These images provide all of the required dependencies for running Cypress in Docker.
We build three main images, click on the image name to see the available tags and versions.
Image | Default | Description | Monthly pulls |
---|---|---|---|
cypress/base | cypress/base:12 |
All operating system dependencies, no Cypress, and no browsers. | |
cypress/browsers | cypress/browsers:chrome67 |
All operating system dependencies and some browsers. | |
cypress/included | cypress/included:3.2.0 |
All operating system dependencies, Cypress, and some browsers installed globally. |
Of these images, we provide multiple tags for various operating systems and specific browser versions. These allow you to target specific combinations you need.
It is recommended to use a specific image tag, and not rely on the default
tag. For example, it is better to use cypress/base:12
than cypress/base
. Even better it is to use full version of the image, like cypress/base:12.18.0
- we will never overwrite the existing Docker images to prevent accidental changes.
All of the images and tags are published to DockerHub under
- https://hub.docker.com/r/cypress/base
- https://hub.docker.com/r/cypress/browsers
- https://hub.docker.com/r/cypress/included
These images have all dependencies necessary to install and run Cypress. Just install your NPM dependencies (including Cypress) and run the tests. We utilize many of these docker images in our own projects, with different CI providers.
Check out our docs for examples.
If you want to use the cypress/included
image, read Run Cypress with a single Docker command
- examples/included-as-non-root shows how to build a new Docker image on top of
cypress/included
image and run the tests as non-root usernode
. - examples/included-as-non-root-alternative shows another approach to allow built-in non-root user
node
to run tests usingcypress/included
image. - examples/included-as-non-root-mapped shows how to build a Docker image on top of
cypress/included
that runs with a non-root user that matches the id of the user on the host machine. This way, the permissions on any files created during the test run match the user's permissions on the host machine. - examples/included-with-plugins shows how to use locally installed Cypress plugins while running
cypress/included
image.
Some versions of Node restrict running the postinstall
hook with the following error message:
lifecycle realworld@1.0.0~postinstall: cannot run in wd realworld@1.0.0
In that case run install with npm install --unsafe-perm
flag, or set an environment variable in the container
npm_config_unsafe_perm: true
When running headed tests with X11 forwarding in Cypress v4 you might see a blank Chrome screen. Try disabling memory sharing by setting the following environment variables:
export QT_X11_NO_MITSHM=1
export _X11_NO_MITSHM=1
export _MITSHM=0
See issue #270
See CONTRIBUTING.md
See LICENSE