

Google-chrome, chrome, or google-chrome-stable The browser you are trying to use does not exist under one of the expectedīinary names, Cypress will not be able to find it. On Linux, Cypress scans your PATH for a number of different binary names. If this does not succeed, it will fall back to the Linux browser detection On Mac, Cypress attempts to find installed browsers by their bundle identifier. Will print information about the found browsers and their properties to theĬommand to see all locally detected browsers. You can see the full list of found browsers and their properties within theĪnother way to log what is found by Cypress is to run Cypress with theĭEBUG environment variable set to cypress:launcher. See 'Launching Browsers' for more information You can also supply the -browser command line argument to launch a browserįrom a known filesystem path to bypass browser auto detection. Using the `-browser` command line argument This will clear out all installed versions of Cypress that may be cached on your If you're having an issue during installation of Cypress, try removing the Specific released version of Chrome (dev, Canary and stable) for every platform. Sometimes causing a breaking change in your automated tests.
#Macvim 8.0 mvim as symlink not working update
The Chrome browser is evergreen - meaning it will automatically update itself, Run the same tests in both Electron andĬhrome, then compare the screenshots/videos. The problem might be isolated to the Electron browser.
#Macvim 8.0 mvim as symlink not working upgrade
Latest version, upgrade to the latest version.

We always recommend using the latest version of Cypress. This guide recommends some resources and steps to take to There are times when you will encounter errors or unexpected behavior withĬypress itself.
