jennifer-shehane / eyes.cypress

Applitoos Eyes SDK for cypress.io

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Eyes.Cypress

Applitoos Eyes SDK for Cypress.

Installation

Install npm package

Install Eyes.Cypress as a local dev dependency in your tested project:

npm install --save-dev @applitools/eyes.cypress

Configure plugin and commands

Automatic configuration

Run the following command in your terminal:

npx eyes-setup

The above command will add the necessary imports to your cypress pluginsFile and supportFile, as described in the manual configuration below.

Manual configuration

Configure Eyes.Cypress plugin

Eyes.Cypress acts as a Cypress plugin, so it should be configured as such. Unfortunately there's no easy way to do this automatically, so you need to manually add the following code to your pluginsFile:

Important: add this code after the definition of module.exports:

require('@applitools/eyes.cypress')(module)

Normally, this is cypress/plugins/index.js. You can read more about it in Cypress' docs here.

Configure custom commands

Eyes.Cypress exposes new commands to your tests. This means that more methods will be available on the cy object. To enable this, it's required to configure these custom commands. As with the plugin, there's no automatic way to configure this in cypress, so you need to manually add the following code to your supportFile:

import '@applitools/eyes.cypress/commands'

Normally, this is cypress/support/index.js. You can read more about it in Cypress' docs here.

Applitools API key

In order to authenticate via the Applitools server, you need to supply the Eyes.Cypress SDK with the API key you got from Applitools. Read more about how to obtain the API key here.

To to this, set the environment variable APPLITOOLS_API_KEY to the API key before running your tests. For example, on Linux/Mac:

export APPLITOOLS_API_KEY=<your_key>
npx cypress open

And on Windows:

set APPLITOOLS_API_KEY=<your_key>
npx cypress open

It's also possible to specify the API key in the applitools.config.js file. The property name is apiKey. For example:

module.exports = {
  apiKey: 'YOUR_API_KEY',
  ...
}

See the Advanced configuration section below for more information on using the config file.

Usage

After completing the configuation (either automatic or manual) and defining the API key, you will be able to use commands from Eyes.Cypress in your cypress tests to take screenshots and use Applitools Eyes to manage them:

Example

describe('Hello world', () => {
  it('works', () => {
    cy.visit('https://applitools.com/helloworld');
    cy.eyesOpen({
      appName: 'Hello World!',
      testName: 'My first JavaScript test!',
      browser: { width: 800, height: 600 },
    });
    cy.eyesCheckWindow('Main Page');
    cy.get('button').click();
    cy.eyesCheckWindow('Click!');
    cy.eyesClose();
  });
});

Best practice for using the SDK

Every call to cy.eyesOpen and cy.eyesClose defines a test in Applitool Eyes, and all the calls to cy.eyesCheckWindow between them are called "steps". In order to get a test structure in Applitools that corresponds to the test structure in Cypress, it's best to open/close tests in every it call. This can be done via the beforeEach and afterEach functions that Cypress provides (via the mocha test runner).

After adjusting the example above, this becomes:

describe('Hello world', () => {
  beforEach(() => {
    cy.eyesOpen({
      appName: 'Hello World!',
      browser: { width: 800, height: 600 },
    });
  });

  afterEach(() => {
    cy.eyesClose();
  });

  it('My first JavaScript test!', () => {
    cy.visit('https://applitools.com/helloworld');
    cy.eyesCheckWindow('Main Page');
    cy.get('button').click();
    cy.eyesCheckWindow('Click!');
  });
});

Applitools will take screenshots and perform the visual comparisons in the background. Performance of the tests will not be affected during the test run, but there will be a small phase at the end of the test run that waits for visual tests to end.

Note: In Cypress interactive mode (cypress open) there is a bug that exceptions in root level after statements don't appear in the UI. They still appear in the browser's console, and considered failures in cypress run. See this issue for more information and tracking.

Commands

In addition to the built-in commands provided by Cypress, like cy.visit and cy.get, Eyes.Cypress defines new custom commands, which enable the visual testing with Applitools Eyes. These commands are:

Open

Create an Applitools test. This will start a session with the Applitools server.

cy.eyesOpen({
  appName: '',
  testName: ''
});

It's possible to pass a config object to eyesOpen with all the possible configuration properties. Read the Advanced configuration section for a detailed description.

