Speed up Playwright tests by caching network requests on the filesystem.
- Automatically cache network requests during test execution
- Save responses to the filesystem in a clear, organized structure
- Modify cached responses dynamically during runtime
- Reuse cached data across multiple test runs
- Configure TTL to automatically refresh the cache and keep responses up-to-date
- View response bodies in a pretty formatted JSON
- No need for manual mocks management
- No mess with the HAR format — see motivation
Example of cache structure:
.network-cache
└── example.com
└── api-cats
└── GET
├── headers.json
└── body.json
- Installation
- Basic usage
- Examples
- Invalidate cache once in a hour
- Modify cached response
- Disable cache
- Force cache update
- Auto-cache request for all tests
- Additional match by HTTP status
- Additional match by request fields
- Split cache by test title
- Split cache by request URL params
- Split cache by request body
- Change base dir
- Multi-step cache in complex scenarios
- API
- Debug
- Motivation
- Alternatives
- Changelog
- Feedback
- License
Install from npm:
npm i -D playwright-network-cache
Extend Playwright's test
instance with cacheRoute
fixture:
// fixtures.ts
import { test as base } from '@playwright/test';
import { CacheRoute } from 'playwright-network-cache';
type Fixtures = {
cacheRoute: CacheRoute;
};
export const test = base.extend<Fixtures>({
cacheRoute: async ({ page }, use) => {
await use(new CacheRoute(page, { /* cache options */ }));
},
});
For example, to cache a GET request to https://example.com/api/cats
:
// test.ts
test('test', async ({ page, cacheRoute }) => {
await cacheRoute.GET('https://example.com/api/cats*');
// ... perform usual test actions
});
On the first run, the test will hit real API and store the response on the filesystem:
.network-cache
└── example.com
└── api-cats
└── GET
├── headers.json
└── body.json
All subsequent test runs will re-use cached response and execute much faster. You can invalidate that cache by manually deleting the files. Or provide ttlMinutes
option to hit real API once in some period of time.
You can call cacheRoute.GET|POST|PUT|PATCH|DELETE|ALL
to cache routes with respective HTTP method. Url can contain *
or **
to match url segments and query params, see url pattern.
To catch requests targeting your own app APIs, you can omit hostname in url:
test('test', async ({ page, cacheRoute }) => {
await cacheRoute.GET('/api/cats*');
// ...
});
Default cache path is:
{baseDir}/{hostname}/{pathname}/{httpMethod}/{extraDir}/{httpStatus}
See more examples below or check configuration options.
Click to expand
To keep response data up-to-date, you can automatically invalidate cache after configured time period. Set ttlMinutes
option to desired value in minutes:
test('test', async ({ page, cacheRoute }) => {
await cacheRoute.GET('/api/cats', {
ttlMinutes: 60 // hit real API once in a hour
});
// ...
});
Click to expand
You can modify the cached response by setting the modify
option to a custom function. In this function, you retrieve the response data, make your changes, and then call route.fulfill
with the updated data.
test('test', async ({ page, cacheRoute }) => {
await cacheRoute.GET('/api/cats', {
modify: async (route, response) => {
const json = await response.json();
json[0].name = 'Kitty-1';
await route.fulfill({ json });
}
});
// ...
});
For modifying JSON responses, there is a helper option modifyJSON
:
test('test', async ({ page, cacheRoute }) => {
await cacheRoute.GET('/api/cats', {
modifyJSON: (json) => {
json[0].name = 'Kitty';
},
});
// ...
});
modifyJSON
can modify response json in-place (like above) or return some result, which will overwrite the original data.
Click to expand
To disable cache in a single test, set cacheRoute.options.noCache
to true
:
test('test', async ({ page, cacheRoute }) => {
cacheRoute.options.noCache = true;
await cacheRoute.GET('/api/cats'); // <- this will not cache the request
// ...
});
To disable cache in all tests, set the noCache
option to true
in the fixture:
export const test = base.extend<{ cacheRoute: CacheRoute }>({
cacheRoute: async ({ page }, use, testInfo) => {
await use(new CacheRoute(page, {
noCache: true
}));
}
});
Note: When cache is disabled,
modify
functions still run
Click to expand
To force updating cache files for a single test, set cacheRoute.options.forceUpdate
to true
:
test('test', async ({ page, cacheRoute }) => {
cacheRoute.options.forceUpdate = true;
await cacheRoute.GET('/api/cats');
// ...
