## Introduction GitHub Actions can be run in GitHub-hosted cloud or self hosted environments. Self-hosted runners offer more control of hardware, operating system, and software tools than GitHub-hosted runners provide. With just a few steps, you can set up your kubernetes (K8s) cluster to be a self-hosted environment. In this guide, we will setup prerequistes, deploy Actions Runner controller (ARC) and then target that cluster to run GitHub Action workflows.

## Setup your K8s cluster
Create a K8s cluster, if not available. If you don't have a K8s cluster, you can install a local environment using minikube. For more information, see "[Installing minikube](https://minikube.sigs.k8s.io/docs/start/)." "[Using workflows](/actions/using-workflows)."
:one: Install cert-manager in your cluster. For more information, see "[cert-manager](https://cert-manager.io/docs/installation/)." ```shell kubectl apply -f https://github.com/cert-manager/cert-manager/releases/download/v1.8.2/cert-manager.yaml ``` *note:- This command uses v1.8.2. Please replace with a later version, if available. >You may also install cert-manager using Helm. For instructions, see "[Installing with Helm](https://cert-manager.io/docs/installation/helm/#installing-with-helm)." :two: Next, Generate a Personal Access Token (PAT) for ARC to authenticate with GitHub. - Login to GitHub account and Navigate to https://github.com/settings/tokens/new. - Select **repo**. - Click **Generate Token** and then copy the token locally ( we’ll need it later). ## Deploy and Configure ARC 1️⃣ Deploy and configure ARC on your K8s cluster. You may use Helm or Kubectl.
Helm deployment ##### Add repository ```shell helm repo add actions-runner-controller https://actions-runner-controller.github.io/actions-runner-controller ``` ##### Install Helm chart ```shell helm upgrade --install --namespace actions-runner-system --create-namespace\ --set=authSecret.create=true\ --set=authSecret.github_token="REPLACE_YOUR_TOKEN_HERE"\ --wait actions-runner-controller actions-runner-controller/actions-runner-controller ``` *note:- Replace REPLACE_YOUR_TOKEN_HERE with your PAT that was generated in Step 1
Kubectl deployment ##### Deploy ARC ```shell kubectl apply -f \ https://github.com/actions-runner-controller/actions-runner-controller/\ releases/download/v0.22.0/actions-runner-controller.yaml ``` *note:- Replace "v0.22.0" with the version you wish to deploy ##### Configure Personal Access Token ```shell kubectl create secret generic controller-manager \ -n actions-runner-system \ --from-literal=github_token=REPLACE_YOUR_TOKEN_HERE ```` *note:- Replace REPLACE_YOUR_TOKEN_HERE with your PAT that was generated in Step 1.
2️⃣ Create the GitHub self hosted runners and configure to run against your repository. Create a `runnerdeployment.yaml` file containing.. ```yaml apiVersion: actions.summerwind.dev/v1alpha1 kind: RunnerDeployment metadata: name: example-runnerdeploy spec: replicas: 1 template: spec: repository: mumoshu/actions-runner-controller-ci ```` *note:- Replace mumoshu/actions-runner-controller-ci with the full path to your github repository. Apply this file to your K8s cluster. ```shell kubectl apply -f runnerdeployment.yaml ```` > >🎉 We are done - now we should have self hosted runners running in K8s configured to your repository. 🎉 > > Up Next - lets verify and execute some workflows. ## Verify and execute workflows :one: Verify your setup is successful with.. ```shell $ kubectl get runners NAME REPOSITORY STATUS example-runnerdeploy2475h595fr mumoshu/actions-runner-controller-ci Running $ kubectl get pods NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE example-runnerdeploy2475ht2qbr 2/2 Running 0 1m ```` Also, this runner has been registered directly to the specified repository, you can see it in repository settings. For more information, see "[settings](https://docs.github.com/en/actions/hosting-your-own-runners/monitoring-and-troubleshooting-self-hosted-runners#checking-the-status-of-a-self-hosted-runner)." :two: You are ready to execute workflows against this self hosted runner. GitHub documentation lists the steps to target Actions against self hosted runners. For more information, see "[Using self-hosted runners in a workflow - GitHub Docs](https://docs.github.com/en/actions/hosting-your-own-runners/using-self-hosted-runners-in-a-workflow#using-self-hosted-runners-in-a-workflow)." There's also has a quick start guide to get started on Actions, For more information, see "[Quick start Guide to GitHub Actions](https://docs.github.com/en/actions/quickstart)." ## Next steps ARC provides several interesting features and capabilities. For more information, see "[readme](https://github.com/actions-runner-controller/actions-runner-controller/blob/master/README.md)."