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  • How to install Cypress via npm
  • How to install Cypress via direct download
  • How to version and run Cypress via package.json

Operating System

Cypress is a desktop application that is installed on your computer. The desktop application supports these operating systems:

  • macOS 10.9 and above (64-bit only)
  • Linux Ubuntu 12.04 and above, Fedora 21 and Debian 8 (64-bit only)
  • Windows 7 and above

Node.js

If you’re using npm to install Cypress, we support:

  • Node.js 10 or 12 and above

Linux

If you’re using Linux, you’ll want to have the required dependencies installed on your system.

We also have an official cypress/base Docker container with all of the required dependencies installed.

Ubuntu/Debian

CentOS

npm install

Install Cypress via npm:

This will install Cypress locally as a dev dependency for your project.

Make sure that you have already run npm init or have a node_modules folder or package.json file in the root of your project to ensure cypress is installed in the correct directory.

Notice that the Cypress npm package is a wrapper around the Cypress binary. The version of the npm package determines the version of the binary downloaded.
As of version 3.0, the binary is downloaded to a global cache directory to be used across projects.

Best Practice

The recommended approach is to install Cypress with npm because :

  • Cypress is versioned like any other dependency.
  • It simplifies running Cypress in Continuous Integration.

yarn add

Installing Cypress via yarn:

Direct download

If you’re not using Node or npm in your project or you want to try Cypress out quickly, you can always download Cypress directly from our CDN.

Recording runs to the Dashboard is not possible from the direct download. This download is only intended as a quick way to try out Cypress. To record tests to the Dashboard, you’ll need to install Cypress as an npm dependency.

The direct download will always grab the latest available version. Your platform will be detected automatically.

Then you can manually unzip and double click. Cypress will run without needing to install any dependencies.

Continuous integration

Download

Please read our Continuous Integration docs for help installing Cypress in CI. When running in linux you’ll need to install some system dependencies or you can use our Docker images which have everything you need prebuilt.

If you used npm to install, Cypress has now been installed to your ./node_modules directory, with its binary executable accessible from ./node_modules/.bin.

Now you can open Cypress from your project root one of the following ways:

The long way with the full path

Driver

Or with the shortcut using npm bin

Or by using npx

note: npx is included with npm > v5.2 or can be installed separately.

Or by using yarn

After a moment, the Cypress Test Runner will launch.

Switching browsers

The Cypress Test Runner attempts to find all compatible browsers on the user’s machine. The drop down to select a different browser is in the top right corner of the Test Runner.

Read Launching Browsers for more information on how Cypress controls a real browser during end-to-end tests.

Cross Browser Support

Cypress currently supports Firefox and Chrome-family browsers (including Edge and Electron). To run tests optimally across these browsers in CI, check out the strategies demonstrated in the cross browser Testing guide.

Adding npm scripts

Current USB- Driver For CY7C68013 | Cypress Developer Community

Cypress

While there’s nothing wrong with writing out the full path to the Cypress executable each time, it’s much easier and clearer to add Cypress commands to the scripts field in your package.json file.

Now you can invoke the command from your project root like so:

CY7C68013A Device Driver Installation For Windo... | Cypress ...

…and Cypress will open right up for you.

By installing Cypress through npm you also get access to many other CLI commands.

As of version 0.20.0 Cypress is also a fully baked node_module you can require in your Node scripts.

You can read more about the CLI here.

Environment variables

NameDescription
CYPRESS_INSTALL_BINARYDestination of Cypress binary that's downloaded and installed
CYPRESS_DOWNLOAD_MIRRORDownloads the Cypress binary though a mirror server
CYPRESS_CACHE_FOLDERChanges the Cypress binary cache location
CYPRESS_RUN_BINARYLocation of Cypress binary at run-time
CYPRESS_SKIP_BINARY_INSTALLremoved use CYPRESS_INSTALL_BINARY=0 instead
CYPRESS_BINARY_VERSIONremoved use CYPRESS_INSTALL_BINARY instead

Install binary

Using the CYPRESS_INSTALL_BINARY environment variable, you can control how Cypress is installed. To override what is installed, you set CYPRESS_INSTALL_BINARY alongside the npm install command.

This is helpful if you want to:

  • Install a version different than the default npm package.
  • Specify an external URL (to bypass a corporate firewall).
  • Specify a file to install locally instead of using the internet.

In all cases, the fact that the binary was installed from a custom location is not saved in your package.json file. Every repeated installation needs to use the same environment variable to install the same binary.