});
To force updating cache files for all tests, set the forceUpdate
option to true
in the fixture:
export const test = base.extend<{ cacheRoute: CacheRoute }>({
cacheRoute: async ({ page }, use, testInfo) => {
await use(new CacheRoute(page, {
forceUpdate: true
}));
}
});
Click to expand
You can setup caching of some request for all tests. Define cacheRoute
as auto fixture and setup cached routes:
export const test = base.extend<{ cacheRoute: CacheRoute }>({
cacheRoute: [async ({ page }, use) => {
const cacheRoute = new CacheRoute(page);
await cacheRoute.GET('/api/cats');
await use(cacheRoute);
}, { auto: true }]
});
Click to expand
By default, only responses with 2xx
status are considered valid and stored in cache.
To test error responses, provide additional httpStatus
option to cache route:
test('test', async ({ page, cacheRoute }) => {
await cacheRoute.GET('/api/cats', {
httpStatus: 500
});
// ...
});
Now error response will be cached in the following structure:
.network-cache
└── example.com
└── api-cats
└── GET
└── 500
├── headers.json
└── body.json
Click to expand
By default, requests are matched by:
HTTP method + URL pattern + (optionally) HTTP status
If you need to match by other request fields, provide custom function to match
option.
Example of matching GET requests with query param /api/cats?foo=bar
:
test('test', async ({ page, cacheRoute }) => {
await cacheRoute.GET('/api/cats*', {
match: req => new URL(req.url()).searchParams.get('foo') === 'bar'
});
// ...
});
Notice
*
in/api/cats*
to match query params
Click to expand
By default, cached responses are stored in a shared directory and re-used across tests.
If you want to isolate cache files for a particular test, utilize cacheRoute.options.extraDir
- an array of extra directories to be inserted into the cache path:
test('test', async ({ page, cacheRoute }) => {
cacheRoute.options.extraDir.push('custom-test');
await cacheRoute.GET('/api/cats');
// ...
});
Generated cache structure:
.network-cache
└── example.com
└── api-cats
└── GET
└── custom-test # <- extra directory
├── headers.json
└── body.json
You can freely transform extraDir
during the test and create nested directories if needed.
To automatically store cache files in a separate directories for each test,
you can set extraDir
option in a fixture setup:
export const test = base.extend<{ cacheRoute: CacheRoute }>({
cacheRoute: async ({ page }, use, testInfo) => {
await use(new CacheRoute(page, {
extraDir: testInfo.title // <- use testInfo.title as a unique extraDir
}));
}
});
After running two tests with titles custom test 1
and custom test 2
,
the generated structure is:
.network-cache
└── example.com
└── api-cats
└── GET
├── custom-test-1
│ ├── headers.json
│ └── body.json
└── custom-test-2
├── headers.json
└── body.json
Click to expand
To split cache by request query params, you can set extraDir
to a function. It accepts request
as a first argument and gives access to any prop of the request:
test('test', async ({ page, cacheRoute }) => {
await cacheRoute.GET('/api/cats*', {
extraDir: req => new URL(req.url()).searchParams.toString()
});
// ...
});
Notice
*
in/api/cats*
to match query params
Given the following requests:
GET /api/cats?foo=1
GET /api/cats?foo=2
Cache structure will be:
.network-cache
└── example.com
└── api-cats
└── GET
├── foo=1
│ ├── headers.json
│ └── body.json
└── foo=2
├── headers.json
└── body.json
Click to expand
To split cache by request body, you can set extraDir
to a function. It accepts request
as a first argument and gives access to any prop of the request:
test('test', async ({ page, cacheRoute }) => {
await cacheRoute.GET('/api/cats', {
extraDir: req => req.postDataJSON().email
});
// ...
});
Having the following requests:
POST -d '{"email":"[email protected]"}' /api/cats
POST -d '{"email":"[email protected]"}' /api/cats
Cache structure will be:
.network-cache
└── example.com
└── api-cats
└── POST
├── [email protected]
│ ├── headers.json
│ └── body.json
└── [email protected]
├── headers.json
└── body.json
Click to expand
By default, cache files are stored in .network-cache
base directory. To change this location, set baseDir
option:
export const test = base.extend<{ cacheRoute: CacheRoute }>({
cacheRoute: async ({ page }, use, testInfo) => {
await use(new CacheRoute(page, {
baseDir: `test/.network-cache`
}));
}
});
Moreover, you can set separate baseDir
for each Playwright project or each test:
export const test = base.extend<{ cacheRoute: CacheRoute }>({
cacheRoute: async ({ page }, use, testInfo) => {
await use(new CacheRoute(page, {
baseDir: `test/.network-cache/${testInfo.project.name}`
}));
}
});
Example of generated structure
.network-cache
├── project-one
│ └── example.com
│ └── api-cats
│ └── GET
│ ├── headers.json
│ └── body.json
└── project-two
└── example.com
└── api-cats
└── GET
├── headers.json
└── body.json
In that example, you get more isolation, but less cache re-use. It's a trade-off, as always 🤷♂️
Click to expand
For complex scenarios, you may want to have different cached responses for the same API. Example: adding a new todo item into the todo list.
