Note: GitHub-hosted runners are not currently supported on GitHub Enterprise Server. You can see more information about planned future support on the GitHub public roadmap.
About autoscaling
You can automatically increase or decrease the number of self-hosted runners in your environment in response to the webhook events you receive with a particular label. For example, you can create automation that adds a new self-hosted runner each time you receive a workflow_job
webhook event with the queued
activity, which notifies you that a new job is ready for processing. The webhook payload includes label data, so you can identify the type of runner the job is requesting. Once the job has finished, you can then create automation that removes the runner in response to the workflow_job
completed
activity.
Supported autoscaling solutions
GitHub recommends using actions/actions-runner-controller for autoscaling your runners.
Using ephemeral runners for autoscaling
GitHub recommends implementing autoscaling with ephemeral self-hosted runners; autoscaling with persistent self-hosted runners is not recommended. In certain cases, GitHub cannot guarantee that jobs are not assigned to persistent runners while they are shut down. With ephemeral runners, this can be guaranteed because GitHub only assigns one job to a runner.
This approach allows you to manage your runners as ephemeral systems, since you can use automation to provide a clean environment for each job. This helps limit the exposure of any sensitive resources from previous jobs, and also helps mitigate the risk of a compromised runner receiving new jobs.
To add an ephemeral runner to your environment, include the --ephemeral
parameter when registering your runner using config.sh
. For example:
./config.sh --url https://github.com/octo-org --token example-token --ephemeral
The GitHub Actions service will then automatically de-register the runner after it has processed one job. You can then create your own automation that wipes the runner after it has been de-registered.
Note: If a job is labeled for a certain type of runner, but none matching that type are available, the job does not immediately fail at the time of queueing. Instead, the job will remain queued until the 24 hour timeout period expires.
Controlling runner software updates on self-hosted runners
By default, self-hosted runners will automatically perform a software update whenever a new version of the runner software is available. If you use ephemeral runners in containers then this can lead to repeated software updates when a new runner version is released. Turning off automatic updates allows you to update the runner version on the container image directly on your own schedule.
To turn off automatic software updates and install software updates yourself, specify the --disableupdate
flag when registering your runner using config.sh
. For example:
./config.sh --url https://github.com/YOUR-ORGANIZATION --token EXAMPLE-TOKEN --disableupdate
If you disable automatic updates, you must still update your runner version regularly. New functionality in GitHub Actions requires changes in both the GitHub Actions service and the runner software. The runner may not be able to correctly process jobs that take advantage of new features in GitHub Actions without a software update.
If you disable automatic updates, you will be required to update your runner version within 30 days of a new version being made available. You may want to subscribe to notifications for releases in the actions/runner
repository. For more information, see "Configuring notifications."
For instructions on how to install the latest runner version, see the installation instructions for the latest release.
Note: If you do not perform a software update within 30 days, the GitHub Actions service will not queue jobs to your runner. In addition, if a critical security update is required, the GitHub Actions service will not queue jobs to your runner until it has been updated.
Using webhooks for autoscaling
You can create your own autoscaling environment by using payloads received from the workflow_job
webhook. This webhook is available at the repository, organization, and enterprise levels, and the payload for this event contains an action
key that corresponds to the stages of a workflow job's life-cycle; for example when jobs are queued
, in_progress
, and completed
. You must then create your own scaling automation in response to these webhook payloads.
- For more information about the
workflow_job
webhook, see "Webhook events and payloads." - To learn how to work with webhooks, see "Webhooks documentation."
Authentication requirements
You can register and delete repository and organization self-hosted runners using the API. To authenticate to the API, your autoscaling implementation can use an access token or a GitHub app.
Your access token will require the following scope:
- For private repositories, use an access token with the
repo
scope. - For public repositories, use an access token with the
public_repo
scope. - For organizations, use an access token with the
admin:org
scope.
To authenticate using a GitHub App, it must be assigned the following permissions:
- For repositories, assign the
administration
permission. - For organizations, assign the
organization_self_hosted_runners
permission.
You can register and delete enterprise self-hosted runners using the API. To authenticate to the API, your autoscaling implementation can use an access token.
Your access token will require the manage_runners:enterprise
scope.