GitHub Action
Cache Nix store
A GitHub Action to cache Nix store paths using GitHub Actions cache.
This action is based on actions/cache.
- Cache full Nix store into a single cache.
- Collect garbage in the store before saving.
- Fuse caches produced by several jobs.
- After saving a new cache, remove old caches by creation or last access time.
-
The nix-quick-install-action action makes
/nix/store
owned by an unpriviliged user. -
cache-nix-action
restores/nix
.- When there's a cache hit, restoring
/nix/store
from a cache is faster than downloading multiple paths from binary caches.- You can compare run times of jobs with and without store caching in Actions.
- Open a run and click on the time under
Total duration
.
- When there's a cache hit, restoring
-
Optionally,
cache-nix-action
purges old caches.- As Nix (flake) inputs may change, it's necessary to use fresher caches.
- Caches can be purged by
created
orlast accessed
time (see Configuration).
-
Optionally,
cache-nix-action
collects garbage in the Nix store (see Garbage Collection).- The store may contain useless paths from previous runs.
- This action allows to limit nix store size (see Configuration).
-
cache-nix-action
saves a new cache when there's no cache hit.- Saving a cache takes time.
- There may be no cache hit after an old matching cache was purged.
GitHub
allows only 10GB of caches and then removes the least recently used entries (see its eviction policy).- Can be overcome by merging similar caches (see Merge caches)
cache-nix-action
restores and saves the whole/nix
directory.cache-nix-action
requiresnix-quick-install-action
(see Approach).- Store size is limited by a runner storage size (link).
- Caches are isolated between branches (link).
- When restoring,
cache-nix-action
writes cached Nix store paths into a read-only/nix/store
of a runner. Some of these paths may already be present, so the action will showFile exists
errors and a warning that it failed to restore. It's OK. - It may be necessary to purge old caches (see Purge old caches).
See alternative caching approaches.
See how you can contribute.
See action.yaml, restore/action.yml, save/action.yml.
This action inherits some inputs and outputs of actions/cache
.
name |
description |
required |
default |
needs |
---|---|---|---|---|
gc-macos |
When true , enables on macOS runners Nix store garbage collection before saving a cache. |
false |
false |
gc-macos: true |
gc-max-store-size-macos |
Maximum Nix store size in bytes on macOS runners. |
false |
||
gc-linux |
When true , enables on Linux runners Nix store garbage collection before saving a cache. |
false |
false |
|
gc-max-store-size-linux |
Maximum Nix store size in bytes on Linux runners. |
false |
gc-linux: true |
|
purge |
When true , purge old caches before saving a new cache with a key . |
false |
false |
|
purge-keys |
A newline-separated list of cache key prefixes used to purge caches. An empty list is equivalent to the key input. |
false |
'' |
purge: true |
purge-accessed |
When true , purge caches by their last access time. |
false |
false |
purge: true |
purge-accessed-max-age |
Purge caches last accessed more than this number of seconds ago. | false |
604800 |
purge-accessed: true |
purge-created |
When true , delete caches by their creation time. |
false |
true |
purge: true |
purge-created-max-age |
Purge caches created more than this number of seconds ago. | false |
604800 |
purge-created: true . |
restore-key-hit |
When true, if a cache key matching restore-keys exists, it counts as a cache hit. Thus, a job won't save a new cache. |
false |
false |
|
extra-restore-keys |
A newline-separated list of key prefixes used for restoring multiple caches. | false |
'' |
Note:
cache-nix-action
purges only caches specific to a branch that has triggered a workflow.*-max-age
is relative to the time before saving a new cache.
The cache-nix-action
doesn't provide the path
input from the original inputs of actions/cache
due to limitations.
Instead, the cache-nix-action
caches /nix
, ~/.cache/nix
, ~root/.cache/nix
paths by default as suggested here.
- This action must be used with nix-quick-install-action.
- Maximum Nix store size on
Linux
runners will be~1GB
due togc-max-store-size-linux: 1000000000
.- If the store has a larger size, it will be garbage collected to reach this limit (See Garbage collection parameters).
- The
cache-nix-action
will print the Nix store size in thePost
phase, so you can choose an optimal store size to avoid garbage collection.
