| CCACHE(1) | CCACHE(1) |
NAME
ccache - a fast C/C++ compiler cache
SYNOPSIS
ccache [ccache options] ccache [KEY=VALUE ...] compiler [compiler options] compiler [compiler options]
The first form takes options described in COMMAND LINE OPTIONS below. The second form invokes the compiler, optionally using configuration options as KEY=VALUE arguments. In the third form, ccache is masquerading as the compiler as described in RUN MODES.
DESCRIPTION
Ccache is a compiler cache that speeds up recompilation by storing the results of previous compilations and reusing them when the same compilation is performed again.
Ccache is designed to produce exactly the same compiler output as a normal compilation. The only difference you should notice is faster build times. Any known exceptions to this behavior are documented in the CAVEATS section. If you find a case where ccache produces different output than expected, please report it to us.
RUN MODES
There are two ways to use ccache to cache compilations:
ccache gcc -c example.c
cp ccache /usr/local/bin/ ln -s ccache /usr/local/bin/gcc ln -s ccache /usr/local/bin/g++
On systems that don’t support symbolic links, you can copy ccache instead:
cp ccache /usr/local/bin/gcc cp ccache /usr/local/bin/g++
This works as long as the directory containing the symbolic links or ccache copies appears before the real compiler directory (typically /usr/bin) in your PATH.
Warning
The masquerade method works well but may conflict with other tools
that
use the same technique. See USING CCACHE WITH OTHER COMPILER WRAPPERS
for more information.
COMMAND LINE OPTIONS
These command line options apply only when you invoke ccache directly as “ccache”. When ccache masquerades as a compiler (as described in the previous section), you should use the normal compiler options and refer to your compiler’s documentation.
Common options
-c, --cleanup
-C, --clear
--config-path PATH
-d, --dir PATH
--evict-namespace NAMESPACE
--evict-older-than AGE
-h, --help
-F NUM, --max-files NUM
-M SIZE, --max-size SIZE
-X LEVEL, --recompress LEVEL
-o KEY=VALUE, --set-config KEY=VALUE
-x, --show-compression
-p, --show-config
--show-log-stats
-s, --show-stats
--stop-storage-helpers
--threads THREADS
-v, --verbose
-V, --version
-z, --zero-stats
Options for remote file-based storage
--trim-dir PATH
Warning
Don’t use this option to trim the local cache. To trim the
local cache
directory to a certain size, use
CCACHE_MAXSIZE=SIZE ccache
-c.
--trim-max-size SIZE
--trim-method METHOD
atime
mtime
--trim-recompress LEVEL
Options for scripting or debugging
--checksum-file PATH
--extract-result PATH
--format FORMAT
tab
json
-k KEY, --get-config KEY
--hash-file PATH
--inspect PATH
--print-log-stats
--print-stats
--print-version
Extra options
When run as a compiler, ccache usually just takes the same command line options as the compiler you are using. The only exception to this is the option --ccache-skip. That option can be used to tell ccache to avoid interpreting the next option in any way and to pass it along to the compiler as-is.
Note
--ccache-skip currently only tells ccache
not to interpret the next
option as a special compiler option — the option will still be included
in the direct mode hash.
The reason this can be important is that ccache does need to parse the command line and determine what is an input filename and what is a compiler option, as it needs the input filename to determine the name of the resulting object file (among other things). The heuristic ccache uses when parsing the command line is that any argument that exists as a file is treated as an input file name. By using --ccache-skip you can force an option to not be treated as an input file name and instead be passed along to the compiler as a command line option.
Another case where --ccache-skip can be useful is if ccache interprets an option specially but shouldn’t, since the option has another meaning for your compiler than what ccache thinks.
See also ignore_options.
CONFIGURATION
You can customize ccache’s behavior using configuration files and environment variables. Configuration options are processed in the following order of priority (highest first):
ccache debug=true compiler_check="%compiler% --version" gcc -c example.c
Exception: If the environment variable CCACHE_CONFIGPATH is set, it specifies the only configuration file that will be read (environment variables and command line settings still apply).
Cache-specific configuration file
The location of the cache-specific configuration file is determined like this on non-Windows systems:
On Windows, this is the method used to find the configuration file:
See also the cache_dir configuration option for how the cache directory location is determined.
Directory-specific configuration file
Ccache searches for a ccache.conf file (separate from the cache-specific configuration file described above) in the current working directory or any parent directory. The found file must be owned by the effective user and must not be world-writable; otherwise ccache will abort with an error. The search stops when reaching:
By default, the file cannot set "unsafe options", i.e. those that affect which commands to execute, which files to write (except cache entries) and which remote storage to use. It is possible to allow unsafe options by adding an entry to safe_dirs.
Configuration value syntax
All configuration values support expansion of environment variables. The syntax is similar to POSIX shell syntax: $VAR or ${VAR}. Both variants will expand to the value of the environment variable VAR.
