Using the file system
On this page
Checkly creates a sandboxed directory for each check run. During the run you can use this directory to save or upload artifacts. This directory is destroyed after a check is finished.
Due to this sandbox, certain Node.js variables are adapted to our platform and have values we set for them:
__dirname
will have the value of/
__filename
will have the value of/script.js
The values these variables correspond to might change in the future. Therefore, we recommend using __dirname
, like path.join(__dirname, 'example.png')
or relative paths, like ./example.png
or just example.png
, while using the file system-related operation. You can find an example code snippet below:
import path from 'path'
import fs from 'fs'
import { test } from '@playwright/test'
test('save file in directory', async ({ page }) => {
const image = await page.goto('https://picsum.photos/200/300')
const imagePath = path.join(__dirname, 'example.jpg')
const buffer = await image.body()
fs.writeFileSync(imagePath, buffer)
const readFileFromDisk = fs.readFileSync(imagePath)
})
const path = require('path')
const fs = require('fs')
const { test } = require('@playwright/test')
test('save file in directory', async ({ page }) => {
const image = await page.goto('https://picsum.photos/200/300')
const imagePath = path.join(__dirname, 'example.jpg')
const buffer = await image.body()
fs.writeFileSync(imagePath, buffer)
const readFileFromDisk = fs.readFileSync(imagePath)
})
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