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CocoaPods binary cache

Test License Gem

A plugin that helps to reduce the build time of Xcode projects which use CocoaPods by prebuilding pod frameworks and cache them in a remote repository to share across multiple machines.

Installation

Requirements

Via Bundler

Add the gem cocoapods-binary-cache to the Gemfile of your project.

gem "cocoapods-binary-cache", :git => "https://github.com/grab/cocoapods-binary-cache.git", :tag => "0.1.11"

Then, run bundle install to install the added gem.

In case you're not familiar with bundler, take a look at Learn how to set it up here.

Via RubyGems

$ gem install cocoapods-binary-cache

How it works

Check out the documentation on how it works for more information.

Usage

1. Configure cache repo

First of all, create a git repo that will be used as a storage of your prebuilt frameworks. Make sure this git repo is accessible via git clone and git fetch. Specify this cache repo in the following section.

2. Configure Podfile

2.1. Load the cocoapods-binary-cache plugin.

Add the following line at the beginning of Podfile:

plugin "cocoapods-binary-cache"

2.2. Configure cocoapods-binary-cache

config_cocoapods_binary_cache(
  cache_repo: {
    "default" => {
      "remote" => "git@cache_repo.git",
      "local" => "~/.cocoapods-binary-cache/prebuilt-frameworks"
    }
  },
  prebuild_config: "Debug"
)

For details about options to use with the config_cocoapods_binary_cache function, check out our guidelines on how to configure cocoapods-binary-cache.

2.3. Declare pods as prebuilt pods

To declare a pod as a prebuilt pod (sometimes referred to as binary pod), add the option :binary => true as follows:

pod "Alamofire", "5.2.1", :binary => true

NOTE:

3. CLI

We provided some command line interfaces (CLI):

$ bundle exec pod binary fetch
$ bundle exec pod binary prebuild [--push]
$ bundle exec pod binary push

For each command, you can run with option --help for more details about how to use each:

$ bundle exec pod binary fetch --help

4. A trivial workflow

A trivial workflow when using this plugin is to fetch from cache repo, followed by a pod installation, as follows:

$ bundle exec pod binary fetch
$ bundle exec pod install

For other usages, check out the best practices docs.

Benchmark

We created a project to benchmark how much of the improvements we gain from this plugin. The demo project is using the following pods:

AFNetworking
SDWebImage
Alamofire
MBProgressHUD
Masonry
SwiftyJSON
SVProgressHUD
MJRefresh
CocoaLumberjack
Realm
SnapKit
Kingfisher

Below is the result we recorded:

<img src=resources/benchmark.png width=700></img>

Hardware specs of the above benchmark:

MacBook Pro (15-inch, 2018)
Mac OS 10.14.6
Processor 2.6 GHz Intel Core i7
Memory 16 GB 2400 MHz DDR4

You can also try it out on your local:

$ cd PodBinaryCacheExample
$ sh BuildBenchMark.sh

In our real project with around 15% of swift/ObjC code from vendor pods. After applying this technique, we notice a reduction of around 10% in build time. <img src=resources/realproj_buildtime_trend.png width=700></img>

Known issues and roadmap

Exporting IPA with Bitcode

Pods with headers only

Best practices

Check out our Best practices for for information.

Troubleshooting

Check out our Troubleshooting guidelines for more information.

Contribution

Check out CONTRIBUTING.md for more information on hw to contribute to this repo.

License

The cocoapods-binary-cache plugin is available as open-source under the terms of the MIT License. It uses cocoapods-rome and cocoapods-binary internally, which are also under MIT License.