Getting started with the Checkly CLI
The Checkly CLI gives you a JavaScript/TypeScript-native workflow for coding, testing and deploying synthetic
monitoring at scale, from your code base. The Checkly CLI comes with native @playwright/test
support. No lock-in,
just write standard *.spec.ts
files.
Starting your first project
Get started by installing the CLI using the following command which will guide you through the required steps to set up a fully working example.
npm create checkly
Now, login to your Checkly account or sign up for a new account right from the terminal.
npx checkly login
After this, let’s dry run the Checks in your new project against the global Checkly infrastructure.
npx checkly test
This should report the following output to your terminal
Running 4 checks in eu-west-1.
src/__checks__/api.check.ts
✔ Books API (222ms)
src/__checks__/home.check.ts
✔ Home page (24s)
✔ Login Check (5s)
src/__checks__/multi-step-spacex.check.ts
✔ SpaceX MS (4s)
4 passed, 4 total
Lastly, you deploy your Checks and related alert channels to Checkly, so we run your checks around the clock.
npx checkly deploy
You just created your entire synthetic monitoring setup with API and Playwright-based Browser Checks from your code base! Open up your Checkly dashboard and you should see your check, ready to start monitoring around the clock.
For a custom installation check out our installation docs
Integrating with CI/CD
After kicking the tires, you should delegate the testing and deploying of your checks to your CI/CD pipeline. Check our docs on setting up the Checkly CLI with your favourite CI/CD platform.
GitHub Actions
Run the Checkly CLI from GitHub Actions, export summary reports and integrate with mono repos
GitLab CI
Run the Checkly CLI from GitLab CI pipelines, using separate e2e-test and deploy jobs.
Jenkins
Run the Checkly CLI from a Jenkins pipeline using a Jenkinsfile.
Last updated on November 13, 2024. You can contribute to this documentation by editing this page on Github