- On
macOS
runners, Nix store won't be garbage collected sincegc-macos: true
isn't set. - The
cache-nix-action
will find caches with a key prefixcache-${{ matrix.os }}-
. Among these caches, thecache-nix-action
will delete caches created more than42
seconds ago
- uses: nixbuild/nix-quick-install-action@v25
with:
nix_conf: |
substituters = https://cache.nixos.org/ https://nix-community.cachix.org
trusted-public-keys = cache.nixos.org-1:6NCHdD59X431o0gWypbMrAURkbJ16ZPMQFGspcDShjY= nix-community.cachix.org-1:mB9FSh9qf2dCimDSUo8Zy7bkq5CX+/rkCWyvRCYg3Fs=
keep-outputs = true
- name: Restore and cache Nix store
uses: nix-community/cache-nix-action@v3
with:
key: cache-${{ matrix.os }}-${{ hashFiles('**/*.nix') }}
restore-keys: |
cache-${{ matrix.os }}-
gc-linux: true
gc-max-store-size-linux: 1000000000
purge-caches: true
purge-key: cache-${{ matrix.os }}-
purge-created: true
purge-created-max-age: 42
See ci.yaml.
- Use action-tmate to debug on a runner via SSH.
On Linux
runners, when gc-linux
is true
, when a cache size is greater than gc-max-cache-size-linux
, this action will run nix store gc --max R
before saving a cache.
Here, R
is max(0, S - gc-max-store-size-linux)
, where S
is the current store size.
Respective conditions hold for macOS
runners.
There are alternative approaches to garbage collection (see Garbage collection).
The cache-nix-action
allows to delete old caches after saving a new cache (see purge-*
inputs in New inputs and compare-run-times
in Example workflow).
The purge-cache action allows to remove caches based on their last accessed
or created
time without branch limitations.
Alternatively, you can use the GitHub Actions Cache API.
GitHub
evicts LRU caches when their total size exceeds 10GB
(see Limitations).
If you have multiple similar caches, you can merge them into a single cache and store just it to save space.
In short:
- Matrix jobs produce similar caches.
- The next job restores all of these individual caches, saves a common cache, and purges individual caches.
- On subsequent runs, matrix jobs use the common cache.
See the make-similar-caches
and merge-similar-caches
jobs in the example workflow.
Pros: if N
individual caches are very similar, a common cache will take approximately N
times less space.
Cons: if caches aren't very similar, run time may increase due to a bigger common cache.
The jlumbroso/free-disk-space action frees ~30GB
of disk space in several minutes.
Discussed in more details here and here.
Caching approaches work at different "distances" from /nix/store
of GitHub Actions runner.
These distances affect the restore and save speed.
Pros:
- Free.
- Uses
GitHub Actions Cache
and works fast. - Easy to set up.
- Allows to save a store of at most a given size (see Garbage collection parameters).
- Allows to save outputs from garbage collection (see Garbage collection).
Cons: see Limitations
Pros (link):
- Free.
- Uses
GitHub Actions Cache
and works fast. - Easy to set up.
- Restores and saves paths selectively.
Cons:
- Collects telemetry (link)
- May trigger rate limit errors (link).
- Follows the GitHub Actions Cache semantics (link).
- Caches are isolated between branches (link).
- Saves a cache for each path in a store and quickly litters
Caches
.
If used with nix-quick-install-action, it's similar to the cache-nix-action.
If used with install-nix-action and a chroot local store:
Pros:
- Quick restore and save
/tmp/nix
.
Cons:
- Slow nix copy from
/tmp/nix
to/nix/store
.
If used with install-nix-action and this trick, it's similar to the cache-nix-action, but slower (link).
See binary cache, HTTP Binary Cache Store.
Pros:
- Restore and save paths selectively.
- Provide LRU garbage collection strategies (cachix, attic).
- Don't cache paths available from the NixOS cache (cachix).
- Allow to share paths between projects (cachix).
Cons:
- Have limited free storage (cachix gives 5GB for open-source projects).
- Need good bandwidth for receiving and pushing paths over the Internet.
- Can be down.
When restoring a Nix store from a cache, the store may contain old unnecessary paths. These paths should be removed sometimes to limit cache size and ensure the fastest restore/save steps.
Produce a cache once, use it multiple times. Don't collect garbage.
Advantages:
- Unnecessary paths are saved to a cache only during a new save.
Disadvantages:
- Unnecessary paths can accumulate between new saves.
- A job at the firs run produces a path
A
and saves a cache. - The job at the second run restores the cache, produces a path
B
, and saves a cache. The cache has bothA
andB
. - etc.
- A job at the firs run produces a path
Collect garbage before saving a cache.
Advantages:
- Automatically keep cache at a minimal/limited size
Disadvantages:
- No standard way to gc only old paths.
- Use
nix profile install
to save installables from garbage collection. - Keep inputs (see this issue and this issue).
- Start direnv in background.
- Use nix-heuristic-gc for cache eviction via
atime
- gc via gc roots nix-cache-cut
- gc based on time cache-gc
- Improve README
- Report errors, suggest improvements in issues
- Upgrade code.
