Catalog of Events

Cypress emits a series of events as it runs in your browser.

These events are useful not only to control your application's behavior, but also for debugging purposes.

Here are some examples you can do with these events:

  • Listen for uncaught exceptions and prevent Cypress from failing the test
  • Listen for alert or confirm calls and change the confirm behavior
  • Listen for window:before:load events and modify the window before any of your app code runs between page transitions
  • Listen for command:retry events to understand why Cypress is internally retrying for debugging purposes

Event Types

App Events

These events come from the application currently under test (your application). These are the most useful events for you to listen to.

Event Details
Name: uncaught:exception
Yields: the error (Object), Mocha runnable (Object)
Description: Fires when an uncaught exception occurs in your application. Cypress will fail the test when this fires. Return false from this event and Cypress will not fail the test. Also useful for debugging purposes because the actual error instance is provided to you. See our recipe Handling errors.
Event Details
Name: window:confirm
Yields: the confirmation text (String)
Description: Fires when your app calls the global window.confirm() method. Cypress will auto accept confirmations. Return false from this event and the confirmation will be canceled.
Event Details
Name: window:alert
Yields: the alert text (String)
Description: Fires when your app calls the global window.alert() method. Cypress will auto accept alerts. You cannot change this behavior.
Event Details
Name: window:before:load
Yields: the remote window (Object)
Description: Fires as the page begins to load, but before any of your applications JavaScript has executed. This fires at the exact same time as cy.visit() onBeforeLoad callback. Useful to modify the window on a page transition.
Event Details
Name: window:load
Yields: the remote window (Object)
Description: Fires after all your resources have finished loading after a page transition. This fires at the exact same time as a cy.visit() onLoad callback.
Event Details
Name: window:before:unload
Yields: the actual beforeunload event (Object)
Description: Fires when your application is about to navigate away. The real event object is provided to you. Your app may have set a returnValue on the event, which is useful to assert on.
Event Details
Name: window:unload
Yields: the actual unload event (Object)
Description: Fires when your application has unloaded and is navigating away. The real event object is provided to you. This event is not cancelable.
Event Details
Name: url:changed
Yields: the new url (String)
Description: Fires whenever Cypress detects that your application's URL has changed.

Cypress Events

These events come from Cypress as it issues commands and reacts to their state. These are all useful to listen to for debugging purposes.

Event Details
Name: fail
Yields: the error (Object), Mocha runnable (Object)
Description: Fires when the test has failed. It is technically possible to prevent the test from actually failing by binding to this event and invoking an async done callback. However this is strongly discouraged. Tests should never legitimately fail. This event exists because it's extremely useful for debugging purposes. See our recipe Handling errors.
Event Details
Name: viewport:changed
Yields: the new viewport (Object)
Description: Fires whenever the viewport changes via a cy.viewport() or naturally when Cypress resets the viewport to the default between tests. Useful for debugging purposes.
Event Details
Name: scrolled
Yields: the element or window being scrolled (Object)
Description: Fires whenever Cypress is scrolling your application. This event is fired when Cypress is waiting for and calculating actionability. It will scroll to 'uncover' elements currently being covered. This event is extremely useful to debug why Cypress may think an element is not interactive.
Event Details
Name: command:enqueued
Yields: command properties and arguments (Object)
Description: Fires when a cy command is first invoked and enqueued to be run later. Useful for debugging purposes if you're confused about the order in which commands will execute.
Event Details
Name: command:start
Yields: command instance (Object)
Description: Fires when cy begins actually running and executing your command. Useful for debugging and understanding how the command queue is async.
Event Details
Name: command:end
Yields: command instance (Object)
Description: Fires when cy finishes running and executing your command. Useful for debugging and understanding how commands are handled.
Event Details
Name: command:retry
Yields: retry options (Object)
Description: Fires whenever a command begins its retrying routines. This is called on the trailing edge after Cypress has internally waited for the retry interval. Useful to understand why a command is retrying, and generally includes the actual error causing the retry to happen. When commands fail the final error is the one that actually bubbles up to fail the test. This event is essentially to debug why Cypress is failing.
Event Details
Name: log:added
Yields: log attributes (Object), whether Cypress is in interactive mode (running via cypress open) (Boolean)
Description: Fires whenever a command emits this event so it can be displayed in the Command Log. Useful to see how internal cypress commands utilize the Cypress.log() API.
Event Details
Name: log:changed
Yields: log attributes (Object), whether Cypress is in interactive mode (running via cypress open) (Boolean)
Description: Fires whenever a command's attributes changes. This event is debounced to prevent it from firing too quickly and too often. Useful to see how internal cypress commands utilize the Cypress.log() API.
Event Details
Name: test:before:run
Yields: test attributes (Object), runnable instance (Object)
Description: Fires before the test and all before and beforeEach hooks run.
Event Details
Name: test:after:run
Yields: test attributes (Object), runnable instance (Object)
Description: Fires after the test and all afterEach and after hooks run.

