Introduction
What you'll learn
- An overview of Continuous Integration
- How to run Cypress tests in Continuous Integration
- How to configure Cypress in various CI Providers
- How to record tests to the Cypress Dashboard
- How to run tests in parallel on CI
What is Continuous Integration?
Setting up CI
Basics
Running Cypress in Continuous Integration is almost the same as running it locally in your terminal. You generally only need to do two things:
- Install Cypress
npm install cypress --save-dev
- Run Cypress
cypress run
Depending on which CI provider you use, you may need a config file. You'll want to refer to your CI provider's documentation to know where to add the commands to install and run Cypress. For more configuration examples check out our examples.
Boot your server
Challenges
Typically you will need to boot a local server prior to running Cypress. When you boot your web server, it runs as a long running process that will never exit. Because of this, you'll need it to run in the background - else your CI provider will never move onto the next command.
Backgrounding your server process means that your CI provider will continue to execute the next command after executing the signal to start your server.
Many people approach this situation by running a command like the following:
npm start & cypress run // Do not do this
The problem is - what happens if your server takes time to boot? There is no
guarantee that when the next command runs (cypress run
) that your web server
is up and available. So your Cypress test may start and try to visit your local
server before it is ready to be visited.
Solutions
Luckily, there are some solutions for this. Instead of introducing arbitrary
waits (like sleep 20
) you can use a better option.
wait-on
module
Using the wait-on module, you can block
the cypress run
command from executing until your server has booted.
npm start & wait-on http://localhost:8080
cypress run
Most CI providers will automatically kill background processes so you don't have to worry about cleaning up your server process once Cypress finishes.
However, if you're running this script locally you'll have to do a bit more work
to collect the backgrounded PID and then kill it after cypress run
.
start-server-and-test
module
If the server takes a very long time to start, we recommend trying the start-server-and-test module.
npm install --save-dev start-server-and-test
In your package.json
scripts, pass the command to boot your server, the url
your server is hosted on and your Cypress test command.
{
...
"scripts": {
"start": "my-server -p 3030",
"cy:run": "cypress run",
"test": "start-server-and-test start http://localhost:3030 cy:run"
}
}
In the example above, the cy:run
command will only be executed when the URL
http://localhost:3030
responds with an HTTP status code of 200. The server
will also shut down when the tests complete.
Gotchas
When
working with webpack-dev-server
that does not respond to HEAD
requests, use an explicit GET
method to ping
the server like this:
{
"scripts": {
"test": "start-server-and-test start http-get://localhost:3030 cy:run"
}
}
When working with local https
in webpack, set an environment variable to allow
local certificate:
{
"scripts": {
"start": "my-server -p 3030 --https",
"cy:run": "cypress run",
"cy:ci": "START_SERVER_AND_TEST_INSECURE=1 start-server-and-test start https-get://localhost:3030 cy:run"
}
}
Record tests
Cypress can record your tests and make the results available in the Cypress Dashboard, which is a service that gives you access to recorded tests - typically when running Cypress tests from your CI provider. The Dashboard provides you insight into what happened when your tests ran.
Recording tests allow you to:
- See the number of failed, pending and passing tests.
- Get the entire stack trace of failed tests.
- View screenshots taken when tests fail and when using
cy.screenshot()
. - Watch a video of your entire test run or a clip at the point of test failure.
- See which machines ran each test when parallelized.
To record tests:
cypress run --record --key=abc123
Read the full guide on the Dashboard Service.
Run tests in parallel
Cypress can run tests in parallel across multiple machines.
You'll want to refer to your CI provider's documentation on how to set up multiple machines to run in your CI environment.
Once multiple machines are available within your CI environment, you can pass the --parallel flag to have your tests run in parallel.
cypress run --record --key=abc123 --parallel
Read the full guide on parallelization.
Official Cypress Docker Images
We have created an official cypress/base container with all of the required dependencies installed. You can add Cypress and go! We are also adding images with browsers pre-installed under cypress/browsers name. A typical Dockerfile would look like this:
FROM cypress/base
RUN npm install
RUN $(npm bin)/cypress run
Mounting a project directory with an existing node_modules
into a
cypress/base
docker image will not work:
docker run -it -v /app:/app cypress/base:14.16.0 bash -c 'cypress run'
Error: the cypress binary is not installed
Instead, you should build a docker container for your project's version of cypress.
Docker images & CI examples
See our examples for additional information on our maintained images and configurations on several CI providers.
Advanced setup
Machine requirements
Hardware requirements to run Cypress depend how much memory the browser, the application under test, and the server (if running it locally) need to run the tests without crashing. Visit our System Requirements guide for minimum hardware recommendations.
Some signs that your machine may not have enough CPU or memory to run Cypress:
- The recorded video artifacts have random pauses or dropped frames.
