netlify-plugin-cypress
v2.2.1
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Cypress Netlify build plugin
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netlify-plugin-cypress
Runs Cypress end-to-end tests on Netlify Build
Install and use
You can install this plugin in the Netlify UI from this direct in-app installation link or from the Plugins directory.
For file based installation, add netlify-plugin-cypress
NPM package as a dev dependency to your repository.
npm install --save-dev netlify-plugin-cypress
# or
yarn add -D netlify-plugin-cypress
And then add the plugin's name to the list of build plugins in netlify.toml
file as shown in the examples below.
note: this plugin assumes you have already installed Cypress as a dev NPM dependency.
Chromium install
This plugin installs via Puppeteer Chromium browser, which is also cached inside ./node_modules
folder.
How does it work
Build steps
When Netlify Build system runs it performs 2 steps essentially:
- builds the site
- deploys the site
Every plugin that wants to perform some actions can do so before the build, after the build (but before the deploy), and after the deploy. The Netlify uses the following names for these events
"preBuild"
1. builds the site
"postBuild"
2. deploys the site
"onSuccess"
"onFailure"
Thus every plugin can register itself to be executed before a site is built using "preBuild" event, or after a successful deploy using "onSuccess" event name, etc.
This plugin
This plugin netlify-plugin-cypress
by default runs during the "onSuccess" event, testing the deployed site. The Netlify Build system gives the URL to the plugin and it runs Cypress against that URL using the Cypress NPM module API.
Optionally, you can also run tests during "preBuild" and "postBuild" steps. This is useful if you want to ensure the site is working even before deploying it to Netlify servers. Finally, this plugin does not use "onFailure" event which happens only if Netlify fails to deploy the site.
Failing the deploy
Running Cypress tests by default uses the "onSuccess" step of the build pipeline. By this point Netlify has already deployed the site. Even if the tests fail now, the Netlify shows the successful deployment - the site is live! To really prevent the broken deploys, we suggest using Cypress GitHub / GitLab / Bitbucket integration to fail the status checks on a pull request.
We also suggest running tests during the "preBuild" and/or "postBuild" steps. If the tests fail during these steps, the Netlify fails the entire build and does not deploy the broken site.
Finally, you can set up Slack notifications on failed tests against the deployed site. At least you will quickly find out if the deployed site fails the E2E tests and would be able to roll back the deploy.
Examples
basic
Here is the most basic Netlify config file netlify.toml
with just the Cypress plugin
[[plugins]]
# runs Cypress tests against the deployed URL
package = "netlify-plugin-cypress"
The example file above should be enough to run Cypress tests in any existing Netlify project.
recommended
We strongly recommend setting CYPRESS_CACHE_FOLDER
to place the Cypress binary inside the node_modules folder to cache it between builds
# explicit commands for building the site
# and the folder to publish
[build]
command = "npm run build"
publish = "build"
[build.environment]
# cache Cypress binary in local "node_modules" folder
# so Netlify caches it
CYPRESS_CACHE_FOLDER = "./node_modules/CypressBinary"
# set TERM variable for terminal output
TERM = "xterm"
[[plugins]]
# runs Cypress tests against the deployed URL
package = "netlify-plugin-cypress"
See netlify-plugin-cypress-example repo.
Typescript users may need to add a install
before the build command. For a yarn user with a typescript app, the build section of the Netlify configuration might look like this:
[build]
command = "yarn install && yarn build"
publish = "build"
# ...remaining configuration...
tutorial
Read the full tutorial at Test Sites Deployed To Netlify Using netlify-plugin-cypress.
Note: if any tests against the deployed URL fail, the Netlify build still considers it a success. Thus if you want to have a test check against the deploy, install Cypress GitHub App. The app will provide its own failing status check in this case.
options
You can control the browser, the specs to run, record tests on Cypress Dashboard, etc, see manifest.yml file.
recording
To record test results and artifacts on Cypress Dashboard, set record: true
plugin input and set CYPRESS_RECORD_KEY
as an environment variable via Netlify Deploy settings.
[build]
command = "npm run build"
publish = "build"
[build.environment]
# cache Cypress binary in local "node_modules" folder
# so Netlify caches it
CYPRESS_CACHE_FOLDER = "./node_modules/CypressBinary"
# set TERM variable for terminal output
TERM = "xterm"
[[plugins]]
# runs Cypress tests against the deployed URL
package = "netlify-plugin-cypress"
[plugins.inputs]
record = true
See cypress-example-kitchensink and recorded results at Cypress Dashboard
Security note 🔐: you should keep your CYPRESS_RECORD_KEY
secret. You can control how Netlify builds external pull requests, see the doc - you never want to expose sensitive environment variables to outside builds.
status checks
If you are recording test results to Cypress Dashboard, you should also install Cypress GitHub Integration App to see status checks from individual groups or from individual specs per commit. See netlify-plugin-prebuild-example PR #8 pull request for an example.
group
You can change the group name for the recorded run using group
parameter
[[plugins]]
# runs Cypress tests against the deployed URL
package = "netlify-plugin-cypress"
[plugins.inputs]
record = true
group = "built site"
tag
You can give recorded run tags using a comma-separated string. If the tag is not specified, Netlify context will be used (production
, deploy-preview
or branch-deploy
)
[[plugins]]
# runs Cypress tests against the deployed URL
package = "netlify-plugin-cypress"
[plugins.inputs]
record = true
group = "built site"
tag = "nightly,production"
spec
Run only a single spec or specs matching a wildcard
[build]
command = "npm run build"
publish = "build"
[build.environment]
# cache Cypress binary in local "node_modules" folder
# so Netlify caches it
CYPRESS_CACHE_FOLDER = "./node_modules/CypressBinary"
# set TERM variable for terminal output
TERM = "xterm"
[[plugins]]
# runs Cypress tests against the deployed URL
package = "netlify-plugin-cypress"
[plugins.inputs]
spec = "cypress/integration/smoke*.js"
See cypress-example-kitchensink for instance.
