[GitHub Actions](https://github.com/features/actions) is a very useful tool for automating development. GitHub Actions jobs are run in the cloud by default, but you may want to run your jobs in your environment. [Self-hosted runner](https://github.com/actions/runner) can be used for such use cases, but requires the provisioning and configuration of a virtual machine instance. Instead if you already have a Kubernetes cluster, it makes more sense to run the self-hosted runner on top of it.
**actions-runner-controller** makes that possible. Just create a *Runner* resource on your Kubernetes, and it will run and operate the self-hosted runner for the specified repository. Combined with Kubernetes RBAC, you can also build simple Self-hosted runners as a Service.
actions-runner-controller uses [cert-manager](https://cert-manager.io/docs/installation/kubernetes/) for certificate management of Admission Webhook. Make sure you have already installed cert-manager before you install. The installation instructions for cert-manager can be found below.
- [Installing cert-manager on Kubernetes](https://cert-manager.io/docs/installation/kubernetes/)
Install the custom resource and actions-runner-controller itself. This will create actions-runner-system namespace in your Kubernetes and deploy the required resources.
If you use either Github Enterprise Cloud or Server (and have recent enought version supporting Actions), you can use **actions-runner-controller** with those, too. Authentication works same way as with public Github (repo and organization level).
[Enterprise level](https://docs.github.com/en/enterprise-server@2.22/actions/hosting-your-own-runners/adding-self-hosted-runners#adding-a-self-hosted-runner-to-an-enterprise) runners are not working yet as there's no API definition for those.
You can create a GitHub App for either your account or any organization. If you want to create a GitHub App for your account, open the following link to the creation page, enter any unique name in the "GitHub App name" field, and hit the "Create GitHub App" button at the bottom of the page.
- [Create GitHub Apps on your account](https://github.com/settings/apps/new?url=http://github.com/summerwind/actions-runner-controller&webhook_active=false&public=false&administration=write&actions=read)
If you want to create a GitHub App for your organization, replace the `:org` part of the following URL with your organization name before opening it. Then enter any unique name in the "GitHub App name" field, and hit the "Create GitHub App" button at the bottom of the page to create a GitHub App.
- [Create GitHub Apps on your organization](https://github.com/organizations/:org/settings/apps/new?url=http://github.com/summerwind/actions-runner-controller&webhook_active=false&public=false&administration=write&organization_self_hosted_runners=write&actions=read)
When the installation is complete, you will be taken to a URL in one of the following formats, the last number of the URL will be used as the Installation ID later (For example, if the URL ends in `settings/installations/12345`, then the Installation ID is `12345`).
Finally, register the App ID (`APP_ID`), Installation ID (`INSTALLATION_ID`), and downloaded private key file (`PRIVATE_KEY_FILE_PATH`) to Kubernetes as Secret.
From an account that has `admin` privileges for the repository, create a [personal access token](https://github.com/settings/tokens) with `repo` scope. This token is used to register a self-hosted runner by *actions-runner-controller*.
Self-hosted runners in GitHub can either be connected to a single repository, or to a GitHub organization (so they are available to all repositories in the organization). This token is used to register a self-hosted runner by *actions-runner-controller*.
For adding a runner to a repository, the token should have `repo` scope. If the runner should be added to an organization, the token should have `admin:org` scope. Note that to use a Personal Access Token, you must issue the token with an account that has `admin` privileges (on the repository and/or the organization).
Open the Create Token page from the following link, grant the `repo` and/or `admin:org` scope, and press the "Generate Token" button at the bottom of the page to create the token.
To launch a single self-hosted runner, you need to create a manifest file includes *Runner* resource as follows. This example launches a self-hosted runner with name *example-runner* for the *summerwind/actions-runner-controller* repository.
<img width="756" alt="Actions tab in your repository settings" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/230145/73618667-8cbf9700-466c-11ea-80b6-c67e6d3f70e7.png">
Now you can use your self-hosted runner. See the [official documentation](https://help.github.com/en/actions/automating-your-workflow-with-github-actions/using-self-hosted-runners-in-a-workflow) on how to run a job with it.
To add the runner to an organization, you only need to replace the `repository` field with `organization`, so the runner will register itself to the organization.
In the below example, `actions-runner` checks for pending workflow runs for each sync period, and scale to e.g. 3 if there're 3 pending jobs at sync time.
The scale out performance is controlled via the manager containers startup `--sync-period` argument. The default value is 10 minutes to prevent unconfigured deployments rate limiting themselves from the GitHub API. The period can be customised in the `config/default/manager_auth_proxy_patch.yaml` patch for those that are building the solution via the kustomize setup.
Additionally, the autoscaling feature has an anti-flapping option that prevents periodic loop of scaling up and down.
By default, it doesn't scale down until the grace period of 10 minutes passes after a scale up. The grace period can be configured by setting `scaleDownDelaySecondsAfterScaleUp`:
When using default runner, runner pod starts up 2 containers: runner and DinD (Docker-in-Docker). This might create issues if there's `LimitRange` set to namespace.
To run a workflow job on a self-hosted runner, you can use the following syntax in your workflow:
```yaml
jobs:
release:
runs-on:self-hosted
```
When you have multiple kinds of self-hosted runners, you can distinguish between them using labels. In order to do so, you can specify one or more labels in your `Runner` or `RunnerDeployment` spec.
```yaml
# runnerdeployment.yaml
apiVersion:actions.summerwind.dev/v1alpha1
kind:RunnerDeployment
metadata:
name:custom-runner
spec:
replicas:1
template:
spec:
repository:summerwind/actions-runner-controller
labels:
- custom-runner
```
Once this spec is applied, you can observe the labels for your runner from the repository or organization in the GitHub settings page for the repository or organization. You can now select a specific runner from your workflow by using the label in `runs-on`:
Note that if you specify `self-hosted` in your workflow, then this will run your job on _any_ self-hosted runner, regardless of the labels that they have.
The GitHub hosted runners include a large amount of pre-installed software packages. For Ubuntu 18.04, this list can be found at <https://github.com/actions/virtual-environments/blob/master/images/linux/Ubuntu1804-README.md>
The container image is based on Ubuntu 18.04, but it does not contain all of the software installed on the GitHub runners. It contains the following subset of packages from the GitHub runners:
The virtual environments from GitHub contain a lot more software packages (different versions of Java, Node.js, Golang, .NET, etc) which are not provided in the runner image. Most of these have dedicated setup actions which allow the tools to be installed on-demand in a workflow, for example: `actions/setup-java` or `actions/setup-node`
If there is a need to include packages in the runner image for which there is no setup action, then this can be achieved by building a custom container image for the runner. The easiest way is to start with the `summerwind/actions-runner` image and installing the extra dependencies directly in the docker image:
2020-11-12T22:17:30.693ZERRORcontroller-runtime.controllerReconcilererror{"controller":"runner","request":"actions-runner-system/runner-deployment-dk7q8-dk5c9","error":"failed to create registration token: Post \"https://api.github.com/orgs/$YOUR_ORG_HERE/actions/runners/registration-token\": net/http: invalid header field value \"Bearer $YOUR_TOKEN_HERE\\n\" for key Authorization"}
```
**Solutions**<br />
Your base64'ed PAT token has a new line at the end, it needs to be created without a `\n` added
*`echo -n $TOKEN | base64`
* Create the secret as described in the docs using the shell and documeneted flags