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Cypress-nuxt

Utilities for using Cypress with Nuxt Apps.

Current features:

  • Expose a plugin for unit testing components (automatically generates the webpack config)

Potential future features:

  • Provide commands for interacting with Nuxt
  • Setup nuxt URL automatically
  • Have other ideas? Make an issue with your idea, I'd love to hear them!

Why though?

First off, cypress is awesome. Second, there's a bit of wiring up needed when using nuxt. Although this was made way easier with Nuxt exposing the webpack config, we still need to tweak the config a tiny bit to get it to work with cypress.

There also might be other utilities needed in the future to make cypress even easier to use with nuxt, so I thought a NPM package would be good. Maybe exposing the nuxt config to cypress, or automatically setting the base URL? Have Ideas? submit some enhancement requests!

Getting started

Nuxt version

First, this requires Nuxt >2.12. This module doesn't rely on nuxt itself so you need to install it (although it's a nuxt app... if you don't have it installed what are you doing?). If you're not on > 2.12 upgrade nuxt

1. Install

npm install -D cypress-nuxt cypress-vue-unit-test

or with yarn

yarn add -D cypress-nuxt cypress-vue-unit-test

2. Add the cypress plugin

With Async/Await

You might want to check that your node.js version supports async await. If it doesn't... well first upgrade. :p but if not use promises below.

cypress/plugins/index.js

const cypressNuxt = require("cypress-nuxt");

module.exports = async (on, config) => { // make sure to include "async"!
  on("file:preprocessor", await cypressNuxt.plugin()); // make sure to include "await"!

  // other plugins...
  return config;
};

or With Promises

cypress/plugins/index.js

const cypressNuxt = require("cypress-nuxt");

module.exports = function (on, config) {
  return cypressNuxt.plugin().then(function (webpackPreProcessor) {
    on("file:preprocessor", webpackPreProcessor);

    // other plugins...
    return config;
  })
  
};

2.b @nuxt/typescript-runtime

@nuxt/typescript-runtime allows writing your nuxt.config file in typescript, this means that cypress-nuxt (and anything else reading your nuxt.config.ts needs to compile it before it can work with it.

in your cypress/plugins/index.js add a ts-node register call before getting the webpack config.

require("ts-node").register({
    compilerOptions: {
        // force to compile to what node.js expects
        target: "es5",
        module: "commonjs" // node expects commonjs format
    }
});

cypressNuxt.plugin({})
  .then((webpackConfig) => {
      console.log(webpackConfig)
  })

Or, With Async/Await

I like to pull it out to a function so it's easy to await cypress/plugins/index.js

const cypressNuxt = require("cypress-nuxt");

module.exports = async (on, config) => { // make sure to include "async"!
  on("file:preprocessor", await filePreprocessor()); // make sure to include "await"!

  // other plugins...
  return config;
};

function filePreprocessor() {
  require("ts-node").register({
    compilerOptions: {
      target: "es5",
      module: "commonjs" // node expects commonjs format
    }
  });
  // return the promise to return the webpack config
  return cypressNuxt.plugin({})
}

3. Setup Cypress-vue-unit-test

For cypress-vue-unit-test < v2 see oldTestOrganization.md

Follow the cypress-vue-unit-test documentation to get setup

4. Write a test

Javascript

~/components/Logo.spec.js

import { createWrapper } from "@vue/test-utils";
import { mountCallback } from "cypress-vue-unit-test";
import Logo from "~/components/Logo.vue";

describe("Logo", () => {
  beforeEach(mountCallback(Logo));

  it("should initialize", () => {
    cy.wrap(Cypress.vue)
      .should("not.be.undefined")
      .get(".Triangle")
      .should("have.length", 4);

    cy.wrap(createWrapper(Cypress.vue)).should(cmp => cmp.isVueInstance());
  });
});

Typescript Tests (if you have @nuxt/typescript-build enabled)

Just rename your spec file to .ts: ~/components/Logo.spec.ts

Options

the plugin function takes an options object. See the type definitions for LoadOptions for valid options.

rootDir

Set the root dir to search for the nuxt.config.[js|ts] This is useful if you don't run cypress from the directory that contains your nuxt config file.

to resolve app/client/nuxt.config.js from app/e2e/cypress/plugin.js

  return cypressNuxt.plugin({
    loadOptions: {
      rootDir: path.join(__dirname, "../../client")
    }
  })

"for"

This option tells nuxt what version of the webpack config you want. Leaving this undefined seems to work fine.

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Cypress plugin to make unit tests with nuxt simple

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