session

Cache and restore cookies, localStorage, and sessionStorage in order to reduce test setup times.

Syntax

cy.session(id, setup)
cy.session(id, setup, options)

Usage

Correct Usage

// Caching session when logging in via API
// Used in both End-to-End and Component testing
cy.session([username, password], () => {
  cy.request({
    method: 'POST',
    url: '/login',
    body: { username, password },
  }).then(({ body }) => {
    window.localStorage.setItem('authToken', body.token)
  })
})

// Caching session when logging in via page visit
// Used in End-to-End testing
cy.session(name, () => {
  cy.visit('/login')
  cy.get('[data-test=name]').type(name)
  cy.get('[data-test=password]').type('s3cr3t')
  cy.get('form').contains('Log In').click()
  cy.url().should('contain', '/login-successful')
})

Incorrect Usage

// visiting before calling cy.session() is redundant, it needs to
// be done inside the setup function
cy.visit('/login')
cy.session(name, () => {
  // need to call cy.visit() here because the page is blank when
  // the setup function runs
  cy.get('[data-test=name]').type(name)
  cy.get('[data-test=password]').type('s3cr3t')
  cy.get('form').contains('Log In').click()
  // should assert that login was successful here to guarantee the
  // login process completes before it is cached
})
// should have asserted this inside the cy.session() setup
// function because the page is blank here
cy.url().should('contain', '/login-successful')

Arguments

id (String, Array, Object)

A unique identifier that will be used to cache and restore a given session. In simple cases, a String value is sufficient. In order to simplify generation of more complex ids, if you pass an Array or Object, Cypress will generate an id for you by deterministically stringifying the value you pass in. For example, if you pass ['Jane', '123', 'admin'], an id of ["Jane","123","admin"] will be generated for you.

setup (Function)

This function is called whenever a session for the given id hasn't yet been cached, or if it's no longer valid (see the validate option). After setup runs, Cypress will preserve all cookies, sessionStorage, and localStorage, so that subsequent calls to cy.session() with the same id will bypass setup and just restore the cached session data.

The page and all active session data (cookies, localStorage and sessionStorage) across all domains are always cleared before setup runs.

options (Object)

OptionDefaultDescription
validateundefinedValidates the newly-created or restored session.

The validate function is run immediately after the setup function runs, and also every time cy.session() restores a cached session. If the validate function returns false, throws an exception, returns a Promise that resolves to false or rejects, or contains any failing Cypress command, the session will be considered invalid, and setup will be re-run. If validation fails immediately after setup runs, the test will fail.

The page is always cleared before validate runs.

Yields

  • cy.session() yields null.
  • cy.session() cannot be chained further.

Examples

Updating an existing login custom command

You can add session caching to your login custom command. Wrap the inside of the command with a call to cy.session().

Before

Cypress.Commands.add('login', (username, password) => {
  cy.request({
    method: 'POST',
    url: '/login',
    body: { username, password },
  }).then(({ body }) => {
    window.localStorage.setItem('authToken', body.token)
  })
})

After

Cypress.Commands.add('login', (username, password) => {
  cy.session([username, password], () => {
    cy.request({
      method: 'POST',
      url: '/login',
      body: { username, password },
    }).then(({ body }) => {
      window.localStorage.setItem('authToken', body.token)
    })
  })
})

With session validation

Cypress.Commands.add('login', (username, password) => {
  cy.session(
    [username, password],
    () => {
      cy.request({
        method: 'POST',
        url: '/login',
        body: { username, password },
      }).then(({ body }) => {
        window.localStorage.setItem('authToken', body.token)
      })
    },
    {
      validate() {
        cy.request('/whoami').its('status').should('eq', 200)
      },
    }
  )
})

Updating an existing login helper function

You can add session caching to a login helper function by wrapping the inside of the function with a call to cy.session().

