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Binary Caching

Most ports in the vcpkg public registry are built from source. By building from source, vcpkg can ensure maximum compatibility by using the same environment, build-tools, compiler flags, linker flags, and other configurations that you use in your project to build your dependencies.

When binary caching is enabled, after each package is built from source, vcpkg creates a binary package. Binary packages hold the build-output of a package: binaries, build system integration files, usage documentation, license, and other files. If a later run requires a cached package to be installed, vcpkg determines whether to restore the cached binary package or trigger a build from source.

This way, binary caching reduces the impact of the following downsides of building from source:

  • Duplicated effort: By reducing the number of times a package needs to be built from source.
  • Long build times: Restoring a binary package is usually a very fast operation that takes seconds to complete.

Binary caching is especially effective in CI scenarios where ephemeral containers or build agents force vcpkg to work with a clean-slate each time. By using a cloud-based binary cache (such as GitHub Packages or Azure DevOps Artifacts you can persist binary packages between runs to ensure maximum speed since rebuilds only happen when you make changes to your dependencies or configuration.

Tip

It is recommended to create a binary cache with read and write permissions for every continuous integration pipeline or workflow. Individual developers should have read-only access to the CI-produced binary cache.

Binary caches can be hosted in a variety of environments. The most basic form of a binary cache is a folder on the local machine or a network file share. Caches can also be stored in any NuGet feed (such as GitHub Packages or Azure DevOps Artifacts), Azure Blob Storage, Google Cloud Storage, and many other services.

If your CI provider offers a native "caching" function, it is recommended to use both vcpkg binary caching and the native method for the most performant results.

Reusing a binary cache for development

While not recommended as a binary distribution mechanism, binary caching can be used to reuse build output from multiple systems. For example, developers can use the binary packages produced by a CI run on their local machines. For other methods to reuse and integrate vcpkg-produced binaries, look at vcpkg export.

For example, you can configure a NuGet feed hosted on Azure Artifacts to accept binary packages built from your CI pipeline and reuse those in a development environment.

You will need to configure your Azure Artifacts feed to grant read and write permissions to your Azure DevOps pipeline as well as granting read-only permissions for hosts in your development team.

Default binary cache

Binary caching is enabled by default with a files provider at the first valid location of:

  • Windows
  1. %VCPKG_DEFAULT_BINARY_CACHE%
  2. %LOCALAPPDATA%\vcpkg\archives
  3. %APPDATA%\vcpkg\archives
  • Non-Windows
  1. $VCPKG_DEFAULT_BINARY_CACHE
  2. $XDG_CACHE_HOME/vcpkg/archives
  3. $HOME/.cache/vcpkg/archives

Reduced in-tool help is available via vcpkg help binarycaching.

Binary Caching only covers binaries you build. To cache source files and prebuilt tools, see Asset Caching.

Next steps

Read the tutorials to learn how to set up a binary cache and the configuration syntax reference: