The goal of Cache@2 task is improving build performance by caching files between pipeline runs. It supports multiple types of packages like

  • Bundler gems
  • npm packages
  • Yarn packages
  • NuGet packages
  • Maven artifacts
  • Gradle artifacts
  • ccache artifacts

Further, we will focus on caching NuGet packages however in a similar manner we can configure this task for other types.

Locking dependencies

Before we configure cache task we need to lock dependencies to create packages.lock.json file as we need that file to set a proper key for the cache. To do that we need to set MSBuild property RestorePackagesWithLockFile for a project.

<PropertyGroup>
    <!--- ... -->
    <RestorePackagesWithLockFile>true</RestorePackagesWithLockFile>
    <!--- ... -->
</PropertyGroup>

On the next dotnet restore a lock file packages.lock.json will be generated. We need to store that file in source control to be able to use cache task. However this is not such easy as it looks like. Because, if you use this file probably you will get on CI server error NU1403:

error NU1403: Package content hash validation failed for System.Linq.4.3.0. The package is different than the last restore. [/home/vsts/work/1/s/PipelineCaching.sln]

This is because we can get different on different machines/systems. So hash on my machine is different than on Linux host agent or Windows host agent. On github you can find the proposed solution. But this boils down to putting these commands:

dotnet nuget locals all --clear
git clean -xfd
git rm **/packages.lock.json -f
dotnet restore Froto.sln

in your pipeline. In general, it is really strange that mechanism which should provide a consistent and reliable way of getting the same packages regardless you compile your source code requires to generate on each machine/system a new lock file. I took a different approach. I created the lock file on the host agent and published it as an artifact. Then I downloaded it and committed into source control. I know that it requires to reproduce that step over and over again when I add or update package. But for me, this is a better approach than removing and recreating lock file by CI server. If you want to do the same, you can achieve this using these steps:

variables:
  buildDirectory: '$(Build.SourcesDirectory)'

steps:
- task: CopyFiles@2
  displayName: Copy packages.lock.json file
  enabled: true
  inputs:
    sourceFolder: $(buildDirectory)/PipelineCaching
    contents: packages.lock.json
    targetFolder:  $(Build.ArtifactStagingDirectory)

- task: PublishBuildArtifacts@1
  displayName: Publish packages.lock.json file
  enabled: true
  inputs:
    pathToPublish: $(Build.ArtifactStagingDirectory)
    artifactName: LockedJson

Once you create a lock file, you can disable these steps.

NuGet packages location

To configure cache task we need also packages location. Following this documentation you can assume that NuGet downloads packages to $(Pipeline.Workspace)/.nuget/packages. But this is wrong or some configuration part is missing like overriding default location for global-packages. If you list $(Pipeline.Workspace) you will find that there is no NuGet folder.

 Directory of D:\a\1

03/10/2020  02:45 PM    <DIR>          .
03/10/2020  02:45 PM    <DIR>          ..
03/10/2020  02:45 PM    <DIR>          a
03/10/2020  02:45 PM    <DIR>          b
03/10/2020  02:45 PM    <DIR>          s
03/10/2020  02:45 PM    <DIR>          TestResults

To find nuget packages folder, we can use this command dotnet nuget locals global-packages -l which allow us to set proper path programmatically.

steps:
- task: PowerShell@2
  inputs:
    targetType: 'inline'
    script: |
      $cache = dotnet nuget locals global-packages -l
      $cacheLocation = $cache.Replace('info : global-packages: ', '')
      
      Write-Host $cacheLocation
      
      Write-Host "##vso[task.setvariable variable=NUGET_PACKAGES;]$cacheLocation"

    pwsh: true

What is worth noted here, that it works for both Linux and Windows host agents.

Configuration for NuGet packages

Putting all together:

trigger:
- master

pool:
  vmImage: 'ubuntu-latest'

variables:
  buildConfiguration: 'Release'
  buildDirectory: '$(Build.SourcesDirectory)'

steps:

- script: dotnet nuget locals global-packages -l
  displayName: 'dotnet nuget locals global-packages -l'

- task: PowerShell@2
  inputs:
    targetType: 'inline'
    script: |
      $cache = dotnet nuget locals global-packages -l
      $cacheLocation = $cache.Replace('info : global-packages: ', '')
      
