cypress-plugin-api

UI for testing API in Cypress


Keywords
cypress, api, testing, plugin, cypress-io
License
ISC
Install
npm install cypress-plugin-api@1.4.0

Documentation

Cypress plugin API

Cypress plugin for effective API testing. Imagine Postman, but in Cypress. Prints out information about the API call in the Cypress App UI.

Cypress plugin for testing API

Features

Installation

Install this package:

npm i cypress-plugin-api
# or
yarn add cypress-plugin-api

Import the plugin into your cypress/support/e2e.js file:

import 'cypress-plugin-api'
// or
require('cypress-plugin-api')

Usage

You can now use cy.api() command. This command works exactly like cy.request() but in addition to calling your API, it will print our information about the API call in your Cypress runner.

Snapshot only mode

If you want to combine your API calls with your UI test, you can now use snapshotOnly mode, that will hide the plugin UI view after command ends. You can access it within the timeline.

snapshotOnly mode is set to false by default. To set up snapshotOnly mode, add following to your test configuration:

it('my UI & API test', { env: { snapshotOnly: true } }, () => {

  cy.visit('/') // open app
  cy.api('/item') // call api
  cy.get('#myElement') // still able to access element on page

})

or you can add the configuration to your cypress.config.{js,ts} file:

import { defineConfig } from 'cypress'

export default defineConfig({
  e2e: {
    setupNodeEvents(on, config) {
    },
    env: {
      snapshotOnly: true
    }
  },
})

Hiding credentials

You can hide your credentials by passing hideCredentials option to your env configuration. This will hide all the credentials from UI, but you can still access them via console. This option is set to false by default.

it('my secret test', { env: { hideCredentials: true } }, () => {

  cy.api({
      url: '/',
      headers: {
        authorization: Cypress.env('myToken')
      }
    })

})

The result will look like this:

Cypress plugin for testing API

You can also hide any credentials you want by defining array of keys in hideCredentialsOptions,

it('my secret test', { 
  env: { 
    hideCredentials: true, 
    hideCredentialsOptions: {
      headers: ['authorization'],
      auth: ['pass'],
      body: ['username'],
      query: ['password']
    }
  }
}, () => {

  cy.api({
      url: '/',
      headers: {
        authorization: Cypress.env('myToken') // hidden
      },
      auth: {
        pass: Cypress.env('myPass') // hidden
      },
      body: {
        username: Cypress.env('myUser') // hidden
      },
      qs: {
        password: Cypress.env('password') // hidden
      }
    })

})

This will override all the defaults set by hideCredentials.

requestMode - enable UI for cy.request() command

This setting adds all the functionality of cy.api() command to cy.request(). It’s set to false by default. This means that when you call cy.request() in your test, it will show UI.

TypeScript support

In most cases, types work just by installing plugin, but you can add the types to your tsconfig.json

{
  "types": ["cypress-plugin-api"]
}

This will add types for cy.api() command, it’s returned values as well as env properties.

Issues

All the issues can be found on issues page, feel free to open any new ones or contribute with your own code.


...powered by coffee and love ❤️ Filip Hric