With caching in mind, the plan for such test can be the following:
- Set cache for GET request to load original todo items
- Open the todo items page
- Set cache for POST request to create new todo item
- Set cache for GET request to load updated todo items
- Enter todo text and click "Add" button
- Assert todo list is updated
The implementation utilizes extraDir
option to dynamically change cache path in the test:
test('adding todo', async ({ page, cacheRoute }) => {
// set cache for GET request to load todo items
await cacheRoute.GET('/api/todo');
// ...load page
// CHECKPOINT: change cache dir, all subsequent requests will be cached in `after-add` dir
cacheRoute.options.extraDir.push('after-add');
// set cache for POST request to create a todo item
await cacheRoute.POST('/api/todo');
// ...add todo item
// ...reload page
// ...assert todo list is updated
});
Generated cache structure:
.network-cache
└── example.com
└── api-todo
├── GET
│ ├── headers.json
│ ├── body.json
│ └── after-add
│ ├── headers.json
│ └── body.json
└── POST
└── after-add
├── headers.json
└── body.json
You may still modify cached responses to match test expectation. But it's better to make it as replacement modifications, not changing the structure of the response body. Keeping response structure unchanged is more "end-2-end" approach.
The CacheRoute
class manages caching of routes for a Playwright Page
or BrowserContext
. It simplifies setting up HTTP method handlers for specific routes with caching options.
const cacheRoute = new CacheRoute(page, options?)
- page: The Playwright
Page
orBrowserContext
to manage routes. - options: Optional configuration to control caching behavior.
These methods enable caching for specific HTTP routes:
cacheRoute.GET(url, optionsOrFn?)
cacheRoute.POST(url, optionsOrFn?)
cacheRoute.PUT(url, optionsOrFn?)
cacheRoute.PATCH(url, optionsOrFn?)
cacheRoute.DELETE(url, optionsOrFn?)
cacheRoute.HEAD(url, optionsOrFn?)
cacheRoute.ALL(url, optionsOrFn?)
- url: Url pattern
- optionsOrFn: Caching options or a function to modify the response
You can provide options to CacheRoute
constructor or modify them dynamically via cacheRoute.options
. All values are optional.
string
Base directory for cache files.
string | string[] | ((req: Request) => string | string[])
Additional directory for cache files. Can be a string, array of strings, or a function that accepts a request and returns a string or an array of strings.
(req: Request) => boolean
Function to add additional matching logic for requests. Returns true
to cache, or false
to skip.
number
Cache responses with the specified HTTP status code.
number
Time to live for cached responses, in minutes.
RequestOverrides | ((req: Request) => RequestOverrides)
Object or function that provides request overrides (e.g., headers, body) when making real calls.
(route: Route, response: APIResponse) => Promise<unknown>
Function to modify the response before caching. This is called for each route.
(json: any) => any
Helper function to modify JSON responses before caching.
boolean
If true
, disables caching and always makes requests to the server.
boolean
If true
, always requests from the server and updates the cached files.
(ctx: BuildCacheDirArg) => string[]
Function to build a custom cache directory, providing fine-grained control over the cache file location. Default implementation.
To debug caching, run Playwright with the following DEBUG
environment variable:
DEBUG=playwright-network-cache npx playwright test
Playwright has built-in support for HAR format to record and replay network requests. But when you need more fine-grained control of network, it becomes messy. Check out these issues where people struggle with HAR:
This library intentionally does not use HAR. Instead, it generates file-based cache structure, giving you full control of what and how is cached.
Alternatively, you can check the following packages:
- playwright-intercept - uses Cypress-influenced API
- playwright-advanced-har - uses HAR format
- playwright-request-mocker uses HAR format, looks abandoned
- handle requests after page is closed
- new api released (breaking)
Feel free to share your feedback and suggestions in issues.