- Read about JavaScript actions
- See main files:
!!! This documentation was inherited from actions/cache and may be partially irrelevant to cache-nix-action
This action allows caching dependencies and build outputs to improve workflow execution time.
Two other actions are available in addition to the primary
cache
action:
See "Caching dependencies to speed up workflows".
- Added support for caching in GHES 3.5+.
- Fixed download issue for files > 2GB during restore.
- Updated the minimum runner version support from node 12 -> node 16.
- Fixed avoiding empty cache save when no files are available for caching.
- Fixed tar creation error while trying to create tar with path as
~/
home folder onubuntu-latest
. - Fixed zstd failing on amazon linux 2.0 runners.
- Fixed cache not working with github workspace directory or current directory.
- Fixed the download stuck problem by introducing a timeout of 1 hour for cache downloads.
- Fix zstd not working for windows on gnu tar in issues.
- Allowing users to provide a custom timeout as input for aborting download of a cache segment using an environment variable
SEGMENT_DOWNLOAD_TIMEOUT_MINS
. Default is 10 minutes. - New actions are available for granular control over caches - restore and save.
- Support cross-os caching as an opt-in feature. See Cross OS caching for more info.
- Added option to fail job on cache miss. See Exit workflow on cache miss for more info.
- Fix zstd not being used after zstd version upgrade to 1.5.4 on hosted runners
- Added option to lookup cache without downloading it.
- Reduced segment size to 128MB and segment timeout to 10 minutes to fail fast in case the cache download is stuck.
See the v2 README.md for older updates.
Create a workflow .yml
file in your repository's .github/workflows
directory. An example workflow is available below. For more information, see the GitHub Help Documentation for Creating a workflow file.
If you are using this inside a container, a POSIX-compliant tar
needs to be included and accessible from the execution path.
If you are using a self-hosted
Windows runner, GNU tar
and zstd
are required for Cross-OS caching to work. They are also recommended to be installed in general so the performance is on par with hosted
Windows runners.
key
- An explicit key for a cache entry. See creating a cache key.path
- A list of files, directories, and wildcard patterns to cache and restore. See@actions/glob
for supported patterns.restore-keys
- An ordered list of prefix-matched keys to use for restoring stale cache if no cache hit occurred for key.enableCrossOsArchive
- An optional boolean when enabled, allows Windows runners to save or restore caches that can be restored or saved respectively on other platforms. Default:false
fail-on-cache-miss
- Fail the workflow if cache entry is not found. Default:false
lookup-only
- If true, only checks if cache entry exists and skips download. Does not change save cache behavior. Default:false
SEGMENT_DOWNLOAD_TIMEOUT_MINS
- Segment download timeout (in minutes, default10
) to abort download of the segment if not completed in the defined number of minutes. Read more
-
cache-hit
- A boolean value to indicate an exact match was found for the key.Note
cache-hit
will only be set totrue
when a cache hit occurs for the exactkey
match. For a partial key match viarestore-keys
or a cache miss, it will be set tofalse
.
See Skipping steps based on cache-hit for info on using this output
The cache is scoped to the key, version, and branch. The default branch cache is available to other branches.
See Matching a cache key for more info.
name: Caching Primes
on: push
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Cache Primes
id: cache-primes
uses: actions/cache@v3
with:
path: prime-numbers
key: ${{ runner.os }}-primes
- name: Generate Prime Numbers
if: steps.cache-primes.outputs.cache-hit != 'true'
run: /generate-primes.sh -d prime-numbers
- name: Use Prime Numbers
run: /primes.sh -d prime-numbers
The cache
action provides a cache-hit
output which is set to true
when the cache is restored using the primary key
and false
when the cache is restored using restore-keys
or no cache is restored.
name: Caching Primes
on: push
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Restore cached Primes
id: cache-primes-restore
uses: actions/cache/restore@v3
with:
path: |
path/to/dependencies
some/other/dependencies
key: ${{ runner.os }}-primes
.
. //intermediate workflow steps
.
- name: Save Primes
id: cache-primes-save
uses: actions/cache/save@v3
with:
path: |
path/to/dependencies
some/other/dependencies
key: ${{ steps.cache-primes-restore.outputs.cache-primary-key }}
Note You must use the
cache
orrestore
action in your workflow before you need to use the files that might be restored from the cache. If the providedkey
matches an existing cache, a new cache is not created and if the providedkey
doesn't match an existing cache, a new cache is automatically created provided the job completes successfully.
With the introduction of the restore
and save
actions, a lot of caching use cases can now be achieved. Please see the caching strategies document for understanding how you can use the actions strategically to achieve the desired goal.