Other Events

There are a myriad of other events Cypress fires to communicate with the Node server process, automation servers, mocha, the runner, and the reporter. They are strictly internal to the way Cypress works and not useful for users.

Binding to Events

Both the global Cypress and cy objects are standard Node event emitters. That means you can use the following methods to bind and unbind from events.

It's important to understand why you'd want to bind to either Cypress or cy.

Cypress

Cypress is a global object that persists for the entirety of all of your tests. Any events you bind to Cypress will apply to all tests, and will not be unbound unless you manually unbind them.

This is useful when you're debugging and want to add a single "catch-all" event to track down things like test failures, or uncaught exceptions from your application.

cy

The cy object is bound to each individual test. Events bound to cy will automatically be removed when the test ends. You don't have to worry about cleanup, and your event listeners will only be called for the duration of the single test.

Examples

Uncaught Exceptions

To turn off all uncaught exception handling

// likely want to do this in a support file
// so it's applied to all spec files
// cypress/support/index.js

Cypress.on('uncaught:exception', (err, runnable) => {
  // returning false here prevents Cypress from
  // failing the test
  return false
})

To conditionally turn off uncaught exception handling for a certain error

// likely want to do this in a support file
// so it's applied to all spec files
// cypress/support/index.js
Cypress.on('uncaught:exception', (err, runnable) => {
  // we expect a 3rd party library error with message 'list not defined'
  // and don't want to fail the test so we return false
  if (err.message.includes('list not defined')) {
    return false
  }
  // we still want to ensure there are no other unexpected
  // errors, so we let them fail the test
})

To conditionally turn off uncaught exception handling unhandled promise rejections

// likely want to do this in a support file
// so it's applied to all spec files
// cypress/support/index.js
Cypress.on('uncaught:exception', (err, runnable, promise) => {
  // when the exception originated from an unhandled promise
  // rejection, the promise is provided as a third argument
  // you can turn off failing the test in this case
  if (promise) {
    return false
  }
  // we still want to ensure there are no other unexpected
  // errors, so we let them fail the test
})

To catch a single uncaught exception

it('is doing something very important', (done) => {
  // this event will automatically be unbound when this
  // test ends because it's attached to 'cy'
  cy.on('uncaught:exception', (err, runnable) => {
    expect(err.message).to.include('something about the error')

    // using mocha's async done callback to finish
    // this test so we prove that an uncaught exception
    // was thrown
    done()

    // return false to prevent the error from
    // failing this test
    return false
  })

  // assume this causes an error
  cy.get('button').click()
})

Catching Test Failures

Debug the moment a test fails

// if you want to debug when any test fails
// You likely want to put this in a support file,
// or at the top of an individual spec file
Cypress.on('fail', (error, runnable) => {
  debugger

  // we now have access to the err instance
  // and the mocha runnable this failed on

  throw error // throw error to have test still fail
})

it('calls the "fail" callback when this test fails', () => {
  // when this cy.get() fails the callback
  // is invoked with the error
  cy.get('element-that-does-not-exist')
})

Read Cypress Metaprogramming for more examples.

