Cypress.env
get
and set
environment variables in your tests.
The Environment Variable guide explains the other ways you can set them outside of your tests.
Scope
Environment variables set using Cypress.env
are only in scope for the current
spec file.
Cypress runs each spec file in isolation: the browser is exited between specs. Environment variables added or changed in one spec won't be visible in other specs.
Difference between OS-level and Cypress environment variables
In Cypress, "environment variables" are variables that are accessible via
Cypress.env
. These are not the same as OS-level environment variables.
However,
it is possible to set Cypress environment variables from OS-level environment variables.
Syntax
Cypress.env()
Cypress.env(name)
Cypress.env(name, value)
Cypress.env(object)
Arguments
name (String)
The name of the environment variable to get or set.
value (String)
The value of the environment variable to set.
object (Object)
Set multiple environment variables with an object literal.
Examples
No Arguments
cypress.json
by default)
Get all environment variables from configuration file ({
"env": {
"foo": "bar",
"baz": "quux"
}
}
Cypress.env() // => {foo: "bar", baz: "quux"}
Name
cypress.json
by default)
Return a single environment variable from configuration file (Boolean
We automatically normalize both the key and the value when passed via the command line. Cypress will automatically convert values into Number or Boolean.
CYPRESS_HOST=laura.dev CYPRESS_IS_CI=true CYPRESS_MY_ID=123 cypress run
Cypress.env('HOST') // => "laura.dev"
Cypress.env('IS_CI') // => true
Cypress.env('MY_ID') // => 123
Name and Value
cypress.json
by default) from within your tests
Change environment variables from configuration file (Scope
Remember, any changes that you make to environment variables using this API will only be in effect for the remainder of the tests in the same spec file.
{
"env": {
"foo": "bar",
"baz": "quux"
}
}
Cypress.env('host', 'http://server.dev.local')
Cypress.env('host') // => http://server.dev.local
Object
cypress.json
by default) by passing an object literal.
Override multiple values from configuration file (// cypress.json
{
"env": {
"foo": "bar",
"baz": "quux"
}
}
Cypress.env({
host: 'http://server.dev.local',
foo: 'foo',
})
Cypress.env() // => {foo: "foo", baz: "quux", host: "http://server.dev.local"}
From a plugin
Here's an example that uses Cypress.env
to access an environment variable
that's been
dynamically set in a plugin.
Use this approach to grab the value of an environment variable once before any of the tests in your spec run.
// cypress/plugins/index.js
module.exports = (on, config) => {
config.env.sharedSecret =
process.env.NODE_ENV === 'qa' ? 'hoop brick tort' : 'sushi cup lemon'
return config
}
// cypress/integration/secrets_spec.js
describe('Environment variable set in plugin', () => {
let sharedSecret
before(() => {
sharedSecret = Cypress.env('sharedSecret')
})
it.only('can be accessed within test.', () => {
cy.log(sharedSecret)
})
})
Notes
Why would I ever need to use environment variables?
The Environment Variables guide explains common use cases.
Can I pass in environment variables from the command line?
Yes. You can do that and much more.
The Environment Variables guide explains the other ways you can set environment variables for your tests.
Cypress.env
and not cy.env
?
Why is it As a rule of thumb anything you call from Cypress
affects global state.
Anything you call from cy
affects local state.
Since the environment variables added or changed by Cypress.env
are only in
scope for the current spec file, you'd think that it should be cy.env
and not
Cypress.env
… and you'd be right. The fact that Cypress.env
affects
local state is an artifact of the API evolving over time: Cypress.env
used to
affect global state—environment variables added in one test spec file were
available in other specs—but the Cypress team wisely made each spec run in
isolation in 3.0.0
and by that time
Cypress.env
was public API.
See also
- The Environment Variable guide
- configuration