# actions-runner-controller This controller operates self-hosted runners for GitHub Actions on your Kubernetes cluster. ## Motivation [GitHub Actions](https://github.com/features/actions) is very useful as a tool for automating development. GitHub Actions job is 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 provision of a virtual machine instance and configuration. If you already have a Kubernetes cluster, you'll want 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 of the specified repository. Combined with Kubernetes RBAC, you can also build simple Self-hosted runners as a Service. ## Installation First, install *actions-runner-controller* with a manifest file. This will create a *actions-runner-system* namespace in your Kubernetes and deploy the required resources. ``` $ kubectl -f https://github.com/summerwind/actions-runner-controller/releases/download/latest/actions-runner-controller.yaml ``` Set your access token of GitHub to the secret. `${GITHUB_TOKEN}` is the value you must replace with your access token. This token is used to register Self-hosted runner by *actions-runner-controller*. ``` $ kubectl create secret generic controller-manager --from-literal=github_token=${GITHUB_TOKEN} -n actions-runner-system ``` ## Usage To launch 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. ``` $ vim runner.yaml ``` ``` apiVersion: actions.summerwind.dev/v1alpha1 kind: Runner metadata: name: example-runner spec: repository: summerwind/actions-runner-controller ``` Apply the created manifest file to your Kubernetes. ``` $ kubectl apply -f runner.yaml ``` You can see that the Runner resource has been created. ``` $ kubectl get runners NAME AGE example-runner 1m ``` You can also see that the runner pod has been running. ``` $ kubectl get pods NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE example-runner 2/2 Running 0 1m ``` The runner you created has been registerd to your repository. Actions tab in your repository settings Now your can use your self-hosted runner. See the [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.