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About

Ccache is a compiler cache. It speeds up recompilation by caching previous compilations and detecting when the same compilation is being done again. Ccache is free software, released under the GNU General Public License version 3 or later. See also the license page.

Latest release: version 4.9.1

Features

[1] Might have limited support — see supported platforms, compilers and languages.

Limitations

Why bother?

If you ever run make clean; make, you can probably benefit from ccache. It is common for developers to do a clean build of a project for a whole host of reasons, and this throws away all the information from your previous compilations. By using ccache, recompilation goes much faster.

Another reason to use ccache is that the same cache is used for builds in different directories. If you have several versions or branches of a software stored in different directories, many of the object files in a build directory can probably be taken from the cache even if they were compiled for another version or branch.

A third scenario is using ccache to speed up clean builds performed by servers or build farms that regularly check that the code is buildable.

You can also share the cache between users, which can be very useful on shared compilation servers.

Is it safe?

The most important aspect of a compiler cache is to always produce exactly the same output that the real compiler would produce. This includes providing exactly the same object files and exactly the same compiler warnings that would be produced if you use the real compiler. The only way you should be able to tell that you are using ccache is the speed.

Ccache of course tries to provide these guarantees. However:

If you experience any bugs or undocumented limitations, please report them.