- Debug logs of the CPU and memory frequently show CPU percent above 100%.
- The browser crashes.
You can see the total available machine memory and the current free memory by
running the cypress info
command.
npx cypress info
...
Cypress Version: 6.3.0
System Platform: linux (Debian - 10.5)
System Memory: 73.8 GB free 25 GB
You can see the CPU parameters on the CI machines by executing the command below.
node -p 'os.cpus()'
[
{
model: 'Intel(R) Xeon(R) Platinum 8124M CPU @ 3.00GHz',
speed: 3399,
times: { user: 760580, nice: 1010, sys: 158130, idle: 1638340, irq: 0 }
}
...
]
Example projects and the machine configurations used to run them on CI:
- Cypress Documentation
and Real World App
projects run tests on the default CircleCI machine using the
Docker executor on the
default medium size machine
with 2 vCPUs and 4GB of RAM.
cypress info
reportsSystem Memory: 73.8 GB free 25 GB
with CPUs reported asIntel(R) Xeon(R) Platinum 8124M CPU @ 3.00GHz
. Note that the free memory varies on CircleCI, typically we see values anywhere from 6GB to 30GB. - Real World App also
executes its tests using
GitHub Actions with the
default hosted runner
with 2 vCPUs and 7GB of RAM.
cypress info
reportsSystem Memory: 7.29 GB free 632 MB
with CPUs reported asIntel(R) Xeon(R) Platinum 8171M CPU @ 2.60GHz
.
Tip: if there are problems with longer specs, try splitting them into shorter ones, following this example.
Dependencies
If you are not using one of the above CI providers then make sure your system has these dependencies installed.
Linux
Ubuntu/Debian
apt-get install libgtk2.0-0 libgtk-3-0 libgbm-dev libnotify-dev libgconf-2-4 libnss3 libxss1 libasound2 libxtst6 xauth xvfb
CentOS
yum install -y xorg-x11-server-Xvfb gtk2-devel gtk3-devel libnotify-devel GConf2 nss libXScrnSaver alsa-lib
Caching
As of Cypress version 3.0, Cypress
downloads its binary to the global system cache - on linux that is
~/.cache/Cypress
. By ensuring this cache persists across builds you can save
minutes off install time by preventing a large binary download.
We recommend users:
-
Cache the
~/.cache
folder after runningnpm install
,yarn
,npm ci
or equivalents as demonstrated in the configs below. -
Do not cache
node_modules
across builds. This bypasses more intelligent caching packaged withnpm
oryarn
, and can cause issues with Cypress not downloading the Cypress binary onnpm install
. -
If you are using
npm install
in your build process, consider switching tonpm ci
and caching the~/.npm
directory for a faster and more reliable build. -
If you are using
yarn
, caching~/.cache
will include both theyarn
and Cypress caches. Consider usingyarn install --frozen-lockfile
as annpm ci
equivalent. -
If you need to override the binary location for some reason, use CYPRESS_CACHE_FOLDER environment variable.
-
Make sure you are not restoring the previous cache using lax keys; then the Cypress binaries can "snowball", read Do Not Let Cypress Cache Snowball on CI.
Tip: you can find lots of CI examples with configured caching in our cypress-example-kitchensink repository.
Environment variables
You can set various environment variables to modify how Cypress runs.
Configuration Values
You can set any configuration value as an environment variable. This overrides values in the Cypress configuration.
Typical use cases would be modifying things like:
CYPRESS_BASE_URL
CYPRESS_VIDEO_COMPRESSION
CYPRESS_REPORTER
CYPRESS_INSTALL_BINARY
Refer to the Environment Variables recipe for more examples.
Record Key
If you are recording your runs on a public project, you'll want to protect your Record Key. Learn why.
Instead of hard coding it into your run command like this:
cypress run --record --key abc-key-123
You can set the record key as the environment variable, CYPRESS_RECORD_KEY
,
and we'll automatically use that value. You can now omit the --key
flag when
recording.
cypress run --record
Typically you'd set this inside of your CI provider.
CircleCI Environment Variable
TravisCI Environment Variable
Git information
Cypress uses the @cypress/commit-info package to extract git information to associate with the run (e.g. branch, commit message, author).
It assumes there is a .git
folder and uses Git commands to get each property,
like git show -s --pretty=%B
to get commit message, see
src/git-api.js.
Under some environment setups (e.g. docker
/docker-compose
) if the .git
directory is not available or mounted, you can pass all git related information
under custom environment variables.
- Branch:
COMMIT_INFO_BRANCH
- Message:
COMMIT_INFO_MESSAGE
- Author email:
COMMIT_INFO_EMAIL
- Author:
COMMIT_INFO_AUTHOR
- SHA:
COMMIT_INFO_SHA
- Remote:
COMMIT_INFO_REMOTE
If the commit information is missing in the Dashboard run then
GitHub Integration or other tasks might
not work correctly. To see the relevant Cypress debug logs, set the environment
variable DEBUG
on your CI machine and inspect the terminal output to see why
the commit information is unavailable.