Before

const login = (name, password) => {
  cy.visit('/login')
  cy.get('[data-test=name]').type(name)
  cy.get('[data-test=password]').type(password)
  cy.get('#submit').click()
  cy.url().should('contain', '/home')
}

After

const login = (name, password) => {
  cy.session([name, password], () => {
    cy.visit('/login')
    cy.get('[data-test=name]').type(name)
    cy.get('[data-test=password]').type(password)
    cy.get('#submit').click()
    cy.url().should('contain', '/home')
  })
}

With session validation

const login = (name, password) => {
  cy.session(
    [name, password],
    () => {
      cy.visit('/login')
      cy.get('[data-test=name]').type(name)
      cy.get('[data-test=password]').type(password)
      cy.get('#submit').click()
      cy.url().should('contain', '/home')
    },
    {
      validate() {
        cy.visit('/account-details')
      },
    }
  )
}

Asserting the session inside setup

Because cy.session() caches session data immediately after the setup function completes, it's a best practice to assert that the login process has completed at the end of session setup, to ensure that setup doesn't return before the session data is available to be cached.

Asserting sessions in this way can help simplify your login custom command, and reduce the need to conditionally cache sessions.

cy.session('user', () => {
  cy.visit('/login')
  cy.get('[data-test=name]').type(name)
  cy.get('[data-test=password]').type('p4ssw0rd123')
  cy.get('#login').click()
  // Wait for the post-login redirect to ensure that the
  // session actually exists to be cached
  cy.url().should('contain', '/login-successful')
})

Conditionally caching a session

Specs usually contain two types of tests where logins are necessary:

  1. Testing functionality that only exists for logged-in users
  2. Testing the act of logging in

For the first, caching sessions can be incredibly useful for reducing the amount of time it takes to run tests. However, for the second, it may be necessary to not cache the session, so that other things can be asserted about the login process.

In this case, it can be helpful to create a custom login command that will conditionally cache the session. However, wherever possible, it's better to assert the session inside setup.

Cypress.Commands.add('login', (name, { cacheSession = true } = {}) => {
  const login = () => {
    cy.visit('/login')
    cy.get('[data-test=name]').type(name)
    cy.get('[data-test=password]').type('p4ssw0rd123')
    cy.get('#login').click()
  }
  if (cacheSession) {
    cy.session(name, login)
  } else {
    login()
  }
})

// Testing the login flow itself
describe('login', () => {
  it('should redirect to the correct page after logging in', () => {
    cy.login('user', { cacheSession: false })
    cy.url().should('contain', '/login-successful')
  })
})

// Testing something that simply requires being logged in
describe('account details', () => {
  it('should have the correct document title', () => {
    cy.login('user')
    cy.visit('/account')
    cy.title().should('eq', 'User Account Details')
  })
})

Switching sessions inside tests

Because cy.session() clears the page and all active session data before running setup, you can use it to easily switch between sessions without first needing to log the previous user out. This allows tests to more accurately represent real-world scenarios and helps keep test run times short.

const login = (name) => {
  cy.session(name, () => {
    cy.request({
      method: 'POST',
      url: '/login',
      body: { name, password: 's3cr3t' },
    }).then(({ body }) => {
      window.localStorage.setItem('authToken', body.token)
    })
  })
}

it('should transfer money between users', () => {
  login('user')
  cy.mount(<AccountDetails />)
  cy.get('#amount').type('100.00')
  cy.get('#send-money').click()

  login('other-user')
  cy.mount(<AccountDetails />)
  cy.get('#balance').should('eq', '100.00')
})

Validating the session

If the validate function return false, throws an exception, returns a Promise that resolves to false or rejects, or contains any failing Cypress command, the session will be considered invalid, and setup will be re-run.

Here are a few validate examples:

// Attempt to visit a page that only a logged-in user can see
function validate() {
  cy.visit('/private')
}

// Make an API request that returns a 200 only when logged in
function validate() {
  cy.request('/api/user').its('status').should('eq', 200)
}

// Run any Cypress command that fails if the user is not logged in
function validate() {
  cy.visit('/account', { failOnStatusCode: false })
  cy.url().should('match', /^/account/)
}

// Or just return false if the session is invalid
function validate() {
  if (!MyApp.isSessionValid()) {
    return false
  }
}

Modifying session data before caching

If you want to change which session data is cached, you can modify cookies, localStorage, sessionStorage as-necessary in setup.

