1.1.2 • Published 9 months ago

cypress-duration-metrics v1.1.2

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
9 months ago

Cypress duration metrics Downloads Version

InstallPreprocessor durationMetrics explainedRelease Notes

Plugin for measuring total duration of the different commands and some stages of the cypress run lifecycle. Helps to identify where tests spend a lot of time and potentially come up with performance improvements.

demo

NOTE: Some stage totals and their labels are based on certain assumptions that might not be correct. These should improve over time as more insight is gained.

NOTE: Metrics are displayed properly only on cypress run. This plugin is meant for measuring performance on pipelines.

Install

Requirements

  • requires cypress >=10.0.0
  1. Install npm package.
    npm i --save-dev cypress-duration-metrics
  2. If using typescript and esm imports ensure esModuleInterop is enabled.
  3. Register the output plugin in cypress.config.{js|ts}

    import registerDurationMetricsPlugin from 'cypress-duration-metrics/plugin';
    
    export default defineConfig({
      e2e: {
        setupNodeEvents(on, config) {
          registerDurationMetricsPlugin(on);
        }
      }
    });
  4. Register the collector support in cypress/support/e2e.{js|ts}

    import registerDurationMetricsSupport from 'cypress-duration-metrics/support';
    registerDurationMetricsSupport();

Preprocessor duration

Tracking preprocessor time is currently only supported if you are using custom preprocessor. If you are using the builtin default one of cypress it won't work. To enable the measurement you need to warp your preprocessor callback.

The tracking should work with any kind of preprocessor, but the example below uses webpack. Your plugin file should look something like this:

import {registerDurationMetricsPlugin} from 'cypress-duration-metrics/plugin';

export default defineConfig({
   e2e: {
      setupNodeEvents(on, config) {
         const {measurePreprocessorDuration} = registerDurationMetricsPlugin(on);
         // .. webpackProcessor initiated here
         on('file:preprocessor', measurePreprocessorDuration(webpackProcessor));
      }
   }
});

Metrics explained

Total exec time

Time spent between the plugins require time and after:run dispatch. This is the current best approximation of the absolute total duration of the cypress run command. But it is not entirely correct, as there is still time that can be spent by cypress before loading in the plugin and after after:run on shutdown.

Test retries

Time spent on tests from all specs that failed and retried. Time is measured only from the retries and not the first try, which is considered the main execution.

Total run time

Time spent between before:run and after:run dispatch.

Cypress boot time

This is the difference between Total exec time and Total run time. Current assumption is that this time is taken up by cypress to prepare everything to start the run, like plugins, events and servers.

Specs

Total time spent on each spec. A specs time is measured between before:spec and after:spec dispatches.

Between specs

Total time spent in-between specs. This measurement is always 0 when there is only 1 spec in the whole run. The time is measured between after:spec of previous and before:spec of current test.

Between tests

Same as Between specs, but for individual tests isolated per spec.

Between commands

Same as Between specs, but for commands isolated per tests.

Browser boot time

This is the equivalent of (Total run time - Between specs - Specs). The current assumption is that this time is spent on actually opening the browser. But most likely there are other things here.

File preprocessor

The total time spent on compiling your spec files and the support file. The count on this metric should be equal to the number of specs + 1 for the support file (e2e.js).

Tracked cy commands

This is the total time spent on executing cypress commands.

cy.*

Total duration for a specific cypress command. All runs of the command are measured and added together. You can see also the average duration for the command, the max duration and also how many times it was run. Only commands that were used during the run will appear.

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