      Write-Host $cacheLocation
      
      Write-Host "##vso[task.setvariable variable=NUGET_PACKAGES;]$cacheLocation"

    pwsh: true

- task: Cache@2
  inputs:
    key: 'nuget | "$(Agent.OS)" | PipelineCaching/packages.lock.json'
    restoreKeys: |
       nuget | "$(Agent.OS)"
       nuget
    path: $(NUGET_PACKAGES)
    cacheHitVar: CACHE_RESTORED
  displayName: Cache NuGet packages

- script: dotnet restore
  displayName: 'dotnet restore'
  condition: ne(variables.CACHE_RESTORED, 'true')
  workingDirectory: $(buildDirectory)

- script: dir
  displayName: 'Displaying NuGet folder'
  enabled: true
  condition: always()
  workingDirectory: $(NUGET_PACKAGES)

- task: CopyFiles@2
  displayName: Copy packages.lock.json file
  enabled: false
  inputs:
    sourceFolder: $(buildDirectory)/PipelineCaching
    contents: packages.lock.json
    targetFolder:  $(Build.ArtifactStagingDirectory)

- task: PublishBuildArtifacts@1
  displayName: Publish packages.lock.json file
  enabled: false
  inputs:
    pathToPublish: $(Build.ArtifactStagingDirectory)
    artifactName: LockedJson

- script: dotnet build --configuration $(buildConfiguration)
  displayName: 'dotnet build $(buildConfiguration)'
  workingDirectory: $(buildDirectory)
 

Looking into cache task logs, you may find that your key was resolved to nuget|"Linux"|h6yiwZzAgkoiZL06WJLdgZToQpsZmeUIUL5u0xFpYHM=, where last part is a hash of your lock file. It means that each time when the lock file will change, a new cache key will be created. In the first run, you may also find information that There is a cache miss. This is because setting cache takes a place in post-job task

Information, Creating a pipeline cache artifact with the following fingerprint: `nuget|"Linux"|h6yiwZzAgkoiZL06WJLdgZToQpsZmeUIUL5u0xFpYHM=`
Information, Cache item created.

In the next run, cache task gets a hit and download packages to the given folder.

There is a cache hit: `nuget|"Linux"|h6yiwZzAgkoiZL06WJLdgZToQpsZmeUIUL5u0xFpYHM=`

Cache task set also variable CACHE_RESTORED to true which causes evaluating condition in next step as false. So we do not restore packages.

Caching npm modules

Cache task allows caching not only NuGet packages but also npm modules. For this case I didn’t find any issue following documentation and thus adding that to your build is straightforward as this code snippet:

variables:
  npm_config_cache: $(Pipeline.Workspace)/.npm

steps:
- task: Cache@2
  inputs:
    key: 'npm | "$(Agent.OS)" | cache-npm/package-lock.json'
    restoreKeys: |
       npm | "$(Agent.OS)"
    path: $(npm_config_cache)
  displayName: Cache npm

- script: npm ci
  workingDirectory: '$(Build.SourcesDirectory)/cache-npm'

My angular project is located in the cache-npm subfolder and this is wahy I had to add this to key input in cache task and the working directory of script task.

You may notice that we use npm ci command instead of typical npm install. There is a significant difference between these two. npm install asks bout each module from dependencies and then it upgrades or not. npm ci deletes all node_modules directory and copies them from the cache. Thus you should avoid caching npm_modules directory and cache folder cache itself as we did above. There are a few key information (please check documentation) which you should know before you will use npm ci:

  • The project must have an existing package-lock.json or npm-shrinkwrap.json.
  • If dependencies in the package lock do not match those in package.json, npm ci will exit with an error, instead of updating the package lock.
  • npm ci can only install entire projects at a time: individual dependencies cannot be added with this command.
  • If a node_modules is already present, it will be automatically removed before npm ci begins its install.
  • It will never write to package.json or any of the package-locks: installs are essentially frozen.

What is important to remember?! npm ci is meant to use in automated environments as CI builds. It may speed up your build but details strongly dependents on how many modules do you have in your dependencies. It is more strict than npm install and thus may help us keeping consistency in our code. But if you want to add/remove/change a module npm install is your choice.

Code for that part you may find here.

Summary

Cache task is very useful as it may reduce significantly network calls to get packages. I recommend to use it especially if you have many dependencies. I can only complain about documentation, as for me there were too many things not working as it is written there. Or maybe it is just me and I didn’t understand all the pieces. In that case, my apologies. The code for this you can find on my github.