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End-to-end tests with Cypress |
Metabase uses Cypress for “end-to-end testing”, that is, tests that are executed against the application as a whole, including the frontend, backend, and application database. These tests are essentially scripts written in JavaScript that run in the web browser: visit different URLs, click various UI elements, type text, and assert that things happen as expected (for example, an element appearing on screen, or a network request occuring).
Metabase’s Cypress tests are located in the frontend/test/metabase/scenarios
source tree, in a structure that roughly mirrors Metabase’s URL structure. For example, tests for the admin “datamodel” pages are located in frontend/test/metabase/scenarios/admin/datamodel
.
During development you will want to run yarn build-hot
to continuously build the frontend, and yarn test-cypress-open
to open the Cypress application where you can execute the tests you are working on.
To run all Cypress tests programmatically in the terminal:
yarn run test-cypress-run
You can run a specific set of scenarios by using the --folder
flag, which will pick up the chosen scenarios under frontend/test/metabase/scenarios/
.
yarn run test-cypress-run --folder sharing
You can quickly test a single file only by using the --spec
flag.
yarn test-cypress-run --spec frontend/test/metabase/scenarios/question/new.cy.spec.js
Cypress test files are structured like Mocha tests, where describe
blocks are used to group related tests, and it
blocks are the tests themselves.
describe("homepage",() => {
it('should load the homepage and...', () => {
cy.visit("/metabase/url");
// ...
})
})
We strongly prefer using selectors like cy.findByText()
and cy.findByLabelText()
from @testing-library/cypress
since they encourage writing tests that don't depend on implementation details like CSS class names.
Try to avoid repeatedly testing pieces of the application incidentally. For example, if you want to test something about the query builder, jump straight there using a helper like openOrdersTable()
rather than starting from the home page, clicking "New", then "Question", etc.
- Introduction: https://docs.cypress.io/guides/core-concepts/introduction-to-cypress.html#Querying-by-Text-Content
- Commands: https://docs.cypress.io/api/api/table-of-contents.html
- Assertions: https://docs.cypress.io/guides/references/assertions.html
Cypress has a set of similar commands for selecting elements. Here are some tips for using them:
contains
is case-sensitive to the text in the DOM. If it’s not matching text you’d expect, check that CSS hasn’t updated the case.contains
matches substrings, so if you see “filter by” and “Add a filter”,contains(“filter”)
will match both. To avoid these issues, you can either pass a regexp that pins the start/end of the string or pass a selector in addition to the string:.contains(selector, content)
.find
will let you search within your previous selection.get
will search the entire page even if chained.
Sometimes Metabase views are a bit large for Cypress’s default 1000x660 viewport. This can require you to scroll for tests to work. To avoid that, you can increase the viewport size for a specific test by calling cy.viewport(width, height)
.
When you edit a Cypress test file, the tests will refresh and run again. However, when you edit a code file, Cypress won’t detect that change. If you’re running yarn build-hot
, the code will rebuild and update within Cypress. You’ll have to manually click rerun after the new code has loaded.
One great feature of Cypress is that you can use the Chrome inspector after each step of a test. They also helpfully provide a helper that can test out contains
and get
calls. This helper creates new UI that prevents inspecting from targeting the correct elements. If you want to inspect the DOM in Chrome, you should close this helper.
yarn build
and yarn build-hot
each overwrite an HTML template to reference the correct Javascript files. If you run yarn build
before building an Uberjar for Cypress tests, you won’t see changes to your Javascript reflected even if you then start yarn build-hot
.
You might run into problems when running Cypress on M1 machine.
This is caused by the @bahmutov/cypress-esbuild-preprocessor
that is using esbuild
as a dependency. The error might look like this. The solution is to install NodeJS using one of the Node version managers like nvm or n.
At the beginning of each test suite we wipe the backend's db and settings cache. This ensures that the test suite starts in a predictable state.
Typically, we use the default snapshot by adding before(restore)
inside the first describe
block to restore before running the whole test suite. If you want to use a snapshot besides the default one, specify the name as an argument to restore
like this: before(() => restore("blank"))
. You can also call restore()
inside beforeEach()
to reset before every test, or inside specific tests.
Snapshots are created with a separate set of Cypress tests. These tests start with a blank database and execute specific actions to put the database in predictable state. For example: signup as [email protected], add a question, turn on setting ABC.
These snapshot-generating tests have the extension .cy.snap.js
. When these tests run they create db dumps in frontend/tests/snapshots/*.sql
. They are run before the tests begin and don't get committed to git.
Cypress records videos of each test run, which can be helpful in debugging. Additionally, failed tests have higher quality images saved.
These files can be found under the “Artifacts” tab in Circle: