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cypress-react-unit-test

Unit test React components using Cypress

  • 3.0.0-cypress-mount-mode.19
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cypress-react-unit-test CircleCI Cypress.io tests renovate-app badge This project is using Percy.io for visual regression testing.

A little helper to unit test React components in the open source Cypress.io E2E test runner ALPHA

TLDR

Known problems

See issues labeled v2

Install

Requires Node version 8 or above.

npm install --save-dev cypress cypress-react-unit-test

Use

Include this plugin from your project's cypress/support/index.js

require('cypress-react-unit-test/dist/hooks')

Then turn the experimental component support on in your cypress.json. You can also specify where component spec files are located. For exampled to have them located in src folder use:

{
  "experimentalComponentTesting": true,
  "componentFolder": "src"
}

Example

import React from 'react'
import { mount } from 'cypress-react-unit-test'
import { HelloWorld } from './hello-world.jsx'
describe('HelloWorld component', () => {
  it('works', () => {
    mount(<HelloWorld />)
    // now use standard Cypress commands
    cy.contains('Hello World!').should('be.visible')
  })
})

styles

If you component imports its own style, the style should be applied during the Cypress test. But sometimes you need more power.

You can 3 options to load additional styles:

mount(<Component />, {
  style: string, // load inline style CSS
  cssFiles: string | string[], // load a single or a list of local CSS files
  stylesheets: string | string[] // load external stylesheets
})
Inline styles

You can add individual style to the mounted component by passing its text as an option

it('can be passed as an option', () => {
  const style = `
    .component-button {
      display: inline-flex;
      width: 25%;
      flex: 1 0 auto;
    }

    .component-button.orange button {
      background-color: #F5923E;
      color: white;
    }
  `
  cy.mount(<Button name="Orange" orange />, { style })
  cy.get('.orange button').should(
    'have.css',
    'background-color',
    'rgb(245, 146, 62)',
  )
})
Load local CSS file
const cssFiles = 'cypress/integration/Button.css'
cy.mount(<Button name="Orange" orange />, { cssFiles })

See cypress/integration/inject-style-spec.js for more examples.

Load external stylesheets
mount(<Todo todo={todo} />, {
  stylesheets: [
    'https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/bulma/0.7.2/css/bulma.css',
  ],
})

Configuration

If your React and React DOM libraries are installed in non-standard paths (think monorepo scenario), you can tell this plugin where to find them. In cypress.json specify paths like this:

{
  "env": {
    "cypress-react-unit-test": {
      "react": "node_modules/react/umd/react.development.js",
      "react-dom": "node_modules/react-dom/umd/react-dom.development.js"
    }
  }
}

Transpilation

How can we use features that require transpilation? By using @cypress/webpack-preprocessor - see the plugin configuration in cypress/plugins/index.js

Code coverage

If you are using plugins/cra-v3 it instruments the code on the fly using babel-plugin-istanbul and generates report using dependency cypress-io/code-coverage (included). If you want to disable code coverage instrumentation and reporting, use --env coverage=false or CYPRESS_coverage=false or set in your cypress.json file

{
  "env": {
    "coverage": false
  }
}

React Scripts App users

If you are using Create-React-App v3 or react-scripts, and want to reuse the built in webpack before ejecting, this module ships with Cypress preprocessor in plugins folder. From the cypress.json point at the shipped plugin in the node_modules.

{
  "pluginsFile": "node_modules/cypress-react-unit-test/plugins/cra-v3",
  "supportFile": "node_modules/cypress-react-unit-test/support"
}

See example repo bahmutov/try-cra-with-unit-test, typical full config with specs and source files in src folder (before ejecting the app):

{
  "fixturesFolder": false,
  "pluginsFile": "node_modules/cypress-react-unit-test/plugins/cra-v3",
  "supportFile": "node_modules/cypress-react-unit-test/support",
  "testFiles": "**/*.spec.js",
  "experimentalComponentTesting": true,
  "componentFolder": "src"
}

If you already have a plugins file, you can use a file preprocessor that points at CRA's webpack

// your project's Cypress plugin file
const craFilePreprocessor = require('cypress-react-unit-test/plugins/cra-v3/file-preprocessor')
module.exports = on => {
  on('file:preprocessor', craFilePreprocessor())
}

Bonus: re-using the config means if you create your application using create-react-app --typescript, then TypeScript transpile just works out of the box. See bahmutov/try-cra-app-typescript.

Your webpack config

If you have your own webpack config, you can use included plugins file to load it. Here is the configuration using the included plugins file and passing the name of the config file via env variable in the cypress.json file

{
  "pluginsFile": "node_modules/cypress-react-unit-test/plugins/load-webpack",
  "env": {
    "webpackFilename": "demo/config/webpack.dev.js"
  }
}

Examples

Look at the examples in cypress/component folder.

Large examples

Repodescription
try-cra-with-unit-testHello world initialized with CRAv3
try-cra-app-typescriptHello world initialized with CRAv3 --typescript
react-todo-with-hooksModern web application using hooks
test-redux-examplesExample apps copies from official Redux repo and tested as components
test-react-hooks-animationsTesting React springs fun blob animation
test-mdx-exampleExample testing MDX components using Cypress
test-apolloComponent testing an application that uses Apollo GraphQL library
test-xstate-reactXState component testing using Cypress
test-react-router-v5A few tests of React Router v5
test-material-uiTesting Material UI components: date pickers, lists, autocomplete
test-d3-react-gaugeTesting React D3 gauges

To find more examples, see GitHub topic cypress-react-unit-test-example

Development

To get started with this repo, compile the plugin's code and the examples code

npm run transpile
npm run build
npm run cy:open
  • run TypeScript compiler in watch mode with npx tsc -w
  • run Cypress with npx cypress open and select the spec you want to work with
  • edit lib/index.ts where all the magic happens

Visual testing

Uses Percy.io visual diffing service as a GitHub pull request check.

Same feature for unit testing components from other frameworks using Cypress

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 17 Apr 2020

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