Two consecutive dollar signs ($$) will expand to a single dollar sign ($).
Configuration file syntax
Configuration files are in a simple “key = value” format, one option per line. Lines starting with a hash sign are comments. Blank lines are ignored, as is whitespace surrounding keys and values. Example:
# Set maximum cache size to 10 GB: max_size = 10GB
Multi-line values
Values can span multiple lines using indentation-based continuation. Lines that start with whitespace (spaces or tabs) are treated as continuation lines and are joined to the previous value with a single space. Comments and blank lines within a multi-line value are skipped. For example:
ignore_options = -Wall -Wextra # This is a comment within the value -pedantic # This ends the multi-line value compiler = gcc
This is equivalent to:
ignore_options = -Wall -Wextra -pedantic compiler = gcc
Multi-line values are particularly useful for options that accept multiple items.
Boolean values
Some configuration options are boolean values (i.e. truth values). In a configuration file, such values must be set to the string true or false. For the corresponding environment variables, the semantics are a bit different:
Each boolean environment variable also has a negated form starting with CCACHE_NO. For example, CCACHE_COMPRESS can be set to force compression and CCACHE_NOCOMPRESS can be set to force no compression.
Configuration options
Below is a list of available configuration options. The corresponding environment variable name is indicated in parentheses after each configuration option key.
Options that define a list of paths have their entries separated by ; on Windows and : on other systems.
absolute_paths_in_stderr (CCACHE_ABSSTDERR)
base_dir (CCACHE_BASEDIR)
This enables cache sharing between compilations in different directories, even when the project uses absolute paths. See COMPILING IN DIFFERENT DIRECTORIES_ for more details. When empty (the default), no path rewriting occurs.
Avoid using / as the base directory as this will also rewrite system header paths, which is usually counterproductive.
Example scenario: Alice works in /home/alice/project1/build and compiles like this:
ccache gcc -I/usr/include/example -I/home/alice/project2/include -c /home/alice/project1/src/example.c
Here is what ccache will actually execute for different base_dir settings:
# Current working directory: /home/alice/project1/build # With base_dir = /: gcc -I../../../../usr/include/example -I../../project2/include -c ../src/example.c # With base_dir = /home or /home/alice: gcc -I/usr/include/example -I../../project2/include -c ../src/example.c # With base_dir = /home/alice/project1 or /home/alice/project1/src: gcc -I/usr/include/example -I/home/alice/project2/include -c ../src/example.c
If Bob stores the same projects in /home/bob/stuff and both users set base_dir to /home or /home/$USER, they will share cache hits because the rewritten command lines will be identical:
# Current working directory: /home/bob/stuff/project1/build # With base_dir = /home or /home/bob: gcc -I/usr/include/example -I../../project2/include -c ../src/example.c
Without base_dir there will be a cache miss since the absolute paths will differ. With base_dir set to / there will be a cache miss since the relative path to /usr/include/example will be different. With base_dir set to /home/bob/stuff/project1 there will a cache miss since the path to project2 will be a different absolute path.
Warning
Rewriting absolute paths to relative is kind of a brittle hack. It
works OK in many cases, but there might be cases where things break. One known
issue is that absolute paths are not reproduced in dependency files, which
can mess up dependency detection in tools like Make and Ninja. If possible,
use relative paths in the first place instead of using base_dir.
cache_dir (CCACHE_DIR)
On non-Windows systems, the default is $HOME/.ccache if such a directory exists, otherwise $XDG_CACHE_HOME/ccache if XDG_CACHE_HOME is set, otherwise $HOME/Library/Caches/ccache (macOS) or $HOME/.cache/ccache (other systems).
On Windows, the default is %USERPROFILE%\.ccache if such a directory exists, otherwise %LOCALAPPDATA%\ccache.
Warning
Previous ccache versions defaulted to storing the cache in
%APPDATA%\ccache on Windows. This can result in large
network file transfers of the cache in domain environments and similar
problems. Please check this directory for cache directories and either
delete them or the whole directory, or move them to the
%LOCALAPPDATA%\ccache directory.
See also Cache-specific configuration file.
ceiling_dirs (CCACHE_CEILING_DIRS)
ceiling_markers (CCACHE_CEILING_MARKERS)
compiler (CCACHE_COMPILER or (deprecated) CCACHE_CC)
compiler_check (CCACHE_COMPILERCHECK)
content
mtime
none
string:value
a command string
%compiler% -v
%compiler% -dumpmachine; %compiler% -dumpversion
You should make sure that the specified command is as fast as possible since it will be run once for each ccache invocation.
Identifying the compiler using a command is useful if you want to avoid cache misses when the compiler has been rebuilt but not changed.