Check window

Generate a screenshot of the current page and add it to the Applitools Test.

cy.eyesCheckWindow(tag)

OR

cy.eyesCheckWindow({ tag: 'your tag', sizeMode: 'your size mode' })
Arguments to cy.eyesCheckWindow
  • tag (optional): A logical name for this check.

  • sizeMode (optional): Possible values are:

    • full-page: This is the default value. It means a screenshot of everything that exists in the DOM at the point of calling eyesCheckWindow will be rendered.
    • viewport: Only a screenshot the size of the browser will be rendered (the size of the browser can be set in the call to cy.eyesOpen - see advanced configuration below).
    • selector: Take a screenshot of the content of the element targeted by the css selector. It's necessary to specify the value of the selector in the selector argument.
    • ** region**: Take a screenshot of a region of the page, specified by coordinates. It's necessary to specify the value of the region in the region argument.
  • selector (optional): In case sizeMode is selector, this should be the actual css selector to an element, and the screenshot would be the content of that element. For example:

cy.eyesCheckWindow({
  sizeMode: 'selector',
  selector: '.my-element'
});
  • region (optional): In case sizeMode is region, this should be an object describing the region's coordinates. For example:
cy.eyesCheckWindow({
  sizeMode: 'region',
  region: {top: 100, left: 0, width: 1000, height: 200}
});
  • ignore (optional): A single or an array of regions to ignore when checking for visual differences. For example:
cy.eyesCheckWindow({
  ignore: [
    {top: 100, left: 0, width: 1000, height: 100},
    {selector: '.some-div-to-ignore'}
  ]
});
  • floating (optional): A single or an array of floating regions to ignore when checking for visual differences. More information about floating regions can be found in Applitools docs here. For example:
cy.eyesCheckWindow({
  floating: [
    {top: 100, left: 0, width: 1000, height: 100, maxUpOffset: 20, maxDownOffset: 20, maxLeftOffset: 20, maxRightOffset: 20},
    {selector: '.some-div-to-float', maxUpOffset: 20, maxDownOffset: 20, maxLeftOffset: 20, maxRightOffset: 20}
  ]
});

Close

Close the applitools test and check that all screenshots are valid.

It is important to call this at the end of each test, symmetrically to eyesOpen(or in afterEach(), see Best practice for using the SDK).

Close receives no arguments.

cy.eyesClose();

Concurrency

The default level of concurrency for free accounts is 1. This means that visual tests will not run in parallel during your tests, and will therefore be slow. If your account does support a higher level of concurrency, it's possible to pass a different value by specifying it in the property concurrency in the applitools.config.js file (see Advanced configuration section below).

If you are interested in speeding up your visual tests, contact sdr@applitools.com to get a trial account and faster tests with more concurrency.

Advanced configuration

It's possible to define the following configuration for tests:

Property name Default value Description
testName The value of Cypress's test title Test name. If this is not specified, the test name will be the title of the it block where the test is running.
browser { width: 800, height: 600, name: 'chrome' } The size and browser of the generated screenshots. This doesn't need to be the same as the browser that Cypress is running. It could be a different size and also a different browser. Currently, firefox and chrome are supported. For more info, see the browser section below.
concurrency 1 The maximum number of tests that can run concurrently. The default value is the allowed amount for free accounts. For paid accounts, set this number to the quota set for your account.
saveDebugData false Whether to save troubleshooting data. See the troubleshooting section of this doc for more info.
batchId random Provides ability to group tests into batches. Read more about batches here.
batchName undefined Provides a name to the batch.
baselineEnvName undefined The name of the environment of the baseline.
envName undefined A name for the environment in which the application under test is running.
ignoreCaret false Whether to ignore or the blinking caret or not when comparing images.
isDisabled false If true, all calls to Eyes.Cypress commandswill be silently ignored.
matchLevel undefined The test-wide match level to use when checking application screenshot with the expected output. Possible values are Strict, Exact, Layout and Content. Read more about match levels here.
matchTimeout undefined Sets the maximum time (in ms) a match operation tries to perform a match.
branchName undefined The name of the branch.
baselineBranchName undefined The name of the baseline branch.
parentBranchName undefined Sets the branch under which new branches are created.
saveFailedTests false Set whether or not failed tests are saved by default.
saveNewTests false Set whether or not new tests are saved by default.
properties undefined Custom properties for the eyes test. The format is an array of objects with name/value properties. For example: [{name: 'My prop', value:'My value'}].
compareWithParentBranch false
ignoreBaseline false
showLogs false Whether or not you want to see logs of the Eyes.Cypress plugin. Logs are written to the same output of the Cypress process.
serverUrl Default Eyes server URL The URL of Eyes server
proxy undefined Sets the proxy settings to be used in network requests to Eyes server.
apiKey undefined The API key used for working with the Applitools Eyes server. See more info in the Applitools API key section above

