This package contains Cypress's suite of system tests.
These tests launch the Cypress server process for each test and run different specs and projects under specific environment conditions, to get tests that can be as close to "real world" as possible.
These tests run in CI in Electron, Chrome, and Firefox under the system-tests
job family.
yarn test # runs all tests
## or use globbing to find spec in folders as defined in "glob-in-dir" param in package.json
yarn test screenshot*element # runs screenshot_element_capture_spec.js
yarn test screenshot # runs screenshot_element_capture_spec.js, screenshot_fullpage_capture_spec.js, ..., etc.
To keep the browser open after a spec run (for easier debugging and iterating on specs), you can pass the --no-exit
flag to the test command. Live reloading due to spec changes should also work:
yarn test go_spec.js --browser chrome --no-exit
To debug the Cypress process under test, you can pass --cypress-inspect-brk
:
yarn test go_spec.js --browser chrome --no-exit --cypress-inspect-brk
System tests cover the entire Cypress run, so they are good for testing features that do not fit into a normal integration or unit test. However, they do take more resources to run, so consider carefully if you really need to write a system test, or if you could achieve 100% coverage via an integration or unit test instead.
There are two parts to a system test:
- A test written using the
systemTests
Mocha wrapper that lives in./test
, and - A matching Cypress test project that lives in the
./projects
directory.
For example, if you initialized a new project in ./projects/my-new-project
, and you wanted to assert that 2 tests fail and take a snapshot of the stdout
, you'd write a test like this:
// ./test/my-new-project.spec.ts
import systemTests from '../lib/system-tests'
import Fixtures from '../lib/fixtures'
describe('my new project', () => {
// scaffold projects
systemTests.setup()
systemTests.it('fails as expected', {
project: 'my-new-project',
snapshot: true,
spec: '*',
expectedExitCode: 2
})
})
From here, you could run this test with yarn test my-new-project
.
There are many more options available for systemTests.it
and systemTests.setup
. You can massage the stdout, do pre-run tasks, set up HTTP/S servers, and more. Explore the typedocs in ./lib/system-tests
for more information.
These tests run in the system-tests-*
CI jobs.
In some situations, we want to test the same cypress project against multiple node_modules
configurations. This is very common in component testing, where we want to ensure that the cypress/react
package is compatible with different versions of React, or ensure that the cypress/webpack-dev-server
is compatible with different versions of webpack.
The project-fixtures directory helps us here. Rather than duplicating the same set of files and needing to update in multiple places, we can specify a Cypress project in a folder, and if the project's package.json
specifies a:
"projectFixtureDirectory": "$PROJECT_FIXTURE_FOLDER"`
We will automatically copy the contents of the project-fixtures
folder into the project just after it has been scaffolded.
See the package.json for the webpack4_wds3-react package as an example of this pattern, and the webpack-dev-server react tests as an example use.
Specs in the ./test
directory are run against an unbuilt Cypress App. They don't test cypress
NPM package installation or other prod app behavior. This is done so that they can run as fast as possible in CI, without waiting for a full build of the Cypress App.
Specs in ./test-binary
are run against the built Cypress App. They also run inside of their own Docker containers to give a blank slate environment for Cypress to run in. Before each test, the prod CLI is npm install
ed along with the built Cypress .zip
, and real cypress run
commands are used to run the tests. There should be no functional difference between running a project in these tests and running real prod Cypress inside of Docker in CI.
The purpose of these tests is to test things that we normally can't inside of regular system-tests
, such as testing Cypress with different Node versions, with/without Xvfb, or inside of different operating system versions.
An example of using dockerImage
and withBinary
to write a binary system test:
// ./test-binary/node-versions.spec.ts
import systemTests from '../lib/system-tests'
import Fixtures from '../lib/fixtures'
describe('node versions', () => {
systemTests.it('runs in node 12', {
dockerImage: 'cypress:node/12',
project: 'todos',
withBinary: true,
})
})
Running yarn test node-versions
would spin up a local Docker container for cypress:node/12
, install Cypress from ../cypress.zip
and ../cli/build
, and then call the regular cypress run
command within the container. Other options for systemTests.it
such as onRun
and expectedExitCode
still function normally.
These tests run in the binary-system-tests
CI job.
Prepend SNAPSHOT_UPDATE=1
to any test command. See snap-shot-it
instructions for more info.
SNAPSHOT_UPDATE=1 yarn test go_spec
Every folder in ./projects
represents a self-contained Cypress project. When you pass the project
property to systemTests.it
or systemTests.exec
, Cypress launches using this project.
If a test project has a package.json
file, the systemTests.exec
helper will attempt to install the correct node_modules
by running yarn install
or npm install
(depending on which lockfile is present) against the project. This is cached in CI and locally to speed up test times.
systemTests.exec
copies the project directory to a temporary folder outside of the monorepo root. This means that temporary projects will not inherit the node_modules
from this package or the monorepo. So, you must add the dependencies required for your project in dependencies
or devDependencies
.
The exception is some commonly used packages that are scaffolded for all projects, like lodash
and debug
. You can see the list by looking at scaffoldCommonNodeModules
in ./lib/fixtures.ts
These packages do not need to be added to a test project's package.json
.
You can also set special properties in a test project's package.json
to influence the helper's behavior when running yarn
or npm
:
package.json Property Name |
Type | Description |
---|---|---|
_cySkipDepInstall |
boolean |
If true , skip the automatic yarn install or npm install for this package, even though it has a package.json . |
_cyYarnV311 |
boolean |
Run the yarn v3.1.1-style install command instead of yarn v1-style. |
_cyRunScripts |
boolean |
By default, the automatic install will not run postinstall scripts. This option, if set, will cause postinstall scripts to run for this project. |
Run yarn projects:yarn:install
to run yarn install
/npm install
for all applicable projects.
Use the UPDATE_LOCK_FILE=1
environment variable with yarn test
or yarn projects:yarn:install
to allow the yarn.lock
or package-lock.json
to be updated and synced back to the monorepo from the temp dir.