This is an example app used to showcase Cypress.io End-to-End (E2E) testing. The application demonstrates the use of most Cypress API commands. Additionally this example app is configured to run E2E tests in various CI platforms. Several workflows demonstrate the CI use of Cypress Docker images which provide convenient, pre-configured compatible environments for Cypress. The tests are also heavily commented.
To see the kitchen sink application, and to view the Cypress API commands demonstrated by the app, visit example.cypress.io.
For a full reference of our documentation, go to docs.cypress.io.
For an example payment application demonstrating real-world usage of Cypress.io End-to-End (E2E) testing, go to the cypress-io/cypress-realworld-app repository.
The following table lists live workflows from various CI providers. These each independently test the contents of this example repository. They run and record using Cypress Cloud with their results displaying centrally under Cypress Cloud ProjectId 4b7344
. Each CI provider shows its build status on its own site:
CI Provider | Workflow | Build Status | Docker example |
---|---|---|---|
AppVeyor | appveyor.yml | ||
CircleCI | .circleci/config.yml | ✅ | |
cypress-io/github-action | using-action.yml | ||
GitHub Actions | single.yml | ||
GitHub Actions | parallel.yml |
You can find all CI results recorded on the Cypress Cloud
This table shows additional examples of CI workflows. With the exception of GitHub Actions workflows, these are not live examples as in the table above and they may require modification before use. The GitHub Actions workflows are live and they run without recording to Cypress Cloud.
The Cypress documentation page CI Provider Examples provides some more examples with extensive guides for using Cypress with some of the most popular CI providers.
To run the tests from this repo on your local machine, first make sure your machine meets the Cypress System Requirements, including the installation of Node.js according to the version specified in the file .node-version.
Executing the following instructions will clone the repository, install dependencies and run Cypress:
git clone https://github.com/cypress-io/cypress-example-kitchensink.git
cd cypress-example-kitchensink
npm ci # install dependencies
npm run local:run # run Cypress headlessly
local:run
is a package.json script that starts a local webserver and then uses cypress run to run Cypress headlessly.
If you would like to run Cypress tests interactively, then run the following command which uses cypress open to run Cypress in headed mode. You can pick individual tests to run.
npm run local:open
As an alternative to using the local:open
and local:run
scripts, you can also start the server in one step and then run Cypress in a second step.
npm start # start server on port 8080
You can check that the server is running if you open a web browser and navigate to http://localhost:8080
.
Then in a separate terminal window execute either
npx cypress run # for headless mode
or
npx cypress open # for headed interactive mode
The scripts local:run
and local:open
use the start-test
alias of the npm module start-server-and-test to run ./scripts/start.js, which starts the webserver, waits for it to become ready, and then launches Cypress.
The start
script spawns a webserver using the npm module serve and displays the Kitchen Sink App on port 8080
.
If you have Docker installed locally, for instance using Docker Desktop, you can run the tests from this repo interactively in a Docker container. Use Cypress Docker images, which are built with all the prerequisites for running Cypress. They are available as base, browsers and included options from Docker Hub and the Amazon ECR (Elastic Container Registry) Public Gallery.
As above, start by cloning the repo and installing dependencies:
git clone https://github.com/cypress-io/cypress-example-kitchensink
cd cypress-example-kitchensink
npm ci
[!NOTE] For simplicity, the Docker examples below use a repository reference such as
cypress/base
with thelatest
version tag. To select an earlier version, replacelatest
with an explicit tag, for examplecypress/base:20.15.1
. Explicit version tags are recommended for production. Usage is further explained in Tag Selection.
The following example uses a cypress/base image which itself contains no browsers. You will use the Electron browser bundled with Cypress instead. To run the Docker container, execute the following:
docker run -it --rm -v .:/e2e -w /e2e cypress/base:latest
When the container prompt appears, enter:
npx cypress install # install Cypress binary
npm run test:ci # start server and run tests in Electron browser
exit
With a cypress/browsers image you have the additional choice of Chrome, Edge and Firefox browsers. Execute the following:
docker run -it --rm -v .:/e2e -w /e2e cypress/browsers:latest
When the container prompt appears, enter:
npx cypress install # install Cypress binary
npm run test:ci # start server and run tests in Electron browser
npm run test:ci:chrome # start server and run tests in Chrome browser
npm run test:ci:edge # start server and run tests in Edge browser
npm run test:ci:firefox # start server and run tests in Firefox browser
exit
The cypress/included images add a full Cypress installation compared to cypress/browsers. Execute the following to run the container with a one-line command, testing with the Chrome browser:
docker run -it --rm -v .:/e2e -w /e2e --entrypoint bash cypress/included:latest -c 'npm run test:ci:chrome' # use for matching Cypress versions
Replace the latest
tag in the above command using the Cypress version from the repo's package.json, if this repository has not yet been updated to the latest released Cypress version.
Note that mismatched versions will cause errors.
[!NOTE] Additional browsers Chrome, Edge and Firefox are only installed in
linux/amd64
architecture imagescypress/browsers
andcypress/included
. Browsers are not available pre-installed forlinux/arm64
architecture images. The Electron browser, which is built-in to Cypress, is available in all images and architectures.
If you would like to try out running tests in a Continuous Integration (CI) provider then you need to first fork the repository so that you have your own copy. Refer to the GitHub documentation to set up aliases for remote upstream
(to this repo) and remote origin
(to your fork) correctly.
You will also need to have an account with the CI provider you want to test with.
- Use the Cypress Documentation for instructions on how to use Cypress
- Read the Command Line Guide for run options
- Refer to the API documents to understand the Cypress API calls tested in this repo
- Read Installing Cypress for step-by-step information on installing Cypress in your own project
- For "how-to" questions and discussions, go to the Cypress Discord Chat and be part of the worldwide user community!
Check out the Contributing Guideline.
See Releases.