DEBUG=commit-info,cypress:server:record
Custom Environment Variables
You can also set custom environment variables for use in your tests. These enable your code to reference dynamic values.
export "EXTERNAL_API_SERVER=https://corp.acme.co"
And then in your tests:
cy.request({
method: 'POST',
url: Cypress.env('EXTERNAL_API_SERVER') + '/users/1',
body: {
foo: 'bar',
baz: 'quux',
},
})
Refer to the dedicated Environment Variables Guide for more examples.
Module API
Oftentimes it can be less complex to programmatically control and boot your servers with a Node script.
If you're using our Module API then you can write a script that boots and then shuts down the server later. As a bonus, you can work with the results and do other things.
// scripts/run-cypress-tests.js
const cypress = require('cypress')
const server = require('./lib/my-server')
// start your server
return server.start().then(() => {
// kick off a cypress run
return cypress.run().then((results) => {
// stop your server when it's complete
return server.stop()
})
})
node scripts/run-cypress-tests.js
Common problems and solutions
Missing binary
When npm or yarn install the cypress
package, a postinstall
hook is executed
that downloads the platform-specific Cypress binary. If the hook is skipped for
any reason the Cypress binary will be missing (unless it was already cached).
To better diagnose the error, add commands to get information about the Cypress cache to your CI setup. This will print where the binary is located and what versions are already present.
npx cypress cache path
npx cypress cache list
If the required binary version is not found in the cache, you can try the following:
- Clean your CI's cache using your CI's settings to force a clean
npm install
on the next build. - Run the binary install yourself by adding the command
npx cypress install
to your CI script. If there is a binary already present, it should finish quickly.
See
bahmutov/yarn-cypress-cache
for an example that runs the npx cypress install
command to ensure the Cypress
binary is always present before the tests begin.
In Docker
If you are running long runs on Docker, you need to set the ipc
to host
mode. This issue describes
exactly what to do.
Xvfb
When running on Linux, Cypress needs an X11 server; otherwise it spawns its own
X11 server during the test run. When running several Cypress instances in
parallel, the spawning of multiple X11 servers at once can cause problems for
some of them. In this case, you can separately start a single X11 server and
pass the server's address to each Cypress instance using DISPLAY
variable.
First, spawn the X11 server in the background at some port, for example :99
.
If you have installed xvfb
on Linux or if you are using one of our Docker
images from
cypress-docker-images,
the tools below should be available.
Xvfb :99 &
Second, set the X11 address in an environment variable
export DISPLAY=:99
Start Cypress as usual
npx cypress run
After all tests across all Cypress instances finish, kill the Xvfb background
process using pkill
pkill Xvfb
In certain Linux environments, you may experience connection errors with your X11 server. In this case, you may need to start Xvfb with the following command:
Xvfb -screen 0 1024x768x24 :99 &
Cypress internally passes these Xvfb arguments, but if you are spawning your own Xvfb, you would need to pass these arguments. This is necessary to avoid using 8-bit color depth with Xvfb, which will prevent Chrome or Electron from crashing.
Running headless tests without Xvfb
Using the ELECTRON_RUN_AS_NODE=1
env var is experimental and not fully tested,
so may not work in all environments.
Chromium based browsers and Firefox can spawn without Xvfb when run via the
--headless
flag. If you're testing against either of those browsers using the
--browser
flag, you can opt out of Cypress spawning an X11 server by setting
the environment variable
ELECTRON_RUN_AS_NODE=1
.
Electron cannot be run without an X11 server. Cypress's default browser is
Electron and won't be able to launch if you set this environment variable.
Likewise, Cypress's interactive mode (running via cypress open
) is run via
Electron and cannot be opened without an X11 server.
Colors
If you want colors to be disabled, you can pass the NO_COLOR
environment
variable to disable colors. You may want to do this if ASCII characters or
colors are not properly formatted in your CI.
NO_COLOR=1 cypress run
Workshop
Cypress team has created a full workshop showing how to run Cypress on popular CI providers. Find the workshop at github.com/cypress-io/cypress-workshop-ci.
See also
- Cypress Real World App runs parallelized CI jobs across multiple operating systems, browsers, and viewport sizes.
- cypress-example-kitchensink is set up to run on multiple CI providers.
- Cross Browser Testing Guide
- Blog: Setting up Bitbucket Pipelines with proper caching of npm and Cypress
- Blog: Record Test Artifacts from any Docker CI
- Continuous Integration with Cypress webinar covering TeamCity, Travis and CircleCI setups, slides.