Another case is when the compiler (as seen by ccache) actually isn’t the real compiler but another compiler wrapper — in that case, the default mtime method will hash the mtime and size of the other compiler wrapper, which means that ccache won’t be able to detect a compiler upgrade. Using a suitable command to identify the compiler is thus safer, but it’s also slower, so you should consider continue using the mtime method in combination with the prefix_command option if possible. See USING CCACHE WITH OTHER COMPILER WRAPPERS.
compiler_type (CCACHE_COMPILERTYPE)
auto
clang
clang-cl
gcc
icl
icx
icx-cl
msvc
nvcc
other
compression (CCACHE_COMPRESS or CCACHE_NOCOMPRESS, see Boolean values above)
Compression is done using the Zstandard algorithm. The algorithm is fast enough that there should be little reason to turn off compression to gain performance. One exception is if the cache is located on a compressed file system, in which case the compression performed by ccache of course is redundant.
Compression will be disabled if file cloning (the file_clone option) or hard linking (the hard_link option) is enabled.
compression_level (CCACHE_COMPRESSLEVEL)
Semantics of compression_level:
> 0
< 0
0 (default)
See the Zstandard documentation https://facebook.github.io/zstd/ for more information.
cpp_extension (CCACHE_EXTENSION)
debug (CCACHE_DEBUG or CCACHE_NODEBUG, see Boolean values above)
debug_dir (CCACHE_DEBUGDIR)
For example, if debug_dir is set to /example, the current working directory is /home/user and the object file is build/output.o then the debug log will be written to /example/home/user/build/output.o.ccache-log. See also CACHE DEBUGGING.
debug_level (CCACHE_DEBUGLEVEL)
depend_mode (CCACHE_DEPEND or CCACHE_NODEPEND, see Boolean values above)
direct_mode (CCACHE_DIRECT or CCACHE_NODIRECT, see Boolean values above)
disable (CCACHE_DISABLE or CCACHE_NODISABLE, see Boolean values above)
It is also possible to disable ccache for a specific source code file by adding the string ccache:disable in a comment in the first 4096 bytes of the file.
extra_files_to_hash (CCACHE_EXTRAFILES)
file_clone (CCACHE_FILECLONE or CCACHE_NOFILECLONE, see Boolean values above)
Files stored by cloning cannot be compressed, so the cache size will likely be significantly larger if this option is enabled. However, performance may be improved depending on the use case.
Unlike the hard_link option, file_clone is completely safe to use, but not all file systems support the feature. For such file systems, ccache will fall back to use plain copying (or hard links if hard_link is enabled).
hard_link (CCACHE_HARDLINK or CCACHE_NOHARDLINK, see Boolean values above)
Files stored via hard links cannot be compressed, so the cache size will likely be significantly larger if this option is enabled. However, performance may be improved depending on the use case.
Warning
Do not enable this option unless you are aware of these caveats:
hash_dir (CCACHE_HASHDIR or CCACHE_NOHASHDIR, see Boolean values above)
The reason for including the CWD in the hash by default is to prevent a problem with the storage of the current working directory in the debug info of an object file, which can lead ccache to return a cached object file that has the working directory in the debug info set incorrectly.
You can disable this option to get cache hits when compiling the same source code in different directories if you don’t mind that CWD in the debug info might be incorrect.
ignore_headers_in_manifest (CCACHE_IGNOREHEADERS)
ignore_options (CCACHE_IGNOREOPTIONS)
inode_cache (CCACHE_INODECACHE or CCACHE_NOINODECACHE, see Boolean values above)
Note
Support for the inode cache feature on Windows is experimental. On
Windows
the default is false.
keep_comments_cpp (CCACHE_COMMENTS or CCACHE_NOCOMMENTS, see Boolean values above)
libexec_dirs (CCACHE_LIBEXEC_DIRS)
log_file (CCACHE_LOGFILE)
If set to syslog, ccache will log using syslog() instead of to a file. If you use rsyslogd, you can add something like this to /etc/rsyslog.conf or a file in /etc/rsyslog.d:
# log ccache to file :programname, isequal, "ccache" /var/log/ccache # remove from syslog & ~
max_files (CCACHE_MAXFILES)
max_size (CCACHE_MAXSIZE)
msvc_dep_prefix (CCACHE_MSVC_DEP_PREFIX)
msvc_utf8 (CCACHE_MSVC_UTF8)
namespace (CCACHE_NAMESPACE)
For instance, if you use the same local cache for several disparate projects, you can use a unique namespace string for each one. This allows you to remove cache entries that belong to a certain project if you stop working with that project.
path (CCACHE_PATH)
pch_external_checksum (CCACHE_PCH_EXTSUM or CCACHE_NOPCH_EXTSUM, see Boolean values above)
prefix_command (CCACHE_PREFIX)
prefix_command_cpp (CCACHE_PREFIX_CPP)
read_only (CCACHE_READONLY or CCACHE_NOREADONLY, see Boolean values above)
If you are using this because your ccache directory is read-only, you need to set temporary_dir since ccache will fail to create temporary files otherwise. You may also want to set stats to false make ccache not even try to update stats files.
