Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

@this-dot/cypress-indexeddb

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
6
Versions
10
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

@this-dot/cypress-indexeddb

A Cypress.io helper library for reading and manipulating data inside IndexedDB

  • 2.0.1
  • latest
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Maintainers
6
Created
Source

Cypress IndexedDB helpers ⚙️

Cypress IndexedDB helpers are a set of custom cypress commands that helps you handle indexedDB related operations in your Cypress tests.

It supports:

✅  Creating new IndexedDB databases and Object Stores
✅  Making CRUD operations on the above-mentioned stores
✅  Read data out of indexedDB and assert the results



Usage

Installation

With Cypress versions above 12.6.0:

  1. Install the package:
    npm install @this-dot/cypress-indexeddb
    or
    yarn add @this-dot/cypress-indexeddb

  2. Import the plugin in your cypress/support/commands.js or cypress/support/commands.ts file:

    import '@this-dot/cypress-indexeddb';
    

Please note, that cypress introduced the Cypress.Commands.overwriteQuery command in 12.6.0, therefore, cypress versions 12.0.0 to 12.5.x are not supported by this library.

With Cypress versions below 12.0.0:

  1. Install the 1.2.1 version of the package:
    npm install @this-dot/cypress-indexeddb@1.2.1
    or
    yarn add @this-dot/cypress-indexeddb@1.2.1

  2. Import the plugin in your cypress/support/commands.js or cypress/support/commands.ts file:

    import '@this-dot/cypress-indexeddb';
    

Using the commands in your Cypress tests

How to clear a database?

In order to make your tests reliable, before every test it is recommended to clear the existing database. You can do it by using the cy.clearIndexedDb('databaseName') command.

beforeEach(() => {
  cy.clearIndexedDb('EXAMPLE_DATABASE');

  // ...

  cy.visit('/');
});
How to create a database connection?

In order to create an object store, first, you need to initiate a database connection by calling the cy.openIndexedDb('databaseName') command and use the as chainer to store it with an alias.

cy.openIndexedDb('EXAMPLE_DATABASE').as('database');

The openIndexedDb command supports providing a database version number optionally

cy.openIndexedDb('EXAMPLE_DATABASE', 12) // initiate with database version 12
  .as('database');

You can access the aliased database with the getIndexedDb('@yourAlias') command.

How to create an Object Store?

You can chain off the createObjectStore('storeName') method from methods that yield an IDBDatabase instance (openIndexedDb or getIndexedDb). You can use the as chainer to save the store using an alias.

cy.getIndexedDb('@database').createObjectStore('example_store').as('exampleStore');

You can also pass an optional options parameter to configure your object store. For example, you can create an object store with autoIncrement with the following command:

cy.getIndexedDb('@database')
  .createObjectStore('example_autoincrement_store', { autoIncrement: true })
  .as('exampleAutoincrementStore');

You can retrieve the saved object store using the cy.getStore('@exampleStore');

How to make CRUD operations on an Object Store?

You can chain off CRUD operation methods from methods that yield an IDBObjectStore instance (createObjectStore or getStore).

The createItem, updateItem and the deleteItem methods yield the store, therefore, you can chain these methods to save multiple entries into the target Object Store.

cy.getStore('@exampleStore')
  .createItem('example', { test: 'test' }) // creates the 'example' key and saves the second parameter as the value.
  .updateItem('example', { test: 'replace' }) // updates the 'example' key's value with the second parameter.
  .deleteItem('example') // deletes the 'example' key
  .createItem('example2', ['testValue', 'testValue2'])
  .createItem('example3', { exampleKey: 1337 });

The readItem method yields the value of the provided key, or undefined if it does not exist. You can chain assertions from this method. If you use TypeScript, you can set the type of the returned value.

cy.getStore('@exampleStore').readItem<string[]>('example2').should('have.length', 2);

cy.getStore('@exampleStore')
  .readItem<number>('example3')
  .should('have.property', 'exampleKey', 1337);
How to handle Object Stores with autoIncrement?

When you need to manipulate or assert data stored in an Object Store, that was set up with { autoIncrement: true }, you have the following commands at your disposal: addItem, keys and entries.

The addItem method stores the provided value into the Object Store at a new index

cy.getStore('@exampleAutoincrementStore').addItem('test').addItem({ test: 'object' }).addItem(1337);

The keys method returns an IDBValidKey[]. You can assert the results using the .should() method.

cy.getStore('@exampleAutoincrementStore')
  .keys()
  .should('have.length', 3)
  .and('deep.equal', [1, 2, 3]);

The entries method returns all the values that are stored in order. You can assert the results using the .should() method.

cy.getStore('@exampleAutoincrementStore')
  .entries()
  .should('have.length', 3)
  .and('deep.equal', ['test', { test: 'object' }, 1337]);

Feel free to check our cypress tests in our git repository for some examples.

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 18 Mar 2023

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc