Saves the code coverage collected during Cypress tests
npm install -D @cypress/code-coverage
and its peer dependencies
npm install -D nyc istanbul-lib-coverage cypress
Add to your cypress/support/index.js
file
import '@cypress/code-coverage/support'
Register tasks in your cypress/plugins/index.js
file
module.exports = (on, config) => {
on('task', require('@cypress/code-coverage/task'))
}
If your application is loaded Istanbul-instrumented source code, then the coverage information will be automatically saved into .nyc_output
folder and a report will be generated after the tests finish (even in the interactive mode). Find the LCOV and HTML report in the coverage/lcov-report
folder.
That should be it!
If you test your application code directly from specs
you might want to instrument them and combine unit test code coverage with any end-to-end code coverage (from iframe). You can easily instrument spec files using babel-plugin-istanbul for example.
Install the plugin
npm i -D babel-plugin-istanbul
Set your .babelrc
file
{
"plugins": ["istanbul"]
}
Put the following in cypress/plugins/index.js
file to use .babelrc
file
module.exports = (on, config) => {
on('task', require('@cypress/code-coverage/task'))
on('file:preprocessor', require('@cypress/code-coverage/use-babelrc'))
}
Now the code coverage from spec files will be combined with end-to-end coverage.
If you cannot use .babelrc
for some reason (maybe it is used by other tools?), try pushing babel-plugin-istanbul
directory to browserify plugins list.
module.exports = (on, config) => {
on('task', require('@cypress/code-coverage/task'))
on('file:preprocessor', require('@cypress/code-coverage/use-browserify-istanbul'))
}
You can also instrument your server-side code and produce combined coverage report that covers both the backend and frontend code.
- Run the server code with instrumentation. The simplest way is to use nyc. If normally you run
node src/server
then to run instrumented version you can donyc --silent node src/server
. - Add an endpoint that returns collected coverage. If you are using Express, you can simply do
const express = require('express')
const app = express()
require('@cypress/code-coverage/middleware/express')(app)
Tip: you can register the endpoint only if there is global code coverage object, and you can exclude the middleware code from the coverage numbers
// https://github.com/gotwarlost/istanbul/blob/master/ignoring-code-for-coverage.md
/* istanbul ignore next */
if (global.__coverage__) {
require('@cypress/code-coverage/middleware/express')(app)
}
If you use Hapi server, define the endpoint yourself and return the object
if (global.__coverage__) {
require('@cypress/code-coverage/middleware/hapi')(server)
}
For any other server, define the endpoint yourself and return the coverage object:
if (global.__coverage__) {
// add method "GET /__coverage__" and response with JSON
onRequest = (response) =>
response.sendJSON({coverage: global.__coverage__ })
}
- Save the API coverage endpoint in
cypress.json
file to let the plugin know where to call to receive the code coverage data from the server. Place it inenv.codeCoverage
object:
{
"env": {
"codeCoverage": {
"url": "http://localhost:3000/__coverage__"
}
}
}
That should be enough - the code coverage from the server will be requested at the end of the test run and merged with the client-side code coverage, producing a combined report
You can specify custom report folder by adding nyc
object to the package.json
file. For example to save reports to cypress-coverage
folder, use:
{
"nyc": {
"report-dir": "cypress-coverage"
}
}
You can specify custom coverage reporter(s) to use. For example to output text summary and save JSON report in cypress-coverage
folder set in your package.json
folder:
{
"nyc": {
"report-dir": "cypress-coverage",
"reporter": [
"text",
"json"
]
}
}
Tip: find list of reporters here
You can exclude parts of the code or entire files from the code coverage report. See Istanbul guide. Common cases:
When running code only during Cypress tests, the "else" branch will never be hit. Thus we should exclude it from the branch coverage computation:
// expose "store" reference during tests
/* istanbul ignore else */
if (window.Cypress) {
window.store = store
}
Often needed to skip a statement
/* istanbul ignore next */
if (global.__coverage__) {
require('@cypress/code-coverage/middleware/express')(app)
}
Or a particular switch
case
switch (foo) {
case 1: /* some code */; break;
/* istanbul ignore next */
case 2: // really difficult to hit from tests
someCode();
}
See nyc
configuration and include and exclude options. You can include and exclude files using minimatch
patterns in .nycrc
file or using "nyc" object inside your package.json
file.
For example, if you want to only include files in the app
folder, but exclude app/util.js
file, you can set in your package.json
{
"nyc": {
"include": [
"app/**/*.js"
],
"exclude": [
"app/util.js"
]
}
}
You can skip the client-side code coverage hooks by setting the environment variable coverage
to false
.
cypress run --env coverage=false
See Cypress environment variables and support.js. You can try running without code coverage in this project yourself
# run with code coverage
npm run dev
# disable code coverage
npm run dev:no:coverage
- Read the Cypress code coverage guide
- Read "Code Coverage by Parcel Bundler" blog post
- Read "Combined End-to-end and Unit Test Coverage"
- cypress-io/cypress-example-todomvc-redux is a React / Redux application with 100% code coverage.
- cypress-io/cypress-example-realworld shows how to collect the coverage information from both back and front end code and merge it into a single report.
- bahmutov/code-coverage-webpack-dev-server shows how to collect code coverage from an application that uses webpack-dev-server.
- bahmutov/code-coverage-vue-example collects code coverage for Vue.js single file components.
- lluia/cypress-typescript-coverage-example shows coverage for React App that uses TypeScript. See discussion in issue #19.
- bahmutov/cypress-and-jest shows how to run Jest unit tests and Cypress unit tests, collecting code coverage from both test runners, and then produce merged report.
- rootstrap/react-redux-base shows an example with a realistic Webpack config. Instruments the source code using
babel-plugin-istanbul
during tests. - skylock/cypress-angular-coverage-example shows Angular 8 + TypeScript application with instrumentation done using istanbul-instrumenter-loader.
- bahmutov/testing-react shows how to get code coverage for a React application created using CRA v3 without ejecting
react-scripts
. - bahmutov/next-and-cypress-example shows how to get backend and fronend coverage for a Next.js project. Uses middleware/nextjs.js.
This plugin uses debug module to output additional logging messages from its task.js file. This can help with debugging errors while saving code coverage or reporting. In order to see these messages, run Cypress from the terminal with environment variable DEBUG=code-coverage
. Example using Unix syntax to set the variable:
$ DEBUG=code-coverage npm run dev
...
code-coverage reset code coverage in interactive mode +0ms
code-coverage wrote coverage file /code-coverage/.nyc_output/out.json +28ms
code-coverage saving coverage report using command: "nyc report --report-dir ./coverage --reporter=lcov --reporter=clover --reporter=json" +3ms
This project is licensed under the terms of the MIT license.