serenity/Documentation/SelfHostedRunners.md
Linus Groh 8639d8bc21 Meta: Switch to clang-format-15 as the standard formatter
The two major changes noticeable on the SerenityOS codebase are:
- Much improved support for const placement, clang-format-14 ignored
  our east-const configuration in various places
- Different formatting for requires clauses, now breaking them onto
  their own line, which helps with readability a bit

Current versions of CLion also ship LLVM 15, so the built-in formatting
now matches CI formatting again :^)
2022-12-03 23:52:23 +00:00

3.2 KiB

SerenityOS self-hosted runner setup instructions

Requirements

Since these self hosted-runners are supposed to be a more performant alternative to the GitHub-provided runners, the bare minimum requirements are GitHub's own Linux runner hardware specification as well as guaranteed uptime.

As for recommended requirements, listed below are the specifications of the current SerenityOS runners, roughly matching these would eventually make running performance-regression related tests on these easier. (But this is not a hard requirement, as GitHub offers the ability to selectively choose which self-hosted runners run which workflow)

IdanHo runner:

  • Ryzen 5 3600 - 12 cores w/ KVM support
  • 64GB of RAM
  • 512GB of SSD space
This runner can be split into 2 runners with half the cores/RAM/space if needed.

Setup

These instructions assume the OS installed is Ubuntu 22.04 (Jammy), so they might not be compatible with other Linux flavours.

Install base dependencies

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:canonical-server/server-backports
wget -O - https://apt.llvm.org/llvm-snapshot.gpg.key | sudo apt-key add -
sudo add-apt-repository 'deb http://apt.llvm.org/jammy/ llvm-toolchain-jammy-15 main'
apt update
apt install git build-essential make cmake clang-format-15 gcc-12 g++-12 libstdc++-12-dev libgmp-dev ccache libmpfr-dev libmpc-dev ninja-build e2fsprogs qemu-utils qemu-system-i386 wabt

Force usage of GCC 12

update-alternatives --install /usr/bin/gcc gcc /usr/bin/gcc-12 100 --slave /usr/bin/g++ g++ /usr/bin/g++-12

Create a new user account named 'runner'

adduser runner

Give it password-less sudo capabilities by adding the following line to /etc/sudoers:

runner ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD:ALL

Add it to the kvm access group (if available):

adduser runner kvm

Switch to the new user and then create a workspace folder in its home directory:

mkdir actions-runner && cd actions-runner

Download the latest version of actions-runner-linux-x64 from https://github.com/rust-lang/gha-runner/releases

curl -o actions-runner-linux-x64-X.X.X.tar.gz -L https://github.com/rust-lang/gha-runner/releases/download/vX.X.X-rust1/actions-runner-linux-x64-X.X.X-rust1.tar.gz

Extract the tar archive

tar xzf ./actions-runner-linux-x64-X.X.X.tar.gz
./config.sh --url https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity --token INSERT_SECRET_TOKEN_HERE

Configure the runner to protect against malicious PRs by adding the following line to .env:

RUST_WHITELISTED_EVENT_NAME=push

Configure the maximum runner threads by adding the following line to .env:

MAX_RUNNER_THREADS=XXX

If you are setting up multiple runners on the same machine, this setting can be used to divvy up the cores, if you're only setting up one runner, this can just be set to the server's core count

Install the runner as a service

sudo ./svc.sh install

Start the runner

sudo ./svc.sh start