3.8 KiB
Depending on your testing type, the Cypress executor is configured in different ways. The following are sample configurations that are created via the cypress-project and cypress-component-project generators.
{% tabs %} {% tab label="E2E Testing" %}
"targets": {
"e2e": {
"executor": "@nrwl/cypress:cypress",
"options": {
"cypressConfig": "apps/app-e2e/cypres.config.ts",
"devServerTarget": "my-react-app:serve",
"testingType": "e2e"
}
}
}
{% callout type="note" title="API Testing" %}
API testing with Cypress is the same setup as e2e testing. Just change which devServerTarget is used!
{% /callout %}
Providing a Base URL
If devServerTarget is provided, the url returned from started the dev server will be passed to cypress as the baseUrl option.
Defining a baseUrl in the executor options will override the inferred baseUrl from the devServerTarget.
The baseUrl defined in the Cypress config file is the last value used if no url is found in the devServerTarget or executor options.
Static Serving
When running in CI it doesn't make sense to start up a dev server since there aren't changes to watch for.
You can use @nrwl/web:file-server to serve the pre-built static files of your frontend project.
In some frontend application, add a 'static-serve' target.
"serve-static": {
"executor": "@nrwl/web:file-server",
"options":{
"buildTarget": "frontend:build"
}
}
In the e2e application add a configuration to change devServerTarget to point to the static-serve from the frontend application
"e2e": {
//...
"configurations": {
"ci": {
"devServerTarget": "frontend:serve-static"
}
}
}
{% callout type="note" title="What about Node projects?" %}
The same can be done for backend node apps with @nrwl/js:node executor
{% /callout %}
nx e2e my-app-e2e --configuration=ci
{% /tab %} {% tab label="Component Testing" %}
{% callout type="note" title="Cypress Component Testing" %}
When adding component testing to a project, it's best to use the framework specific generator, instead cypress-component-project directly.
{% /callout %}
"targets": {
"component-test": {
"executor": "@nrwl/cypress:cypress",
"options": {
"cypressConfig": "apps/app/cypres.config.ts",
"devServerTarget": "my-react-app:build",
"testingType": "component",
"skipServe": true
}
}
}
It's important skipServe is set to true. Nx doesn't need to run the devServerTarget, Cypress creates its own dev server for component testing.
Instead, Nx needs to know what build target to create the correct configuration to pass to Cypress, which is why it's still used in component testing.
{% /tab %} {% /tabs %}
Environment Variables
Using executor configurations offers flexibility to set environment variables
"targets": {
"e2e": {
"executor": "@nrwl/cypress:cypress",
"options": {
"cypressConfig": "apps/app-e2e/cypres.config.ts",
"devServerTarget": "my-react-app:serve",
"testingType": "e2e"
},
"configurations": {
"qa": {
"env": {
"API_URL": "https://api.qa.company.com"
}
},
"dev": {
"env": {
"API_URL": "http://locahost:3333/api"
}
}
}
}
}
Read more on different ways to use environment variables for cypress executor