read_only_direct (CCACHE_READONLY_DIRECT or CCACHE_NOREADONLY_DIRECT, see Boolean values above)
recache (CCACHE_RECACHE or CCACHE_NORECACHE, see Boolean values above)
remote_only (CCACHE_REMOTE_ONLY or CCACHE_NOREMOTE_ONLY, see Boolean values above)
remote_storage (CCACHE_REMOTE_STORAGE)
Examples:
remote_storage = file:/shared/nfs/directory+` remote_storage = file:///shared/nfs/one read-only file:///shared/nfs/two remote_storage = file:///Z:/example/windows/folder remote_storage = http://example.com/cache remote_storage = redis://example.com
Note
In previous ccache versions this option was called
secondary_storage
(CCACHE_SECONDARY_STORAGE), which can still be used as an alias.
reshare (CCACHE_RESHARE or CCACHE_NORESHARE, see Boolean values above)
response_file_format (CCACHE_RESPONSE_FILE_FORMAT)
auto
posix
windows
safe_dirs (CCACHE_SAFE_DIRS)
Allowed list values: * matches any directory. An absolute path ending with /* matches any subdirectory (at any depth) under that path. An absolute path not ending in /* matches only that directory.
sloppiness (CCACHE_SLOPPINESS)
clang_index_store
Effect: Ignores the -index-store-path and -index-unit-output-path options when hashing.
Trade-off: Index won’t update correctly on cache hits.
file_stat_matches
Effect: Uses file timestamps instead of content for cache validation.
Trade-off: May miss content changes with identical timestamps.
file_stat_matches_ctime
Effect: Ignores status change time when file_stat_matches is enabled.
Trade-off: May miss some file system changes.
gcno_cwd
Effect: Ignores current directory when creating .gcno files (-ftest-coverage). Also disables hashing of the current working directory if -fprofile-abs-path is used.
Trade-off: Directory information in coverage files may be incorrect.
Note
No effect with --coverage (it implies -fprofile-arcs).
incbin
Effect: Allows caching files with .incbin directives.
Trade-off: Won’t detect changes to included binary files.
include_file_ctime
Effect: Ignores file status change time when checking for recent modifications.
Trade-off: May miss recent changes to source files.
include_file_mtime
Effect: Ignores file modification time when checking for recent changes.
Trade-off: May miss recent modifications to source files.
ivfsoverlay
Effect: Ignores -ivfsoverlay virtual filesystem option.
Trade-off: May not detect VFS-related changes.
locale
Effect: Ignores locale environment variables (LANG, LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE, LC_MESSAGES).
Trade-off: Compiler warning messages may vary between cached and fresh builds.
modules
Effect: Allows caching when C++ modules are used.
Trade-off: May not detect changes in module internal state.
See C++ MODULES for details.
pch_defines
Effect: Relaxes checking of #define directives in precompiled headers.
Trade-off: May not detect some macro definition changes.
See PRECOMPILED HEADERS for details.
random_seed
Effect: Ignores random seed values in compilation hash.
Trade-off: Builds may not be fully reproducible.
system_headers
Effect: Only tracks non-system headers in direct mode.
Trade-off: Won’t detect system header changes that affect compilation.
Limitations: Only supported for GCC-like compilers (not MSVC). System headers are still checked in preprocessor mode.
See also ignore_headers_in_manifest.
time_macros
Effect: Ignores __DATE__, __TIME__, and __TIMESTAMP__ in source.
Trade-off: Time values in output will be from cached compilation.
stats (CCACHE_STATS or CCACHE_NOSTATS, see Boolean values above)
stats_log (CCACHE_STATSLOG)
Note
Lines in the stats log starting with a hash sign (#) are comments.
temporary_dir (CCACHE_TEMPDIR)
Note
In previous versions of ccache, CCACHE_TEMPDIR had to be on
the same
filesystem as the CCACHE_DIR path, but this
requirement has been relaxed.
umask (CCACHE_UMASK)
Disabling ccache
To disable ccache completely for all invocations, set disable = true (CCACHE_DISABLE=1). You can also disable ccache for a certain source code file by adding the string ccache:disable in a comment in the first 4096 bytes of the file. In the latter case the Ccache disabled statistics counter will be increased.
REMOTE STORAGE BACKENDS
The remote_storage option lets you configure ccache to use one or several remote storage backends. By default, the local cache directory located in cache_dir will be queried first and remote storage second, but remote_only can be set to true to disable local storage. Note that cache statistics counters will still be kept in the local cache directory — remote storage backends only store compilation results and manifests.
