Adds commands for executing a mocked GraphQL server using only the client
npm install cypress-graphql-mock
in Cypress' commands.js
add:
import "cypress-graphql-mock";
Adds .mockGraphql()
and .mockGraphqlOps()
methods to the cypress chain.
The .mockGraphql
should be called in the Cypress before
or beforeEach
block
config to setup the server. This method takes a schema, either in the form of one or more SDL files, or as the JSON result of an introspection query.
const schema = fs.readFileSync("../../app-schema.graphql", "utf8");
// alternatively, using a dumped introspection query:
// const schema = require('../../dumped-schema.json')
beforeEach(() => {
cy.server();
cy.mockGraphql({ schema });
});
Actually it is not possible to use fs.readFileSync
right in the cypress tests. So here you can create custom command. Add this to your cypress/plugins/index.js
.
module.exports = (on, config) => {
on("task", {
getSchema() {
return fs.readFileSync(
path.resolve(__dirname, "../../app-schema.graphql"),
"utf8"
);
}
});
};
And then in the code you will be able to
beforeEach(() => {
cy.task("getSchema").then(schema => {
cy.mockGraphql({
schema,
operations: { ... }
});
});
});
By default, it will use the /graphql
endpoint, but this can be changed
depending on the expected server implementation.
beforeEach(() => {
cy.server();
cy.mockGraphql({
schema,
endpoint: "/gql"
});
});
It takes an "operations" object, representing the named operations of the GraphQL server. This is combined with the "mocks" option, to modify the output behavior per test.
The .mockGraphqlOps()
allows you to configure the mock responses at a
more granular level
For example, if we have a query called "UserQuery" and wanted to explicitly force a state where a viewer is null (logged out), it would look something like:
.mockGraphqlOps({
operations: {
UserQuery: {
viewer: null
}
}
})
Just return mutation result. Make sure that mostly always you will need to duplicate mutation name 1st time as operation key, and 2nd as return data object key.
cy.server();
cy.mockGraphql({ schema });
cy.mockGraphqlOps({
operations: {
userNameChange: {
userNameChange: {
name: "New user name"
}
}
}
});
It is also possible to pass a function to simulate dynamic resolver.
cy.server();
cy.mockGraphql({ schema });
cy.mockGraphqlOps({
operations: {
userNameChange: variables => ({
userNameChange: {
viewer: {
name: variables.name
}
}
})
}
});
In order to test asynchronous behavior sometimes you will need to delay your graphql request. This can be done with a help of delay
option.
cy.mockGraphqlOps({
operations: {
delay: 1000, // 1 second
userNameChange: new GraphQLError("Your message goes here")
}
});
import { GraphQLError } from "graphql";
cy.mockGraphqlOps({
delay: 1000, // wait 1 second
operations: {
userNameChange: new GraphQLError("Your message goes here")
}
});
It is also possible to throw error from the function. Just return
or throw
a GraphQLError.
cy.mockGraphqlOps({
operations: {
userNameChange: (variables) => {
if (!variables.name) {
throw new GraphQLError("Name is required")
}
}
}
});
MIT