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Cypress Docker Images CircleCI

Cypress Docker images are published to Cypress on Docker Hub.

These images provide all of the required dependencies for running Cypress in Docker.

We build four images: click on the image name to see the available tags with versions, and refer to the Tags section below. These allow you to target specific combinations you need.

Image Name Description Monthly pulls
cypress/factory A base image template which can be used with ARGs to create a custom docker image. Docker Pulls
cypress/base All operating system dependencies, no Cypress, and no browsers. Docker Pulls
cypress/browsers All operating system dependencies, no Cypress, and some browsers. Docker Pulls
cypress/included All operating system dependencies, Cypress, and some browsers installed globally. Docker Pulls

Platforms

Cypress Docker images are Linux based, using the Docker image debian:12-slim as the default base image. Each of the above listed Cypress Docker images is published with multi-architecture support for Linux/amd64 and Linux/arm64 platforms.

Cypress Docker images can be run as containers on Continuous Integration (CI) systems which support Docker. Cypress Docker images can also be run locally under Docker Desktop for Mac, Linux or Windows environments.

In the case of Windows environments, see Docker Desktop for Windows and Cypress documentation Windows Subsystem for Linux for additional information regarding Microsoft's WSL2 and WSLg subsystems. The documentation and scripts in this repository assume that Docker Desktop for Windows runs in a virtual Linux environment.

Browsers

Cypress Docker images cypress/browsers include browsers for the Linux/amd64 platform. Availability is pending for the Linux/arm64 platform.

Browser Linux/amd64 Linux/arm64
Google Chrome see #1188
Mozilla Firefox see #1190 and examples/firefox-esr
Microsoft Edge see #1189

On POSIX-based systems, or with Git for Windows at a Git Bash prompt, execute uname -m to display your system's architecture. (x86_64 is equivalent to amd64.)

cypress/included images, which are built on top of cypress/browsers, contain the same set of browsers.

Tags for cypress/browsers and cypress/included images show which versions of the browsers are loaded into the respective image. (Disregard the browser version tags for current Linux/arm64 images however.)

Building a custom image with cypress/factory allows selection of individual browsers from the above list.

Debian packages

Debian provides two Cypress-compatible browsers as packages covering both amd64 and arm64 architectures. These can be used to complement the browsers that are configurable through the cypress/factory build process:

Tags

To select an image, use the [REPOSITORY[:TAG]] format. REPOSITORY is one of cypress/factory, cypress/base, cypress/browsers or cypress/included. If TAG is omitted, it defaults to latest.

For each of the REPOSITORY image types, see the Tags section of each README document for more detail.

Image Type README Example Tag
cypress/factory README 5.1.0
cypress/base README 22.11.0
cypress/browsers README 22.11.0
cypress/included README 13.16.0

Images with a specific version tag for cypress/factory and cypress/base (for example: cypress/factory:5.1.0 and cypress/base:22.11.0) are frozen once they have been published. The same is true for images linked to full browser version tags for cypress/browsers and cypress/included (for example: cypress/browsers:node-22.11.0-chrome-131.0.6778.69-1-ff-132.0.2-edge-131.0.2903.51-1 and cypress/included:cypress-13.16.0-node-22.11.0-chrome-131.0.6778.69-1-ff-132.0.2-edge-131.0.2903.51-1).

cypress/browsers and cypress/included images are also offered with short-form convenience tags that do not include browser version details (example: cypress/browsers:22.11.0 and cypress/included:13.16.0). The tags that these images refer to can change without notice if browser updates are made.

Similarly, the convenience tag latest, for each of the image types, changes without notice.

To avoid breaking changes when new images are released, use a corresponding frozen image tag rather than a convenience tag.

Usage

📍Cypress Docker images are offered as a convenience measure. The goal is to offer Node.js, Browser and Cypress versions to streamline running tests in CI or other non-public, sandboxed environments.

Some preparations and optimizations are not included. For example, given the near infinite permutations, images are not monitored for security vulnerabilities. Additionally, once images are published they are considered immutable and cannot be patched. That means (hypothetically) older images could become more vulnerable over time.

This means they should not be used for production deployment and security scans should be performed as-needed by users of these images.

Docker Hub

All of the images and tags are published to Cypress on Docker Hub under:

Cypress/Factory

Don't see the exact combination of Cypress, Node.js and browser versions you need for your test environment? Checkout our cypress/factory. You can use it to generate a custom image to fit your needs.

Examples

User

By default, Docker containers run as root user. cypress/base, cypress/browsers and cypress/included images provide the additional non-root user node.

If you run a Cypress Docker image locally as container with a non-root user, refer to the Docker documentation, such as Docker Desktop FAQs, for information on file-sharing between your host system and Docker. File-sharing details differ depending on the host operating system running Docker.

If you specify a Cypress Docker image in a GitHub Actions job container workflow section, add options: --user 1001 to the workflow to avoid permissions issues.

Debug logs

To enable all Cypress debug logs when running Cypress in a Docker container, set the environment variable DEBUG to the value cypress:*. To filter the debug logs read Log sources for alternate values of DEBUG.

  • For docker run in a command line, refer to docker run: set environment variables for options to pass environment variables to a Docker container.
  • In a Continuous Integration (CI) workflow using a Cypress Docker image, refer to your CI documentation for information on setting environment variables.

Known problems

Firefox not found

Problem

When running in GitHub Actions using a cypress/browsers or cypress/included image and testing against the Mozilla Firefox browser with the default root user, Cypress may fail to detect an installed Firefox browser. Instead Cypress shows the following error message:

Browser: firefox was not found on your system or is not supported by Cypress. Can't run because you've entered an invalid browser name.

The GitHub Actions Runner creates the /github/home directory with non-root ownership 1001 (runner) and sets the environment variable HOME to point to this directory. Firefox will not run with these settings. If the command firefox --version is executed, Firefox explains the restriction:

Running Firefox as root in a regular user's session is not supported. ($HOME is /github/home which is owned by uid 1001.)

See Cypress issue #27121.

Resolution

To allow Firefox to run in GitHub Actions in a Docker container, add options: --user 1001 to the workflow to match GitHub Actions' runner user.

container:
  image: cypress/browsers
  options: --user 1001

See Tag Selection above for advice on selecting a non-default image tag.

Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md

License

See LICENSE