The CLI is used to build the cypress npm module to be run within a terminal.
The CLI has the following responsibilities:
- Allow users to print CLI commands
- Allow users to install the Cypress executable
- Allow users to print their current Cypress version
- Allow users to run Cypress tests from the terminal
- Allow users to open Cypress in the interactive Test Runner.
- Allow users to verify that Cypress is installed correctly and executable
- Allow users to manages the Cypress binary cache
- Allow users to pass in options that change way tests are ran or recorded (browsers used, specfiles ran, grouping, parallelization)
See scripts/build.js
. Note that the built npm package will include NPM_README.md as its public README file.
From the repo's root, you can run unit tests with:
yarn test-unit --scope cypress
yarn test-watch --scope cypress
yarn test-debug --scope cypress
Prepend SNAPSHOT_UPDATE=1
to any test command. See snap-shot-it
instructions for more info.
SNAPSHOT_UPDATE=1 yarn test-unit --scope cypress
When testing with dtslint
, you may need to remove existing typescript installations before running the type linter (for instance, on OS X, you might rm -rf ~/.dts/typescript-installs
) in order to reproduce issues with new versions of typescript (i.e., @next
).
To build and test an NPM package:
yarn
yarn build
This creates build
folder.
cd build; yarn pack
This creates an archive, usually named cypress-v<version>.tgz
. You can install this archive from other projects, but because there is no corresponding binary yet (probably), skip binary download. For example from inside cypress-example-kitchensink
folder
yarn add ~/{your-dirs}/cypress/cli/build/cypress-3.3.1.tgz --ignore-scripts
Which installs the tgz
file we have just built from folder Users/jane-lane/{your-dirs}/cypress/cli/build
.
How do deep imports from cypress/* get resolved?
The cypress npm package comes pre-assembled with mounting libraries for major front-end frameworks. These mounting libraries are the first examples of Cypress providing re-exported sub-packages. These sub-packages follow the same naming convention they do when they're published on npm, but without a leading @
sign. For example:
Let's discuss the Vue mounting library that Cypress ships.
If you'd installed the @cypress/vue
package from NPM, you could write the following code.
This would be necessary when trying to use a version of Vue, React, or other library that may be newer or older than the current version of cypress itself.
import { mount } from '@cypress/vue'
Now, with the sub-package API, you're able to import the latest APIs directly from Cypress without needing to install a separate dependency.
import { mount } from 'cypress/vue'
The only difference is the import name, and if you still need to use a specific version of one of our external sub-packages, you may install it and import it directly.
There are a few steps when adding a new sub-package.
- Make sure the sub-package's rollup build is self-contained or that any dependencies are also declared in the CLI's
package.json
. - Now, in the
postbuild
script for the sub-package you'd like to embed, invokenode ./scripts/sync-exported-npm-with-cli.js
(relative to the sub-package, seenpm/vue
for an example). - Add the sub-package's name to the following locations:
cli/.gitignore
cli/scripts/post-build.js
.eslintignore
(under cli/sub-package)
- DO NOT manually update the package.json file. Running
yarn build
will automate this process. - Commit the changed files.
Here is an example Pull Request
The module API can be tested locally using something like:
/* @ts-ignore */
import cypress from '../../cli/lib/cypress'
const run = cypress.run as (options?: Partial<CypressCommandLine.CypressRunOptions>) => Promise<CypressCommandLine.CypressRunResult | CypressCommandLine.CypressFailedRunResult>
run({
spec: './cypress/component/advanced/framer-motion/Motion.spec.tsx',
testingType: 'component',
/* @ts-ignore */
dev: true,
}).then(results => {
console.log(results)
})
Note that the dev
flag is required for local testing, as otherwise the command will fail with a binary error.