Table of Contents
This repository contains the source code used to create the VM images for GitHub-hosted runners used for Actions, as well as for Microsoft-hosted agents used for Azure Pipelines. To build a VM machine from this repo's source, see the instructions.
-latest
label is used for the latest OS image version that is GA-latest
label to a new OS version we will announce the change and give sufficient lead time for users to update their workflowsSee notable upcoming changes by viewing issues with the Announcement label.
The purpose of a Beta is to collect feedback on an image before it is released to GA. The goal of a Beta is to identify and fix any potential issues that exist on that image. Images are updated on a weekly cadence. Any workflows that run on a beta image do not fall under the customer SLA in place for Actions. Customers choosing to use Beta images are encouraged to provide feedback in the runner-images repo by creating an issue. A Beta may take on different availability, i.e. public vs private.
A GA (General Availability) image has been through a Beta period and is deemed ready for general use. Images are updated on a weekly cadence. In order to be moved to GA the image must meet the following criteria:
This image type falls under the customer SLA for actions. GA images are eventually deprecated according to our guidelines as we only support the latest 2 versions of an OS.
GitHub Actions and Azure DevOps use the -latest
YAML label (ex: ubuntu-latest
, windows-latest
, and macos-latest
). These labels point towards the newest stable OS version available.
The -latest
migration process is gradual and happens over 1-2 months in order to allow customers to adapt their workflows to the newest OS version. During this process, any workflow using the -latest
label, may see changes in the OS version in their workflows or pipelines. To avoid unwanted migration, users can specify a specific OS version in the yaml file (ex: macos-14, windows-2022, ubuntu-22.04).
How to best follow along with changes
Find the latest releases for this repository here.
Subscribe to the releases coming out of this repository, instructions here.
Upcoming changes: A pre-release is created when the deployment of an image has started. As soon as the deployment is finished, the pre-release is converted to a release. If you have subscribed to releases, you will get notified of pre-releases as well.
For high impact changes, we will post these in advance to the GitHub Changelog on our blog and on twitter.
Cadence
Tools and versions will typically be removed 6 months after they are deprecated or have reached end-of-life
We support (at maximum) 2 GA images and 1 beta image at a time. We begin the deprecation process of the oldest image label once the newest OS image label has been released to GA.
The images generally contain the latest versions of packages installed except for Ubuntu LTS where we mostly rely on the Canonical-provided repositories.
Popular tools can have several versions installed side-by-side with the following strategy:
major.minor
versions PyPy 3 most popular major.minor
versions .NET Core 2 latest LTS versions and 1 latest version. For each feature version only latest patch is installed. Note for Ubuntu images see details. GCC
We use third-party package managers to install software during the image generation process. The table below lists the package managers and the software installed.
Note
Third-party repositories are re-evaluated every year to identify if they are still useful and secure.
In general, these are the guidelines we follow when deciding what to pre-install on our images:
The availability of images for GitHub Actions and Azure DevOps is the same. However, deprecation policies may differ. See documentation for more details:
What image version is used in my build?Usually, image deployment takes 2-3 days, and documentation in the main
branch is only updated when deployment is finished. To find out which image version and what software versions are used in a specific build, see Set up job
(GitHub Actions) or Initialize job
(Azure DevOps) step log.
We do not plan to offer other Linux distributions. We recommend using Docker if you'd like to build using other distributions with the hosted runner images. Alternatively, you can leverage self-hosted runners and fully customize your VM image to your needs.
How do I contribute to the macOS source?macOS source lives in this repository and is available for everyone. However, macOS image-generation CI doesn't support external contributions yet so we are not able to accept pull-requests for now.
We are in the process of preparing macOS CI to accept contributions. Until then, we appreciate your patience and ask you to continue to make tool requests by filing issues.
How does GitHub determine what tools are installed on the images?For some tools, we always install the latest at the time of the deployment; for others, we pin the tool to specific version(s). For more details please see the Preinstallation Policy
How do I request that a new tool be pre-installed on the image? Please create an issue and get an approval from us to add this tool to the image before creating the pull request. What branch should I use to build custom image? We strongly encourage customers to build their own images using the main branch. This repository contains multiple branches and releases that serve as document milestones to reflect what software is installed in the images at certain point of time. Current builds are not idempotent and if one tries to build a runner image using the specific tag it is not guaranteed that the build will succeed.RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
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