Simulink® cache files contain build artifacts that can speed up simulation and code generation. To generate these build artifacts and automatically package them in Simulink cache files, perform one of these actions:
Update the diagram for a model hierarchy that contains models referenced in accelerator mode
Simulate a model hierarchy that contains models referenced in accelerator mode
Simulate a top model in accelerator or rapid accelerator mode
Generate code for a model or model hierarchy
The second time that you perform any of these actions, Simulink builds only the out-of-date files as long as the Rebuild configuration parameter is set to If
any changes detected
(default) or If any changes in known
dependencies detected
. With fewer files to build, the actions complete
faster.
While you can avoid all referenced model rebuilds by setting the
Rebuild configuration parameter to
Never
, using this setting can produce invalid simulation
results.
Team members or continuous integration systems can generate Simulink cache files for models that you use. To reduce the time it takes when you build those models for the first time, you can copy the corresponding Simulink cache files to your local folder specified by the Simulation cache folder preference. Simulink extracts any Simulink cache file contents that differ from the contents on disk. If Simulink generates or updates the build artifacts on disk, it locally updates the corresponding Simulink cache files.
You can identify a Simulink cache file by its .slxc
extension. Its file name matches
the name of the corresponding model.
Simulink cache files can contain multiple types of build artifacts, including:
Accelerator targets
Rapid accelerator targets
Model reference simulation targets
Variable usage information
Code generation targets (Simulink Coder™, Embedded Coder®)
Model representations (Simulink Design Verifier™)
Simulink cache files accumulate build artifacts for multiple platforms and Simulink releases.
To learn what a specific Simulink cache file contains, open the report by double-clicking the file.
You can reuse build artifacts that support the platform and release that you are using. For example, suppose that you use a Windows® machine and the R2019a Simulink release. In the Simulink cache file described by this report, you can use the simulation targets under R2019a : win64. A team member that uses a Linux® machine and R2019b can use the simulation and code generation targets under R2019b : glnxa64 and the model representations under R2019b : all platforms.
If you create a Simulink cache file in R2019b, you cannot use that Simulink cache file in R2019a. A Simulink cache file can accumulate build artifacts for the release in which it was created and later releases.
While most teams can benefit from using Simulink cache files, a development environment with these features is best suited for using Simulink cache files.
A model hierarchy that contains many referenced models.
A top model that simulates in accelerator or rapid accelerator mode, causing Simulink to generate a simulation target for the top model and all referenced models.
A standardized platform, compiler, and Simulink release for the entire development team.
Relative paths or consistent absolute paths, which you specify with the Include directories configuration parameter, for the entire development team.
A source control system, such as Git™, that manages design files. See Set Up Git Source Control.
Since Simulink cache files are derived files, you should not manage them under source control. Even if you share Simulink cache files by storing them in a source control system, you cannot diff or merge different versions of these files.
A CI system, such as Jenkins™, which periodically builds the latest version of the model hierarchy using a pool of parallel workers.
In this development environment, you interact with files in the source control system and build archive.
To reduce the amount of time that you spend updating simulation targets, follow these steps.
Pull the latest version of all design files from the source control system.
Copy the latest version of all Simulink cache files from the build archive and place them in your Simulation cache folder.
Open the top model and simulate it.
Simulink extracts the required build artifacts from the Simulink cache files. The simulation completes without rebuilding any models as long as the models have not changed since the most recent build completed by the CI system.
Change a model and simulate the model hierarchy again.
Simulink rebuilds the necessary models and updates the local copy of the corresponding Simulink cache file.
Commit the updated model to the source control system. You do not commit the Simulink cache file, which is a derived file.
When you create a project from a top model, the project includes the corresponding Simulink cache files for the model and its referenced models.
To view Simulink cache file dependencies in a model hierarchy, you can select Dependency Analyzer in the Views pane of the corresponding project.
If any Simulink cache files are missing from the project, the dependency analysis identifies them.
For more information, see What Is Dependency Analysis?