Storage helper process
ccache can spawn a long-lived local storage helper process (installed separately) to handle communication with the remote storage. Storage helpers keep remote connections up for efficiency and terminate after a while on inactivity.
The storage helper program is called ccache-storage-<scheme>, where <scheme> is the scheme part of a URL, e.g. https. The program can be placed in these locations (in priority order):
If the program is not found, ccache falls back to one of the builtin backends if available, otherwise ccache exits with an error.
Configuration syntax
A remote storage backend is specified by a URL and can be followed by a whitespace-separated list of properties (key=value) and custom attributes (@key=value). A missing =value is shorthand for setting the value to true. Values must be percent-encoded https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percent-encoding if they contain %, | or whitespace characters. For compatibility with older ccache versions, | characters are treated as spaces.
Properties
Timeouts can be specified with an ms (milliseconds), s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours) or d (days) suffix.
Examples:
Custom attributes
Custom attributes on the form @key=value are specific to each storage helper implementation. See the backend’s documentation for which attributes are available. Examples:
Storage interaction
The table below describes the interaction between local and remote storage on cache hits and misses if remote_only is false (which is the default):
| Local storage | Remote storage | What happens |
| miss | miss | Compile, write to local, write to remote[1] |
| miss | hit | Read from remote, write to local |
| hit | - | Read from local, don’t write to remote[2] |
[1] Unless remote storage has property
read-only=true.
[2] Unless local storage is set to share its cache hits with the
reshare option.
If remote_only is true:
| Local storage | Remote storage | What happens |
| - | miss | Compile, write to remote, don’t write to local |
| - | hit | Read from remote, don’t write to local |
File storage backend
URL format: file:DIRECTORY or file://[HOST]DIRECTORY
This backend stores data as separate files in a directory structure below DIRECTORY, similar (but not identical) to the local cache storage. A typical use case for this backend would be sharing a cache on an NFS directory. DIRECTORY must start with a slash. HOST can be the empty string or localhost. On Windows, HOST can also be the name of a server hosting a shared folder.
Important
ccache will not perform any cleanup of the storage — that
has to be
done by other means, for instance by running ccache
--trim-dir periodically.
Examples:
Optional attributes:
The default is subdirs.
CRSH storage backend
URL format: crsh:IPC_ENDPOINT
This backend connects to an already running ccache storage helper (CRSH) process listening on IPC_ENDPOINT (Unix socket path or Windows named pipe). The use case for this is mainly when developing or debugging a storage helper, or in special setups where the helper program is started and managed externally.
Examples:
HTTP storage backend
Warning
Built-in support for the HTTP protocol will likely be removed in a
future ccache release.
URL format: http://HOST[:PORT][/PATH]
This backend stores data in an HTTP-compatible server. The required HTTP methods are GET, PUT and DELETE.
Important
ccache will not perform any cleanup of the storage — that
has to be
done by other means, for instance by running ccache
--trim-dir periodically.
Note
HTTPS is not supported.
Tip
See
How to set up HTTP storage
https://ccache.dev/howto/http-storage.html for hints on how to set
up an HTTP server for use with ccache.
Examples:
Optional attributes:
Note
You may have to disable verification of action cache values in the
server
for this to work since ccache entries are not valid action result metadata
values.
The default is subdirs.
Redis storage backend
Warning
Built-in support for the Redis protocol will likely be removed in
a
future ccache release.
URL formats:
redis://[[USERNAME:]PASSWORD@]HOST[:PORT][/DBNUMBER]
redis+unix:SOCKET_PATH[?db=DBNUMBER]
redis+unix://[[USERNAME:]PASSWORD@localhost]SOCKET_PATH[?db=DBNUMBER]
This backend stores data in a Redis https://redis.io (or Redis-compatible) server. There are implementations for both memory-based and disk-based storage. PORT defaults to 6379 and DBNUMBER defaults to 0.
Note
ccache will not perform any cleanup of the Redis storage, but you
can
configure LRU eviction https://redis.io/topics/lru-cache.
Tip
See
How to set up Redis https://ccache.dev/howto/redis-storage.html
storage" for hints on setting up a Redis server for use with
ccache.
Tip
You can set up a cluster of Redis servers using the
shards property
described in REMOTE STORAGE BACKENDS.
Examples:
CACHE SIZE MANAGEMENT
By default, ccache has a 5 GB limit on the total size of files in the cache and no limit on the number of files. You can set different limits using the command line options -M/--max-size and -F/--max-files. Use the -s/--show-stats option to see the cache size and the currently configured limits (in addition to other various statistics).
Cleanup can be triggered in two different ways: automatic and manual.
Automatic cleanup
After a new compilation result has been stored in the local cache, ccache will trigger an automatic cleanup if max_size or max_files is exceeded. The cleanup removes cache entries in approximate LRU (least recently used) order based on the modification time (mtime) of files in the cache. For this reason, ccache updates mtime of the cache files read on a cache hit to mark them as recently used.