Every programming language and framework has its own way of caching.
See Examples for a list of actions/cache
implementations for use with:
- C# - NuGet
- Clojure - Lein Deps
- D - DUB
- Deno
- Elixir - Mix
- Go - Modules
- Haskell - Cabal
- Haskell - Stack
- Java - Gradle
- Java - Maven
- Node - npm
- Node - Lerna
- Node - Yarn
- OCaml/Reason - esy
- PHP - Composer
- Python - pip
- Python - pipenv
- R - renv
- Ruby - Bundler
- Rust - Cargo
- Scala - SBT
- Swift, Objective-C - Carthage
- Swift, Objective-C - CocoaPods
- Swift - Swift Package Manager
- Swift - Mint
A cache key can include any of the contexts, functions, literals, and operators supported by GitHub Actions.
For example, using the hashFiles
function allows you to create a new cache when dependencies change.
- uses: actions/cache@v3
with:
path: |
path/to/dependencies
some/other/dependencies
key: ${{ runner.os }}-${{ hashFiles('**/lockfiles') }}
Additionally, you can use arbitrary command output in a cache key, such as a date or software version:
# http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/date.1.html
- name: Get Date
id: get-date
run: |
echo "date=$(/bin/date -u "+%Y%m%d")" >> $GITHUB_OUTPUT
shell: bash
- uses: actions/cache@v3
with:
path: path/to/dependencies
key: ${{ runner.os }}-${{ steps.get-date.outputs.date }}-${{ hashFiles('**/lockfiles') }}
See Using contexts to create cache keys
A repository can have up to 10GB of caches. Once the 10GB limit is reached, older caches will be evicted based on when the cache was last accessed. Caches that are not accessed within the last week will also be evicted.
Using the cache-hit
output, subsequent steps (such as install or build) can be skipped when a cache hit occurs on the key. It is recommended to install missing/updated dependencies in case of a partial key match when the key is dependent on the hash
of the package file.
Example:
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- uses: actions/cache@v3
id: cache
with:
path: path/to/dependencies
key: ${{ runner.os }}-${{ hashFiles('**/lockfiles') }}
- name: Install Dependencies
if: steps.cache.outputs.cache-hit != 'true'
run: /install.sh
Note The
id
defined inactions/cache
must match theid
in theif
statement (i.e.steps.[ID].outputs.cache-hit
)
Cache version is a hash generated for a combination of compression tool used (Gzip, Zstd, etc. based on the runner OS) and the path
of directories being cached. If two caches have different versions, they are identified as unique caches while matching. This, for example, means that a cache created on a windows-latest
runner can't be restored on ubuntu-latest
as cache Version
s are different.
Pro tip: The list caches API can be used to get the version of a cache. This can be helpful to troubleshoot cache miss due to version.
Example
The workflow will create 3 unique caches with same keys. Ubuntu and windows runners will use different compression technique and hence create two different caches. And `build-linux` will create two different caches as the `paths` are different.jobs:
build-linux:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Cache Primes
id: cache-primes
uses: actions/cache@v3
with:
path: prime-numbers
key: primes
- name: Generate Prime Numbers
if: steps.cache-primes.outputs.cache-hit != 'true'
run: ./generate-primes.sh -d prime-numbers
- name: Cache Numbers
id: cache-numbers
uses: actions/cache@v3
with:
path: numbers
key: primes
- name: Generate Numbers
if: steps.cache-numbers.outputs.cache-hit != 'true'
run: ./generate-primes.sh -d numbers
build-windows:
runs-on: windows-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Cache Primes
id: cache-primes
uses: actions/cache@v3
with:
path: prime-numbers
key: primes
- name: Generate Prime Numbers
if: steps.cache-primes.outputs.cache-hit != 'true'
run: ./generate-primes -d prime-numbers
There are a number of community practices/workarounds to fulfill specific requirements. You may choose to use them if they suit your use case. Note these are not necessarily the only solution or even a recommended solution.
- Cache segment restore timeout
- Update a cache
- Use cache across feature branches
- Cross OS cache
- Force deletion of caches overriding default cache eviction policy
Please note that Windows environment variables (like %LocalAppData%
) will NOT be expanded by this action. Instead, prefer using ~
in your paths which will expand to the HOME directory. For example, instead of %LocalAppData%
, use ~\AppData\Local
. For a list of supported default environment variables, see the Learn GitHub Actions: Variables page.
We would love for you to contribute to actions/cache
. Pull requests are welcome! Please see the CONTRIBUTING.md for more information.
The scripts and documentation in this project are released under the MIT License