Skipping installation

You can also force Cypress to skip the installation of the binary application by setting CYPRESS_INSTALL_BINARY=0. This could be useful if you want to prevent Cypress from downloading the Cypress binary at the time of npm install.

Now Cypress will skip its install phase once the npm module is installed.

Binary cache

As of version 3.0, Cypress downloads the matching Cypress binary to the global system cache, so that the binary can be shared between projects. By default, global cache folders are:

  • MacOS: ~/Library/Caches/Cypress
  • Linux: ~/.cache/Cypress
  • Windows: /AppData/Local/Cypress/Cache

To override the default cache folder, set the environment variable CYPRESS_CACHE_FOLDER.

Cypress will automatically replace the ~ with the user’s home directory. So you can pass CYPRESS_CACHE_FOLDER as a string from CI configuration files, for example:

See also Continuous Integration - Caching section in the documentation.

CYPRESS_CACHE_FOLDER will need to exist every time cypress is launched. To ensure this, consider exporting this environment variable. For example, in a .bash_profile (MacOS, Linux), or using RegEdit (Windows).

Run binary

Setting the environment variable CYPRESS_RUN_BINARY overrides where the npm module finds the Cypress binary.

CYPRESS_RUN_BINARY should be a path to an already unzipped binary executable. The Cypress commands open, run, and verify will then launch the provided binary.

Mac

Linux

Windows

We recommend not exporting the CYPRESS_RUN_BINARY environment variable, since it will affect every cypress module installed on your file system.

Download URLs

If you want to download a specific Cypress version for a given platform (Operating System), you can get it from our CDN.

Windows

The download server URL is https://download.cypress.io.

We currently have the following downloads available:

  • Windows 64-bit (?platform=win32&arch=x64)
  • Windows 32-bit (?platform=win32&arch=ia32, available since Cypress 3.3.0)
  • Linux 64-bit (?platform=linux)
  • macOS 64-bit (?platform=darwin)

Here are the available download URLs:

See https://download.cypress.io/desktop.json for all available platforms.

MethodURLDescription
GET/desktopDownload Cypress at latest version (platform auto-detected)
GET/desktop.jsonReturns JSON containing latest available CDN destinations
GET/desktop?platform=p&arch=aDownload Cypress for a specific platform and/or architecture
GET/desktop/:versionDownload Cypress with a specified version
GET/desktop/:version?platform=p&arch=aDownload Cypress with a specified version and platform and/or architecture

Example of downloading Cypress 3.0.0 for Windows 64-bit:

Mirroring

If you choose to mirror the entire Cypress download site, you can specify CYPRESS_DOWNLOAD_MIRROR to set the download server URL from https://download.cypress.io to your own mirror.

For example:

Cypress will then attempt to download a binary with this format: https://www.example.com/desktop/:version?platform=p

Opt out of sending exception data to Cypress

When an exception is thrown regarding Cypress, we send along the exception data to https://api.cypress.io. We solely use this information to help develop a better product.

If you would like to opt out of sending any exception data to Cypress, you can do so by setting CYPRESS_CRASH_REPORTS=0 in your system environment variables.

Drivers - Microsoft Download Center

Opt out on Linux or macOS

To opt out of sending exception data on Linux or macOS, run the following command in a terminal before installing Cypress:

To make these changes permanent, you can add this command to your shell’s ~/.profile (~/.zsh_profile, ~/.bash_profile, etc.) to run them on every login.

Installer

Opt out on Windows

To opt out of sending exception data on Windows, run the following command in the Command Prompt before installing Cypress:

To accomplish the same thing in Powershell:

To save the CYPRESS_CRASH_REPORTS variable for use in all new shells, use setx:

Install pre-release version

If you would like to install a pre-release version of the Test Runner to test out functionality that has not yet been released, here is how:

  1. Open up the list of commits to develop on the Cypress repo: https://github.com/cypress-io/cypress/commits/develop
  2. Find the commit that you would like to install the pre-release version of. Click the comment icon (highlighted in red below):
  3. You should see several comments from the cypress-bot user with instructions for installing Cypress pre-releases. Pick the one that corresponds to your operating system and CPU architecture, and follow the instructions there to install the pre-release.

Notes on pre-releases:

  • Cypress pre-releases are only available for about a month after they are built. Do not rely on these being available past one month.
  • If you already have a pre-release or official release installed for a specific version of Cypress, you may need to do cypress cache clear before Cypress will install a pre-release. This also applies to installing an official release over a pre-release - if you have a pre-release of Cypress vX.Y.Z installed, the official release of Cypress vX.Y.Z will not install until you do cypress cache clear.