browser
By default all tests run using the Chromium browser. If you want to use Electron:
[build]
command = "npm run build"
publish = "build"
[build.environment]
# cache Cypress binary in local "node_modules" folder
# so Netlify caches it
CYPRESS_CACHE_FOLDER = "./node_modules/CypressBinary"
# set TERM variable for terminal output
TERM = "xterm"
[[plugins]]
package = "netlify-plugin-cypress"
[plugins.inputs]
# allowed values: electron, chromium
browser = "electron"
configFile
If you would like to use a different Cypress config file instead of cypress.json
, specify it using the configFile
option
[build]
command = "npm run build"
publish = "build"
[build.environment]
# cache Cypress binary in local "node_modules" folder
# so Netlify caches it
CYPRESS_CACHE_FOLDER = "./node_modules/CypressBinary"
# set TERM variable for terminal output
TERM = "xterm"
[[plugins]]
package = "netlify-plugin-cypress"
[plugins.inputs]
configFile = "cypress.netlify.json"
testing SPA routes
SPAs need catch-all redirect setup to make non-root paths accessible by tests. You can enable this with spa
parameter.
[[plugins]]
# local Cypress plugin will test our site after it is built
package = "netlify-plugin-cypress"
[plugins.inputs]
# can also use "spa = true" to use "index.html" by default
spa = "index.html"
See lws-spa for more options and tests/routing example.
testing the site before build
By default this plugin tests static site after deploy. But maybe you want to run end-to-end tests against the local development server. You can start the local server, wait for it to respond and then run Cypress tests by passing parameters to this plugin. Here is a sample config file
[[plugins]]
package = "netlify-plugin-cypress"
# let's run tests against development server
# before building it (and testing the built site)
[plugins.inputs.preBuild]
enable = true
start = 'npm start'
wait-on = 'http://localhost:5000'
wait-on-timeout = '30' # seconds
Parameters you can place into preBuild
inputs: start
, wait-on
, wait-on-timeout
, spec
, record
, group
, and tag
.
See netlify-plugin-prebuild-example repo
testing the site after build
By default this plugin tests static site after deploy. But maybe you want to run end-to-end tests locally after building the static site. Cypress includes a local static server for this case but you can specify your own command if needed by using the start
argument. Here is a sample config file
[[plugins]]
package = "netlify-plugin-cypress"
# let's run tests against the built site
[plugins.inputs.postBuild]
enable = true
Parameters you can place into postBuild
inputs: spec
, record
, group
, tag
, start
and spa
.
The SPA parameter
If your site requires all unknown URLs to redirect back to the index page, use the spa
parameter
[[plugins]]
package = "netlify-plugin-cypress"
# let's run tests against the built site
[plugins.inputs.postBuild]
enable = true
# must allow our test server to redirect unknown routes to "/"
# so that client-side routing can correctly route them
# can be set to true or "index.html" (or similar fallback filename in the built folder)
spa = true
start = 'npm start'
See the routing example.
using Netlify CLI
Even better when testing the prebuilt site is to run the Netlify CLI to make sure the local API redirects and Netlify functions work in addition to the web site. Add netlify-cli
as a dev dependency and start it during testing.
$ npm i -D netlify-cli
[[plugins]]
package = "netlify-plugin-cypress"
# start Netlify server
[plugins.inputs.preBuild]
start = 'npx netlify dev'
wait-on = 'http://localhost:8888'
For more, see tests/test-netlify-dev example and read Testing Netlify Function section.
skipping tests
If you are testing the site before building it and want to skip testing the deployed URL
[[plugins]]
package = "netlify-plugin-cypress"
# do not test the deployed URL
[plugins.inputs]
enable = false
# test the local site
[plugins.inputs.preBuild]
enable = true
parallelization
Running tests in parallel is not supported because Netlify plugin system runs on a single machine. Thus you can record the tests on Cypress Dashboard, but not run tests in parallel. If Netlify expands its build offering by allowing multiple build machines, we could take advantage of it and run tests in parallel.
HTML files
When serving the built folder, we automatically serve .html
files. For example, if your folder has the following structure:
public/
index.html
pages/
about.html
The public
folder is served automatically and the following test successfully visits both the root and the about.html
pages:
cy.visit('/')
cy.visit('/pages/about') // visits the about.html
Example repos
Name | Description --- | --- netlify-plugin-cypress-example | Runs Cypress tests on Netlify and records their results to Cypress Dashboard netlify-plugin-prebuild-example | Runs tests twice, first using the development version of the site, then after Netlify builds the production bundles, runs the tests again cypress-example-kitchensink | Runs only a subset of all tests before publishing the folder to Netlify bahmutov/eleventyone | Example used in Test Sites Deployed To Netlify Using netlify-plugin-cypress tutorial gatsby-starter-portfolio-cara | A Gatsby site example
Major upgrades
v1 to v2
- The default browser has been switched to Chromium. If you want to use the built-in Electron use an explicit option browser
- We have changed the default testing phase. In v1 the tests executed after building the site by default. In v2 the tests run against the deployed URL by default, and you need to enable the testing during
preBuild
orpostBuild
steps.
Debugging
Set environment variable DEBUG=netlify-plugin-cypress
to see the debug logs. To see even more information, set DEBUG=netlify-plugin-cypress,netlify-plugin-cypress:verbose
Warning: be careful with verbose logging, since it can print all environment variables passed to the plugin, including tokens, API keys, and other secrets.
Common problems
License
This project is licensed under the terms of the MIT license.
Contributing
Read the contributing guide