Cypress is a test runner built for the modern web. It has a lot of great features:
- Time travel
- Real-time reloads
- Automatic waiting
- Spies, stubs, and clocks
- Network traffic control
- Screenshots and videos
Setting Up @nx/cypress
Info about Cypress Component Testing can be found here
Installation
Keep Nx Package Versions In SyncMake sure to install the @nx/cypress
version that matches the version of nx
in your repository. If the version numbers get out of sync, you can encounter some difficult to debug errors. You can fix Nx version mismatches with this recipe.
In any Nx workspace, you can install @nx/cypress
by running the following command:
❯
nx add @nx/cypress
This will install the correct version of @nx/cypress
.
How @nx/cypress Infers Tasks
Inferred TasksSince Nx 18, Nx plugins can infer tasks for your projects based on the configuration of different tools. You can read more about it at the Inferred Tasks concept page.
The @nx/cypress
plugin will create a task for any project that has a Cypress configuration file present. Any of the following files will be recognized as a Cypress configuration file:
cypress.config.js
cypress.config.ts
cypress.config.mjs
cypress.config.cjs
View Inferred Tasks
To view inferred tasks for a project, open the project details view in Nx Console or run nx show project my-project --web
in the command line.
@nx/cypress Configuration
The @nx/cypress/plugin
is configured in the plugins
array in nx.json
.
1{
2 "plugins": [
3 {
4 "plugin": "@nx/cypress/plugin",
5 "options": {
6 "targetName": "e2e",
7 "ciTargetName": "e2e-ci",
8 "componentTestingTargetName": "component-test",
9 "openTargetName": "open-cypress"
10 }
11 }
12 ]
13}
14
The targetName
, ciTargetName
, componentTestingTargetName
, and open-cypress
options control the names of the inferred Cypress tasks. The default names are e2e
, e2e-ci
, component-test
, and open-cypress
.
Splitting E2E tasks by file
The @nx/cypress/plugin
will automatically split your e2e tasks by file. You can read more about this feature here.
To enable e2e task splitting, make sure there is a ciWebServerCommand
property set in your cypress.config.ts
file. It will look something like this:
1import { defineConfig } from 'cypress';
2import { nxE2EPreset } from '@nx/cypress/plugins/cypress-preset';
3
4export default defineConfig({
5 e2e: {
6 ...nxE2EPreset(__filename, {
7 cypressDir: 'src',
8 bundler: 'vite',
9 webServerCommands: {
10 default: 'nx run my-project:serve',
11 production: 'nx run my-project:preview',
12 },
13 ciWebServerCommand: 'nx run my-project:serve-static',
14 }),
15 baseUrl: 'http://localhost:4200',
16 },
17});
18
If you use the setupNodeEvents
function in your Cypress configuration, make sure to invoke the same function that is returned by nxE2EPreset
. See the recipe on using setupNodeEvents
with Cypress preset for more details.
E2E Testing
By default, when creating a new frontend application, Nx will use Cypress to create the e2e tests project.
❯
nx g @nx/web:app frontend
Configure Cypress for an existing project
To configure Cypress for an existing project, run the following generator:
❯
nx g @nx/cypress:configuration --project=your-app-name
Optionally, you can use the --baseUrl
option if you don't want the Cypress plugin to serve your-app-name
.
❯
nx g @nx/cypress:configuration --project=your-app-name --baseUrl=http://localhost:4200
Replace your-app-name
with the app's name as defined in your project.json
file or the name
property of your package.json
.
The @nx/cypress:configuration
generator is not a project generator. It won't generate a separate project for the E2E tests. It will configure Cypress for the provided project.
To set up a separate project, you can generate a separate project with a project generator like @nx/js:library
first and then run the @nx/cypress:configuration
generator.
Testing Applications
Run nx e2e frontend-e2e
to execute e2e tests with Cypress.
You can run your e2e test against a production build by using the production
configuration
❯
nx e2e frontend-e2e --configuration=production
You can use the --spec
flag to glob for test files.
❯
# run the tests in the smoke/ directory
❯
nx e2e frontend-e2e --spec="**smoke/**"
❯
# run the tests in smoke/ directory and with dashboard in the file name
❯
nx e2e frontend-e2e --spec="**smoke/**,**dashboard.cy**"
By default, Cypress will run in headless mode. You will have the result of all the tests and errors (if any) in your terminal. Screenshots and videos will be accessible in dist/cypress/apps/frontend/screenshots
and dist/cypress/apps/frontend/videos
.
Watching for Changes (Headed Mode)
You can also run Cypress in headed mode and watching for changes. This is a great way to enhance the dev workflow. You can build up test files with the application running and Cypress will re-run those tests as you enhance and add to the suite.
❯
nx open-cypress frontend-e2e
Specifying a Custom Url to Test
The baseUrl
property provides you the ability to test an application hosted on a specific domain.
❯
nx e2e frontend-e2e --config="baseUrl=https://frontend.com"
If baseUrl
is not provided, Cypress will expect to have the baseUrl
property in its config file. Otherwise, it will error.
Using cypress.config.ts
If you need to fine tune your Cypress setup, you can do so by modifying cypress.config.ts
in the project root. For instance, you can easily add your projectId
to save all the screenshots and videos into your Cypress dashboard. The complete configuration is documented on the official website.
For adding more dynamic configurations to your Cypress configuration, you can look into using setupNodeEvents configuration option.
Environment Variables
If you need to pass a variable to Cypress that you don't want to commit to your repository (i.e. API keys, dynamic values based on configurations, API URLs), you can use Cypress environment variables.
There are a handful of ways to pass environment variables to Cypress, but the most common is going to be via the cypress.env.json
file, the -e
Cypress arg or the env
option from the @nx/cypress:cypress
executor in the project configuration or the command line.
Create a cypress.env.json
file in the projects root (i.e. apps/my-cool-app-e2e/cypress.env.json
). Cypress will automatically pick up this file. This method is helpful for configurations that you don't want to commit. Just don't forget to add the file to the .gitignore
and add documentation so people in your repo know what values to populate in their local copy of the cypress.env.json
file.
Setting the -e
Cypress arg or the env
option from the @nx/cypress:cypress
executor in the project configuration is a good way to add values you want to define that you don't mind committing to the repository, such as a base API URL.
1{
2 ...
3 "targets": {
4 "e2e": {
5 "options": {
6 "args": "--env=API_URL=https://api.my-nx-website.com"
7 }
8 }
9 }
10}
11
Finally, you can also pass environment variables via the command line with the -e
Cypress arg or the --env
option for the @nx/cypress:cypress
executor.
❯
nx e2e frontend-e2e -e=API_URL=https://api.my-nx-website.com,API_KEY=abc-123
Providing a flag will override any option with the same name set in the project or workspace configuration.