Test that your application was redirected

// app code
$('button').on('click', (e) => {
  // change the page programmatically
  window.location.href = '/some/new/link'
})

// test code
it('redirects to another page on click', (done) => {
  // this event will automatically be unbound when this
  // test ends because it's attached to 'cy'
  cy.on('window:before:unload', (e) => {
    // no return value on the event
    expect(e.returnValue).to.be.undefined
  })

  cy.on('window:unload', (e) => {
    // using mocha's async done callback to finish
    // this test so we are guaranteed the application
    // was unloaded while navigating to the new page
    done()
  })

  // click the button causing the page redirect
  cy.get('button').click()
})

Window Before Load

Modify your Application before it loads after page transitions

it('can modify the window prior to page load on all pages', () => {
  // create the stub here
  const ga = cy.stub().as('ga')

  // prevent google analytics from loading
  // and replace it with a stub before every
  // single page load including all new page
  // navigations
  cy.on('window:before:load', (win) => {
    Object.defineProperty(win, 'ga', {
      configurable: false,
      get: () => ga, // always return the stub
      set: () => {}, // don't allow actual google analytics to overwrite this property
    })
  })

  cy
    // window:before:load will be called here
    .visit('/first/page')

    .then((win) => {
      // and here
      win.location.href = '/second/page'
    })

    // and here
    .get('a')
    .click()
})

Window Confirm

Control whether you accept or reject confirmations

This enables you to test how your application reacts to accepted confirmations and rejected confirmations.

// app code
$('button').on('click', (e) => {
  const one = confirm('first confirm')

  if (one) {
    const two = confirm('second confirm')

    if (!two) {
      const three = confirm('third confirm')

      confirm('third confirm was ' + three)
    }
  }
})

// test code
it('can control application confirms', (done) => {
  let count = 0

  // make sure you bind to this **before** the
  // confirm method is called in your application
  //
  // this event will automatically be unbound when this
  // test ends because it's attached to 'cy'
  cy.on('window:confirm', (str) => {
    count += 1

    switch (count) {
      case 1:
        expect(str).to.eq('first confirm')
      // returning nothing here automatically
      // accepts the confirmation
      case 2:
        expect(str).to.eq('second confirm')

        // reject the confirmation
        return false

      case 3:
        expect(str).to.eq('third confirm')

        // don't have to return true but it works
        // as well
        return true

      case 4:
        expect(str).to.eq('third confirm was true')

        // using mocha's async done callback to finish
        // this test so we are guaranteed everything
        // got to this point okay without throwing an error
        done()
    }
  })

  // click the button causing the confirm to fire
  cy.get('button').click()
})

it('could also use a stub instead of imperative code', () => {
  const stub = cy.stub()

  // not necessary but showing for clarity
  stub.onFirstCall().returns(undefined)
  stub.onSecondCall().returns(false)
  stub.onThirdCall().returns(true)

  cy.on('window:confirm', stub)

  cy.get('button')
    .click()
    .then(() => {
      expect(stub.getCall(0)).to.be.calledWith('first confirm')
      expect(stub.getCall(1)).to.be.calledWith('second confirm')
      expect(stub.getCall(2)).to.be.calledWith('third confirm')
      expect(stub.getCall(3)).to.be.calledWith('third confirm was true')
    })
})

Window Alert

Assert on the alert text

Cypress automatically accepts alerts but you can still assert on the text content.

// app code
$('button').on('click', (e) => {
  alert('hi')
  alert('there')
  alert('friend')
})

it('can assert on the alert text content', () => {
  const stub = cy.stub()

  cy.on('window:alert', stub)

  cy.get('button')
    .click()
    .then(() => {
      expect(stub.getCall(0)).to.be.calledWith('hi')
      expect(stub.getCall(1)).to.be.calledWith('there')
      expect(stub.getCall(2)).to.be.calledWith('friend')
    })
})

Notes

Logging All Events

Cypress uses the debug node module for both the back end server process, and for everything running in the browser (called the driver).

If you'd like to see (the huge) stream of events that Cypress emits you can pop open your Dev Tools and write this line in the console.

localStorage.debug = 'cypress:*'

Reload the browser and turn on 'Verbose' logs to see debug messages within the Developer Tools console.

console log events for debugging

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Licensed under the MIT License.
https://docs.cypress.io/api/events/catalog-of-events