There are 3 ways to specify test configuration:

  1. Arguments to cy.eyesOpen()
  2. Environment variables
  3. The applitools.config.js file

The list above is also the order of precedence, which means that if you pass a property to cy.eyesOpen it will override the environment variable, and the environment variable will override the value defined in the applitools.config.js file.

Important note about exceptions to this list: The configuration properties showLogs, apiKey, serverUrl and proxy cannot be defined using the first method of passing them to cy.eyesOpen. They should be defined either in the applitools.config.js file or as environment variables.

Method 1: Arguments for cy.eyesOpen

Pass a config object as the only argument. For example:

cy.eyesOpen({
  appName: 'My app',
  showLogs: true,
  batchName: 'My batch',
  ...
  // all other configuration variables apply
})

Method 2: Environment variables

The name of the corresponding environment variable is in uppercase, with the APPLITOOLS_ prefix, and separating underscores instead of camel case:

APPLITOOLS_APP_NAME
APPLITOOLS_SHOW_LOGS
APPLITOOLS_BATCH_NAME
...
// all other configuration variables apply

Method 3: The applitools.config.js file

It's possible to have a file called applitools.config.js at the same folder location as cypress.json. In this file specify the desired configuration, in a valid JSON format. For example:

module.exports = {
  appName: 'My app',
  showLogs: true,
  batchName: 'My batch'
  ...
  // all other configuration variables apply
}

Configuring the browser

Eyes.Cypress will take a screenshot of the page in the browser passed as an argument to cy.eyesOpen.

It's also possible to send an array of browsers, for example:

cy.eyesOpen({
  ...
  browser: [
    {width: 800, height: 600, name: 'firefox'},
    {width: 1024, height: 768, name: 'chrome'}
  ]
}

Device emulation

To enable chrome's device emulation, it's possible to send a device name and screen orientation, for example:

cy.eyesOpen({
  ...
  browser: {
    deviceName: 'iPhone X',
    screenOrientation: 'landscape'
  }
}

Possible values for screen orientation are landscape and portrait, and if no value is specified, the default is portrait.

The list of device names is taken from chrome devtools predefined devices, and can be obtained by running the following command in a unix-based shell (installing jq might be needed):

curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/chromium/chromium/0aee4434a4dba42a42abaea9bfbc0cd196a63bc1/third_party/blink/renderer/devtools/front_end/emulated_devices/module.json | jq '.extensions[].device.title'

In addition, it's possible to use chrome's device emulation with custom viewport sizes, pixel density and mobile mode, by passing deviceScaleFactor and mobile in addition to width and height. For example:

cy.eyesOpen({
  ...
  browser: {
    width: 800,
    height: 600,
    deviceScaleFactor: 3,
    mobile: true
  }
}

Setting a timeout

At the end of the test run, Eyes.Cypress will wait for the results of all visual tests. There's a default timeout of 2 minutes between the end of the test run and the end of the visual tests (although it should not take so long normally!).

It's possible to change that default by setting the configuration variable eyesTimeout, in one of the varios ways to configure Cypress, as described in the Cypress plugins documentation.

Troubleshooting

If issues occur, the saveDebugData config property can be set to true in order to save helpful information. The information will be saved under a folder named .applitools in the current working directory. This could be then used for getting support on your issue.

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Applitoos Eyes SDK for cypress.io


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