Cypress Autorecord is a plugin built to be used with Cypress.io. It simplifies mocking by auto-recording/stubbing HTTP interactions and automating the process of updating/deleting recordings. Spend more time writing integration tests instead of managing your mock data. Refer to the changelog for more details on all the changes.
Version 3 is now compatible with Cypress 6 and 7 and includes a few fixes. If you are using an earlier cypress version, you will need to use cypress-autorecord v2.x.
Install from npm
npm install --save-dev cypress-autorecord
Add this snippet in your project's /cypress/plugins/index.js
const fs = require('fs');
const autoRecord = require('cypress-autorecord/plugin');
module.exports = (on, config) => {
autoRecord(on, config, fs);
};
To allow for auto-recording and stubbing to work, require cypress-autorecord in each of your test file and call the function at the beginning of your parent describe
block.
const autoRecord = require('cypress-autorecord'); // Require the autorecord function
describe('Home Page', function() { // Do not use arrow functions
autoRecord(); // Call the autoRecord function at the beginning of your describe block
// Your hooks (beforeEach, afterEach, etc) goes here
it('...', function() { // Do not use arrow functions
// Your test goes here
});
});
NOTE: Do not use ES6 arrow functions for your describe or it callback. This will cause the recording function to break.
That is it! Now, just run your tests and the auto-record will take care of the rest!
In the case you need to update your mocks for a particular test:
const autoRecord = require('cypress-autorecord');
describe('Home Page', function() {
autoRecord();
it('[r] my awesome test', function() { // Insert [r] at the beginning of your test name
// ...
});
});
This will force the test to record over your existent mocks for ONLY this test on your next run.
This can also be done through the configurations by adding the test name in the file cypress.json
:
{
"autorecord": {
"recordTests": ["my awesome test"]
}
}
Alternatively, you can update recordings for all tests by setting forceRecord
to true
before rerunning your tests:
{
"autorecord": {
"forceRecord": true
}
}
Stale mocks that are no longer being used can be automatically removed when you run your tests by setting cleanMocks
to true
in the file cypress.json
:
{
"autorecord": {
"cleanMocks": true
}
}
NOTE: Only mocks that are used during the run are considered "active". Make sure to only set cleanMocks
to true
when you are running ALL your tests. Remove any unintentional .only
or .skip
.
By default autorecorder is recording all outgoing requests but if you want to record only specific calls based on pattern(Ex. just record api calls on backend), you can set interceptPattern
in cypress.json
. it can be string, regex or glob
{
"autorecord": {
"interceptPattern": "http://localhost:3000/api/*"
}
}
Cypress Autorecord uses Cypress' built-in cy.intercept
to hook into every request, including GET, POST, DELETE and PUT. If mocks doesn't exist for a test, the http calls (requests and responses) are captured and automatically written to a local file. If mocks exist for a test, each http call will be stubbed in the beforeEach
hook.
The mocks will be automatically generated and saved in the /cypress/mocks/
folder. Mocks are grouped by test name and test file name. You will find mock files matching the name of your test files. Within your mock files, mocks are organized by test names in the order that they were called. Changing the test file name or test name will result to a disconnection to the mocks and trigger a recording on your next run.
Mocks are saved as a simple json object and can be updated manually. This is not recommended since any manual change you make will be overwritten when you automatically update the mocks. Leave the data management to cypress-autorecord. Make any modifications to the http calls inside your test so that it will be consistent across recordings.
it('should display an error message when send message fails', function() {
cy.route({
url: '/message',
method: 'POST',
status: 404,
response: { error: 'It did not work' },
});
cy.get('[data-cy="msgInput"]').type('Hello World!');
cy.get('[data-cy="msgSend"]').click();
cy.get('[data-cy="errorMessage"]').should('contain', 'Looks like we ran into a problem. Please try again.');
});
Cypress-autorecord leverages Cypress' built in cy.route
to handle stubbing, which means that it inherits some limitations as well. This is the disclaimer on the cy.route
documentation page with some potential workarounds:
Please be aware that Cypress only currently supports intercepting XMLHttpRequests. Requests using the Fetch API and other types of network requests like page loads and <script> tags will not be intercepted or visible in the Command Log. See #95 for more details and temporary workarounds.
I would really appreciate any help with bug fixes or any new features you think might be relevant! Feel free to submit a PR!