cy.session('user', () => {
  cy.visit('/login')
  cy.get('name').type('user')
  cy.get('password').type('p4ssw0rd123')
  cy.get('#submit').click()
  cy.url().should('contain', '/home')
  // Remove session data we don't want to cache
  cy.clearCookie('authId')
  cy.window().then((win) => {
    win.localStorage.removeItem('authToken')
  })
  // Add session data we do want to cache
  cy.setCookie('session_id', '189jd09sufh33aaiidhf99d09')
})

Multiple login commands

A more complex app may require multiple login commands, which may require multiple uses of cy.session(). However, because the id value is used as a unique identifier to save and restore sessions, it's very important that it's actually unique per session.

In the following example, if the resulting session data that loginByForm and loginByApi create is different in any way, it would be a mistake to specify [name, password] as the id for both, because there would be no way to distinguish between the sessions created by loginByForm("user", "p4ssw0rd") and loginByApi("user", "p4ssw0rd"). Instead, you can modify the id to differentiate its value between both login functions, so that each will always be cached uniquely.

const loginByForm = (name, password) => {
  cy.session(['loginByForm', name, password], () => {
    cy.visit('/login')
    cy.get('[data-test=name]').type(name)
    cy.get('[data-test=password]').type(password)
    cy.get('#submit').click()
    cy.url().should('contain', '/home')
  })
}

const loginByApi = (name, password) => {
  cy.session(['loginByApi', name, password], () => {
    cy.request({
      method: 'POST',
      url: '/api/login',
      body: { name, password },
    }).then(({ body }) => {
      window.localStorage.setItem('authToken', body.token)
    })
  })
}

Where to call cy.visit()
End-to-End Only

If you call cy.visit() immediately after cy.session() in your login function or custom command, it will always end up visiting the specified URL.

const login = (name) => {
  cy.session(name, () => {
    cy.visit('/login')
    cy.get('[data-test=name]').type(name)
    cy.get('[data-test=password]').type('s3cr3t')
    cy.get('#submit').click()
    cy.url().should('contain', '/home')
  })
  cy.visit('/home')
}

beforeEach(() => {
  login('user')
})

it('should test something on the /home page', () => {
  // assertions
})

it('should test something else on the /home page', () => {
  // assertions
})

However, any time you want to test something on a different page, you will need to call cy.visit() at the beginning of that test, which will then be effectively calling cy.visit() twice in a row, which will result in slightly slower tests.

// ...continued...

it('should test something on the /other page', () => {
  cy.visit('/other')
  // assertions
})

Tests will often be faster if you call cy.visit() only when necessary. This works especially well when organizing tests into suites and calling cy.visit() after logging in inside a beforeEach hook.

const login = (name) => {
  cy.session(name, () => {
    cy.visit('/login')
    cy.get('[data-test=name]').type(name)
    cy.get('[data-test=password]').type('s3cr3t')
    cy.get('#submit').click()
    cy.url().should('contain', '/home')
  })
  // no visit here
}

describe('home page tests', () => {
  beforeEach(() => {
    login('user')
    cy.visit('/home')
  })

  it('should test something on the /home page', () => {
    // assertions
  })

  it('should test something else on the /home page', () => {
    // assertions
  })
})

describe('other page tests', () => {
  beforeEach(() => {
    login('user')
    cy.visit('/other')
  })

  it('should test something on the /other page', () => {
    // assertions
  })
})

Where to call cy.mount()
Component Only

If you call cy.mount() immediately after cy.session() in your login function or custom command, it will always end up mounting the specified component.

const login = (name) => {
  cy.session(name, () => {
    cy.request({
      method: 'POST',
      url: '/login',
      body: { name, password: 's3cr3t' },
    }).then(({ body }) => {
      window.localStorage.setItem('authToken', body.token)
    })
  })
  cy.mount(<AccountDetails />)
}

beforeEach(() => {
  login('user')
})

it('should test something in the AccountDetails component', () => {
  // assertions
})

it('should test something else in the AccountDetails component', () => {
  // assertions
})

However, any time you want to test something in a different component, you will need to call cy.mount() at the beginning of that test, which will then be effectively calling cy.mount() twice in a row, which will result in slightly slower tests.