For performance reasons only entries in a subset of the cache are considered when automatic cleanup is triggered, so the oldest entries aren’t always removed first but the overall behavior approximates LRU over time.
Manual cleanup
Run ccache --cleanup to force cleanup of the whole cache. This will recalculate the cache size information and make sure that the cache size does not exceed max_size and max_files.
Note that there is no guarantee that only the oldest entries are evicted, as discussed in Automatic cleanup above. To evict based on age use ccache --evict-older-than AGE.
CACHE COMPRESSION
By default, ccache compresses all cached data using the Zstandard http://zstd.net (zstd) algorithm at compression level 1. This algorithm is fast enough that compression rarely impacts performance. You might want to disable compression only if your cache is stored on an already-compressed filesystem, where ccache’s compression would be redundant.
For configuration details, see compression and compression_level.
Use ccache --show-compression to display compression information. Example output:
Total data: 14.8 GB (16.0 GB disk blocks) Compressed data: 11.3 GB (30.6% of original size) Original size: 36.9 GB Compression ratio: 3.267 x (69.4% space savings) Incompressible data: 3.5 GB
Notes:
You can recompress cached data to different compression levels using ccache --recompress. Only files with different compression levels than the target will be recompressed.
CACHE STATISTICS
ccache --show-stats shows a summary of statistics, including cache size, cleanups (number of performed cleanups, either implicitly due to a cache size limit being reached or due to explicit ccache -c calls), overall hit rate, hit rate for direct/preprocessed modes and hit rate for local and remote storage.
The statistics counters are not used by ccache itself during builds. This means that you can safely reset them at any time using ccache --zero-stats without affecting the build process. For example, you might reset them before a build so that ccache --show-stats will only summarize the results from that specific build. Alternatively, you can set stats_log before starting the build and then run ccache --show-log-stats afterward to view build-specific statistics. This approach allows the statistics counters to continue tracking the entire lifetime of the cache while still giving you detailed information for individual builds. Another advantage of stats_log is that it collects statistics without interference from other concurrent builds that access the same cache.
The summary also includes counters called “Errors” and “Uncacheable”, which are sums of more detailed counters. To see those detailed counters, use the -v/--verbose flag. The verbose mode can show the following counters:
| Counter | Description |
| Autoconf compile/link | Uncacheable compilation or linking by an Autoconf test. |
| Bad compiler arguments | Malformed compiler argument, e.g. missing a value for a compiler option that requires an argument or failure to read a file specified by a compiler option argument. |
| Called for linking | The compiler was called for linking, not compiling. Ccache only supports compilation of a single file, i.e. calling the compiler with the -c option to produce a single object file from a single source file. |
| Called for preprocessing | The compiler was called for preprocessing, not compiling. |
| Ccache disabled | Ccache was disabled by a ccache:disable string in the source code file. |
| Could not use modules | Preconditions for using C++ MODULES were not fulfilled. |
| Could not use precompiled header | Preconditions for using precompiled headers were not fulfilled. |
| Could not read or parse input file | An input file could not be read or parsed (see the debug log for details). |
| Could not write to output file | The output path specified with -o could not be written to. |
| Compilation failed | The compilation failed. No result stored in the cache. |
| Compiler check failed | A compiler check program specified by compiler_check (CCACHE_COMPILERCHECK) failed. |
| Compiler output file missing | One of the files expected to be produced by the compiler was missing after compilation. |
| Compiler produced empty output | The compiler’s output file (typically an object file) was empty after compilation. |
| Could not find the compiler | The compiler to execute could not be found. |
| Error hashing extra file | Failure reading a file specified by extra_files_to_hash (CCACHE_EXTRAFILES). |
| Forced recache | CCACHE_RECACHE was used to overwrite an existing result. |
| Input file modified during compilation | An input file was modified during compilation. |
| Internal error | Unexpected failure, e.g. due to problems reading/writing the cache. |
| Missing cache file | A file was unexpectedly missing from the cache. This only happens in rare situations, e.g. if one ccache instance is about to get a file from the cache while another instance removed the file as part of cache cleanup. |
| Multiple source files | The compiler was called to compile multiple source files in one go. This is not supported by ccache. |
| No input file | No input file was specified to the compiler. |
| Output to stdout | The compiler was instructed to write its output to standard output using -o -. This is not supported by ccache. |
| Preprocessing failed | Preprocessing the source code using the compiler’s -E option failed. |
| Unsupported code directive | Code like the assembler .incbin directive was found. This is not supported by ccache. |
| Unsupported compiler option | A compiler option not supported by ccache was found. |
| Unsupported environment variable | An environment variable not supported by ccache was set. |
| Unsupported source encoding | Source file (or an included header) has unsupported encoding. ccache currently requires UTF-8-encoded source code for MSVC when msvc_utf8 is true. |
| Unsupported source language | A source language e.g. specified with -x was unsupported by ccache. |
HOW CCACHE WORKS
Ccache detects when you’re compiling the same code and reuses previously stored output. It works by creating a unique hash (the “input hash”) from various information that affects the compilation. When the same hash is encountered again, ccache can supply all the correct compiler outputs from the cache.
