of its usage in Button.stories.js
:
// Button.stories.js
export default {
title: 'Button',
parameters: {
backgrounds: [
{ name: 'twitter', value: '#00aced', default: true },
{ name: 'facebook', value: '#3b5998' },
],
},
};
Here's an updated version of the example, using the new api:
// Button.stories.js
export default {
title: 'Button',
parameters: {
backgrounds: {
default: 'twitter',
values: [
{ name: 'twitter', value: '#00aced' },
{ name: 'facebook', value: '#3b5998' },
],
},
},
};
In addition, backgrounds now ships with the following defaults:
- no selected background (transparent)
- light/dark options
We've deprecated the following in 6.0: addon-info
, addon-notes
, addon-contexts
, addon-centered
, polymer
.
The info/notes addons have been replaced by addon-docs. We've documented a migration in the docs recipes.
Both addons are still widely used, and their source code is still available in the deprecated-addons repo. We're looking for maintainers for both addons. If you're interested, please get in touch on our Discord.
The contexts addon has been replaced by addon-toolbars, which is simpler, more ergonomic, and compatible with all Storybook frameworks.
The addon's source code is still available in the deprecated-addons repo. If you're interested in maintaining it, please get in touch on our Discord.
In 6.0 we removed the centered addon. Centering is now core feature of storybook, so we no longer need an addon.
Remove the addon-centered decorator and instead add a layout
parameter:
export const MyStory = () => <div>my story</div>;
MyStory.story = {
parameters: { layout: 'centered' },
};
Other possible values are: padded
(default) and fullscreen
.
We've deprecated @storybook/polymer
and are focusing on @storybook/web-components
. If you use Polymer and are interested in maintaining it, please get in touch on our Discord.
The UI options sidebarAnimations
, enableShortcuts
, theme
, showRoots
should not be changed on a per-story basis, and as such there is no reason to set them via parameters.
You should use addon.setConfig
to set them:
// in .storybook/manager.js
import { addons } from '@storybook/addons';
addons.setConfig({
showRoots: false,
});
The addParameters
and addDecorator
APIs to add global decorators and parameters, exported by the various frameworks (e.g. @storybook/react
) and @storybook/client
are now deprecated.
Instead, use export const parameters = {};
and export const decorators = [];
in your .storybook/preview.js
. Addon authors similarly should use such an export in a preview entry file (see Preview entries).
Similarly, clearDecorators
, exported by the various frameworks (e.g. @storybook/react
) is deprecated.
The configure
API to load stories from preview.js
, exported by the various frameworks (e.g. @storybook/react
) is now deprecated.
To load stories, use the stories
field in main.js
. You can pass a glob or array of globs to load stories like so:
// in .storybook/main.js
module.exports = {
stories: ['../src/**/*.stories.js'],
};
You can also pass an array of single file names if you want to be careful about loading files:
// in .storybook/main.js
module.exports = {
stories: [
'../src/components/Button.stories.js',
'../src/components/Table.stories.js',
'../src/components/Page.stories.js',
],
};
In 6.0 we deprecated the ability to split a kind's (component's) stories into multiple files because it was causing issues in hot module reloading (HMR). It will likely be removed completely in 7.0.
If you had N stories that contained export default { title: 'foo/bar' }
(or the MDX equivalent <Meta title="foo/bar">
), Storybook will now raise the warning Duplicate title '${kindName}' used in multiple files
.
To split a component's stories into multiple files, e.g. for the foo/bar
example above:
- Create a single file with the
export default { title: 'foo/bar' }
export, which is the primary file - Comment out or delete the default export from the other files
- Re-export the stories from the other files in the primary file
So the primary example might look like:
export default { title: 'foo/bar' };
export * from './Bar1.stories'
export * from './Bar2.stories'
export * from './Bar3.stories'
export const SomeStory = () => ...;
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!
If you're using addon-docs, you should probably not do this. Docs uses the theme as well, but this change makes the theme inaccessible to addon-docs. We'll address this in 6.0.0.
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-async-storage/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-async-storage/async-storage').default
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-async-storage/async-storage').default || 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 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 instructions 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.
Update: corejs-upgrade-webpack-plugin has been removed again after running into further issues as described in #7445.
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 simplified 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 trigger 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.
If you previously had:
import centered from '@storybook/addon-centered';
You should replace it with the React or Vue version as appropriate
import centered from '@storybook/addon-centered/react';
or
import centered from '@storybook/addon-centered/vue';
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:
Shortcut | 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@latest
-
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.
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.
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:import '@storybook/addon-actions/register'; import '@storybook/addon-links/register';
change
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';