// ...continued...

it('should test something in the OtherDetails component', () => {
  cy.mount(<OtherDetails />)
  // assertions
})

Tests will often be faster if you call cy.mount() only when necessary. This works especially well when organizing tests into suites and calling cy.mount() after logging in inside a beforeEach hook.

const login = (name) => {
  cy.session(name, () => {
    cy.request({
      method: 'POST',
      url: '/login',
      body: { name, password: 's3cr3t' },
    }).then(({ body }) => {
      window.localStorage.setItem('authToken', body.token)
    })
  })
  // no mount here
}

describe('home page tests', () => {
  beforeEach(() => {
    login('user')
    cy.mount(<AccountDetails />)
  })

  it('should test something in the AccountDetails component', () => {
    // assertions
  })

  it('should test something else in the AccountDetails component', () => {
    // assertions
  })
})

describe('other page tests', () => {
  beforeEach(() => {
    login('user')
    cy.mount(<OtherDetails />)
  })

  it('should test something in the OtherDetails component', () => {
    // assertions
  })
})

Updating a login function that returns a value

If your custom login command returns a value that you use to assert in a test, wrapping it with cy.session() will break that test. However, it's usually easy to solve this by refactoring the login code to assert directly inside setup.

Before

Cypress.Commands.add('loginByApi', (username, password) => {
  return cy.request('POST', `/api/login`, {
    username,
    password,
  })
})

it('should return the correct value', () => {
  cy.loginByApi('user', 's3cr3t').then((response) => {
    expect(response.status).to.eq(200)
  })
})

After

Cypress.Commands.add('loginByApi', (username, password) => {
  cy.session([username, password], () => {
    cy.request('POST', `/api/login`, {
      username,
      password,
    }).then((response) => {
      expect(response.status).to.eq(200)
    })
  })
})

it('is a redundant test', () => {
  /* which you can now delete! */
})

Cross-domain sessions
End-to-End Only

It's possible to switch domains while caching sessions, just be sure to explicitly visit the domain in your login command before calling cy.session().

const login = (name) => {
  if (location.hostname !== 'example.com') {
    cy.visit('example.com')
  }
  cy.session(name, () => {
    cy.visit('/login')
    // etc
  }, {
    validate() {
      cy.request('/whoami', {
        headers: { 'Authorization' : localStorage.token }
        method: 'POST'
      }).its('status').should('equal', 200)
    }
  })
}

it('t1', ()=>{
  login('bob')
  // do things on example.com
})

it('t2', ()=>{
  cy.visit('anotherexample.com')
  // do things on anotherexample.com
})

it('t3', ()=>{
  login('bob')
  // do things on example.com
})

Notes

When the page and active session data are cleared

The page is cleared and all active session data (cookies, localStorage, and sessionStorage) across all domains are cleared automatically when cy.session() runs. This guarantees consistent behavior whether a session is being created or restored and allows you to switch sessions without first having to explicitly log out.

Current page clearedActive session data cleared
Before setup
Before validate
After cy.session()

Because calling cy.session() clears the current page in addition to restoring cached session data, cy.visit() or cy.mount() must always be explicitly called afterwards to ensure a page is visited or a component is mounted.

Session caching

Once created, a session for a given id is cached for the duration of the spec file. You can't modify a stored session after it has been cached, but you can always create a new session with a different id.

In order to reduce development time, when running the Test Runner in "open" mode, sessions will be cached between spec file runs as long as the setup function hasn't changed.

Explicitly clearing sessions

When running the Test Runner in "open" mode, you can explicitly clear all sessions and re-run the spec file by clicking the "Clear All Sessions" button in the Instrument Panel.

Sessions Instrument Panel

For debugging purposes, all sessions can be cleared with the Cypress.session.clearAllSavedSessions() method.

Where to call cy.session()

While it is possible to call cy.session() explicitly inside a test or beforeEach, it is considered a best practice to call cy.session() inside a login custom command or reusable wrapper function. See the Updating an existing login custom command and Updating an existing login helper function examples for more details.