For hashing, ccache uses BLAKE3 https://blake3.io, a fast cryptographic hash algorithm. For data integrity, cached data is protected with XXH3 https://xxhash.com checksums to detect corruption.
Ccache has two strategies for gathering the information used to create cache lookup keys:
Direct mode is generally faster because it avoids the overhead of running the preprocessor.
When direct mode doesn’t find a cached result (cache miss), ccache falls back to preprocessor mode unless depend mode is enabled. In depend mode, ccache never runs the preprocessor, even on cache misses. See The depend mode for details.
Common hashed information
The following information is always included in the hash:
The preprocessor mode
In the preprocessor mode, the hash is formed of the common information and:
Based on the hash, the cached compilation result can be looked up directly in the cache.
The direct mode
In the direct mode, the hash is formed of the common information and:
Based on the hash, a data structure called “manifest” is looked up in the cache. The manifest contains:
The current contents of the include files are then hashed and compared to the information in the manifest. If there is a match, ccache knows the result of the compilation. If there is no match, ccache falls back to running the preprocessor. The output from the preprocessor is parsed to find the include files that were read. The paths and hash sums of those include files are then stored in the manifest along with information about the produced compilation result.
There is a catch with the direct mode: header files that were used by the compiler are recorded, but header files that were not used, but would have been used if they existed, are not. To mitigate this problem, ccache records whether directories specified with -I and similar exist at the time of compilation, which handles most cases. Still, when ccache checks if a result can be taken from the cache, it currently can’t check with 100% accuracy if the existence of a new header file should invalidate the result. In practice, the direct mode is safe to use in the absolute majority of cases.
The direct mode will be disabled if any of the following holds:
The depend mode
If the depend mode is enabled, ccache will not use the preprocessor at all. The hash used to identify results in the cache will be based on the direct mode hash described above plus information about include files read from the dependency list generated by MSVC with /showIncludes, or the dependency file generated by other compilers with -MD or -MMD.
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
The depend mode will be disabled if any of the following holds:
HANDLING OF NEWLY CREATED SOURCE FILES
If modification time (mtime) or status change time (ctime) of the source file or one of the include files is equal to (or newer than) the time that ccache was invoked, ccache disables caching completely. This is done as a safety measure to avoid a race condition (see below). In practice, this is only a problem when using file systems with very low timestamp granularity. You can set sloppiness to include_file_ctime,include_file_mtime to opt out of the safety measure.
For reference, the race condition mentioned above consists of these events:
CACHE DEBUGGING
To find out what information ccache actually is hashing, you can enable the debug mode via the configuration option debug or by setting CCACHE_DEBUG in the environment. This can be useful if you are investigating why you don’t get cache hits. Note that performance will be reduced slightly.
When the debug mode is enabled, ccache will create up to five additional files next to the object file:
| Filename | Debug level | Description |
| <objectfile>.<timestamp>.ccache-input-c | 2 | Binary input hashed by both the direct mode and the preprocessor mode. |
| <objectfile>.<timestamp>.ccache-input-d | 2 | Binary input only hashed by the direct mode. |
| <objectfile>.<timestamp>.ccache-input-p | 2 | Binary input only hashed by the preprocessor mode. |
| <objectfile>.<timestamp>.ccache-input-text | 2 | Human-readable combined diffable text version of the three files above. |
| <objectfile>.<timestamp>.ccache-log | 1 | Log for this object file. |
The timestamp format is <year><month><day>_<hour><minute><second>_<microsecond>.
If you only need the log file, set debug_level (environment variable CCACHE_DEBUGLEVEL) to 1.
If debug_dir (environment variable CCACHE_DEBUGDIR) is set, the files above will be written to that directory with full absolute paths instead of next to the object file.
In the direct mode, ccache uses the 160 bit BLAKE3 hash of the “ccache-input-c” + “ccache-input-d” data (where + means concatenation), while the “ccache-input-c” + “ccache-input-p” data is used in the preprocessor mode.
The “ccache-input-text” file is a combined text version of the three binary input files. It has three sections (“COMMON”, “DIRECT MODE” and “PREPROCESSOR MODE”), which is turn contain annotations that say what kind of data comes next.
