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How to Evaluate Remote Caching and Execution

Between roughly 2006 to 2008, Google developed remote caching and execution technologies to scale its massive monorepo based software development operation. This platform included Forge, the remote caching and execution platform, and Blaze, a tool for building large multilanguage software projects, eventually open sourced as Bazel. The advantages of this original platform were so obvious that it literally sold itself, and ultimately inspired the EngFlow platform.

Today, EngFlow is one of several competing remote caching and execution products now available in the commercial space. This post describes how we continuously benchmark our own product against different configurations to ensure that we offer the best possible value. We hope that sharing our methodology might help you evaluate whether remote caching or execution is right for your organization.