Choosing the correct id to cache a session

In order for sessions to be cached uniquely, the id argument must be unique for each new session created.

// If your session setup code uses a string variable, pass in the
// string as the id
const login = (name) => {
  cy.session(name, () => {
    loginWith(name)
  })
}

// If your session setup code uses a single object, pass in the
// object as the id and it will be serialized into an identifier
const login = (params = {}) => {
  cy.session(params, () => {
    loginWith(params)
  })
}

// If your session setup code uses multiple variables, pass in an
// array of those variables and it will be serialized into an
// identifier
const login = (name, email, params = {}) => {
  cy.session([name, email, params], () => {
    loginWith(name, email, params)
  })
}

// If your session setup code uses external constants, they don't
// need to be included in the id, since they will never change
const API_KEY = 'I_AM_AN_API_KEY'
const login = (name, email) => {
  cy.session([name, email], () => {
    loginWith(name, email, API_KEY)
  })
}

Incorrect Usage

If you have custom login code that uses multiple parameters (in this example, a name, a token, and a password), in order to be able to log in many different users, but the id only included one of them (in this example, name):

const login = (name, token, password) => {
  cy.session(name, () => {
    cy.visit('/login')
    cy.get('[data-test=name]').type(name)
    cy.get('[data-test=token]').type(token)
    cy.get('[data-test=password]').type(password)
    cy.get('#submit').click()
  })
}

If you ran this, user1 would be logged in with token1 and p4ssw0rd, and a session would be created and cached using "user1" as the id.

login('user1', 'token1', 'p4ssw0rd')

Now let's say you wanted to try to log in the same user, but with a different token and/or password, and expect a different session to be created and cached. You run this, but because cy.session() is only being passed name as its id, it won't create a new session, but will instead load the saved session for "user1".

login('user1', 'different-token', 'p4ssw0rd')

In summary, you need to ensure that the id is created from all the parameters that are used inside the setup function that may change, otherwise id values may collide and create unexpected results.

Correct Usage

In this example, setting the id to [name, token, password] guarantees that calling login() with different name, token and password values will create and cache unique sessions.

const login = (name, token, password) => {
  cy.session([name, token, password], () => {
    cy.visit('/login')
    cy.get('[data-test=name]').type(name)
    cy.get('[data-test=token]').type(token)
    cy.get('[data-test=password]').type(password)
    cy.get('#submit').click()
  })
}

Common Questions

Why are all my Cypress commands failing after calling cy.session()?

Ensure that you're calling cy.visit() or cy.mount() after calling cy.session(), otherwise your tests will be running on a blank page.

Why am I seeing 401 errors after calling cy.session()?

It's possible that your session has been invalidated. Be sure to specify a validate function so that cy.session() can validate and recreate the session if necessary.

Command Log

The Instrument Panel

Whenever a session is created or restored inside a test, an extra instrument panel is displayed at the top of the test to give more information about the state of your sessions.

Clicking any session id in the panel will print that session's details to the console, and clicking the "Clear All Sessions" button will clear all saved sessions and re-run the spec file (see Session caching for more details).

Sessions Instrument Panel

The command log

Whenever cy.session() is called, the command log will show one of the following lines, which includes the status of the session call along with the session id value:

  • No saved session was found, so a new session was created and saved: New session (collapsed)

  • A saved session was found, and used: Saved session (collapsed)

  • A saved session was found, but the validate function failed, so the session was recreated and saved: Recreated session (collapsed)

Note that in cases where the validate function fails immediately after setup creates the session, the test will fail with an error.

Expanding the session group in the command log will show all of the commands that were run when creating and/or validating the session.

In this image, a saved session is restored, but when /personal is visited in the validate function, the app redirects to /signin, which invalidates the session. A new session is created by visiting /signin where the user is logged in, after which, validation succeeds, and the session is made active for the remainder of the test.

Recreated session (expanded)

Printing to the console

Clicking a session id in the Instrument Panel or clicking the first line under an expanded session group in the command log will print that session's details to the console. This information contains the id along with any cached session data, including cookies, localStorage and sessionStorage.

Session console output

See also