Files
cypress/cli
Adam Stone-Lord 4c11731ee1 chore: optimize task execution (#27848)
* Revert "chore: simplify build script (#27547)"

This reverts commit 0a86ec686e.

* Revert "chore: upgrade lerna to 6, cache build step (#26913)"

This reverts commit 9e60aeba8f.

* [run ci]

* chore: upgrade lerna to 6, cache build step (#26913)

* chore: update build-npm-modules script

* chore: update build-npm-modules script

* chore: update build-npm-modules script

* chore: update build-npm-modules script

* chore: update lerna to 6

* [run ci]

* try caching build step

* we can't clean without building after

* add dependencies on scripts for npm packages

* update commands

* add config for data-context build step

* fix output configurations for npm packages, add gitignores

* revert changes to config and data-context build steps

* fix outputs

* run with cache

* fix outputs for cli

* actually fix outputs

* test with cache

---------

Co-authored-by: astone123 <adams@cypress.io>

* chore: simplify build script (#27547)

* chore: simplify build script

* update CI workflows

* fix workflows

* empty commit because Percy weirdness

* chore: add driver, reporter, config as implicit dependencies for runner package (#27559)

* run all workflows on branch

* chore: parallelize test-binary-against-recipes CI step (#27570)

* chore: fix some easy circular dependencies in dep graph (#27612)

* chore: remove gulp tasks from postinstall (#27616)

* empty commit

* chore: minor improvements to node_modules_install (#27647)

* chore: fix cypress:open and dev scripts

* run with cache [run ci]

* exclude mochaawesome assets from .yarnclean [run ci]

* bump cache again [run ci]

* run cached [run ci]

* chore: do not cache cli build step [run ci]

* update workflow command and docs for build-cli [run ci]

* fix commands that use scope [run ci]

* use different branch for publish repo [run ci]

* percy weirdness? [run ci]

* fix postbuild cli script [run ci]

* try to remove typescript from production binary [run ci]

* fix circular dependency [run ci]

* try removing ts from node_modules [run ci]

* remove typescript resolution [run ci]

* remove redundant target scripts

* update to lerna scoped commands

* remove unneeded yarn in lerna command

* try to fix Electron install in Windows workflow

---------

Co-authored-by: Jordan <jordan@jpdesigning.com>
Co-authored-by: Dave Kasper <dave.m.kasper@gmail.com>
2023-10-04 12:25:00 -05:00
..
2022-12-29 17:26:13 +00:00

CLI

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)

Building

See scripts/build.js. Note that the built npm package will include NPM_README.md as its public README file.

Testing

Automated

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

Updating snapshots

Prepend SNAPSHOT_UPDATE=1 to any test command. See snap-shot-it instructions for more info.

SNAPSHOT_UPDATE=1 yarn test-unit --scope cypress

Type Linting

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).

Manual

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.

Sub-package API

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:

An example of a sub-package: @cypress/vue, @cypress/react, @cypress/mount-utils

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.

Adding a new sub-package

There are a few steps when adding a new sub-package.

  1. Make sure the sub-package's rollup build is self-contained or that any dependencies are also declared in the CLI's package.json.
  2. Now, in the postbuild script for the sub-package you'd like to embed, invoke node ./scripts/sync-exported-npm-with-cli.js (relative to the sub-package, see npm/vue for an example).
  3. Add the sub-package's name to the following locations:
  • cli/.gitignore
  • cli/scripts/post-build.js
  • .eslintignore (under cli/sub-package)
  1. DO NOT manually update the package.json file. Running yarn build will automate this process.
  2. Commit the changed files.

Here is an example Pull Request

Module API

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.