To debug why you don’t get an expected cache hit for an object file, you can do something like this:
COMPILING IN DIFFERENT DIRECTORIES
When compiling the same source code in different directories, ccache often can’t share cached results if absolute paths become part of the input hash. These paths appear in:
To enable cache sharing across different build directories for debug builds (using -g), normalize debug paths e.g. with GCC option -fdebug-prefix-map=$PWD=. (map current directory to relative) or -fdebug-compilation-dir=. (set compilation directory). Alternatively, set hash_dir to false (disables directory hashing).
For builds with absolute paths, set base_dir to a common parent directory. Ccache will convert absolute paths under this directory to relative paths before hashing.
For example, if projects are in /home/user/projects, set base_dir to /home/user/projects or just /home/user.
PRECOMPILED HEADERS
Ccache has limited support for precompiled headers (PCH) with GCC and Clang.
Required configuration:
Troubleshooting:
C++ MODULES
Ccache does currently not support standard C++20 modules.
There is however limited support for “Clang modules” (the -fmodules option) with these requirements:
This is how it works:
Note
The preprocessor mode doesn’t provide enough information
for module
support depend mode. When using the preprocessor mode Clang does not
provide enough information to allow hashing of
module.modulemap files.
SHARING A LOCAL CACHE
A group of developers can increase the cache hit rate by sharing a local cache directory. To share a local cache without unpleasant side effects, the following conditions should to be met:
find $CCACHE_DIR -type d | xargs chmod g+s
The reason to avoid the hard link mode is that the hard links cause unwanted side effects, as all links to a cached file share the file’s modification timestamp. This results in false dependencies to be triggered by timestamp-based build systems whenever another user links to an existing file. Typically, users will see that their libraries and binaries are relinked without reason.
You may also want to make sure that a base directory is set appropriately, as discussed in a previous section.
SHARING A CACHE ON NFS
It is possible to put the cache directory on an NFS filesystem (or similar filesystems), but keep in mind that:
A tip is to set temporary_dir to a directory on the local host to avoid NFS traffic for temporary files.
It is recommended to use the same operating system version when using a shared cache. If operating system versions are different then system include files will likely be different and there will be few or no cache hits between the systems. One way of improving cache hit rate in that case is to set sloppiness to system_headers to ignore system headers.
An alternative to putting the main cache directory on NFS is to set up a remote storage file cache.
USING CCACHE WITH OTHER COMPILER WRAPPERS
The recommended way of combining ccache with another compiler wrapper (such as “distcc”) is by letting ccache execute the compiler wrapper. This is accomplished by defining prefix_command, for example by setting the environment variable CCACHE_PREFIX to the name of the wrapper (e.g. distcc). Ccache will then prefix the command line with the specified command when running the compiler. To specify several prefix commands, set prefix_command to a space-separated list of commands.
Unless you set compiler_check to a suitable command (see the description of that configuration option), it is not recommended to use the form ccache anotherwrapper compiler args as the compilation command. It’s also not recommended to use the masquerading technique for the other compiler wrapper. The reason is that by default, ccache will in both cases hash the mtime and size of the other wrapper instead of the real compiler, which means that:
Another minor thing is that if prefix_command is used, ccache will not invoke the other wrapper when running the preprocessor, which increases performance. You can use prefix_command_cpp if you also want to invoke the other wrapper when doing preprocessing (normally by adding -E).
CAVEATS
TROUBLESHOOTING
General
To understand what ccache is doing you can enable debug logging by setting debug to true or using the environment variable CCACHE_DEBUG=1. See CACHE DEBUGGING for details.
You can also use ccache -s to view cache hit rates, miss reasons and other performance metrics.
Performance
Ccache is designed to work well with minimal configuration, but you can optimize performance further:
To monitor cache effectiveness, compare ccache -s output before and after builds to identify issues.
If “preprocessed cache hits” increases instead of “direct cache hits”, ccache is falling back to the slower preprocessor mode. Causes include:
If identical code doesn’t produce cache hits these are some possible causes:
Common error counters:
Corrupt object files
It should be noted that ccache is susceptible to general storage problems. If a bad object file sneaks into the cache for some reason, it will of course stay bad. Some possible reasons for erroneous object files are bad hardware (disk drive, disk controller, memory, etc), buggy drivers or file systems, a bad prefix_command or compiler wrapper. If this happens, the easiest way of fixing it is this:
An alternative is to clear the whole cache with ccache -C if you don’t mind losing other cached results.
There are no reported issues about ccache producing broken object files reproducibly. That doesn’t mean it can’t happen, so if you find a repeatable case, please report it.
MORE INFORMATION
Credits, mailing list information, bug reporting instructions, source code, etc, can be found on ccache’s web site: https://ccache.dev.
AUTHOR
Ccache was originally written by Andrew Tridgell and is currently developed and maintained by Joel Rosdahl. See AUTHORS.txt or AUTHORS.html and https://ccache.dev/credits.html for a list of contributors.
| 2026-03-14 | Ccache 4.13.1 |