GitLab Runner Autoscaling

You can use GitLab Runner autoscaling to automatically scale the runner on public cloud instances. When you configure a runner to use an autoscaler, you can manage increases in CI/CD job load by leveraging your cloud infrastructure to run multiple jobs simultaneously.

In addition to the autoscaling options for public cloud instances, you can use the following container orchestration solutions for hosting and scaling a runner fleet.

  • Red Hat OpenShift Kubernetes clusters
  • Kubernetes clusters: AWS EKS, Azure, on-premise
  • Amazon Elastic Container Services clusters on AWS Fargate

GitLab Runner Autoscaler

GitLab Runner Autoscaler is the successor to the autoscaling technology based on Docker Machine. The components of the GitLab Runner Autoscaler are:

  • Taskscaler: Manages the autoscaling logic, bookkeeping, and creates fleets for runner instances that use cloud provider autoscaling groups of instances.
  • Fleeting: An abstraction for cloud provider virtual machines.
  • Cloud provider plugin: Handles the API calls to the target cloud platform and is implemented using a plugin development framework.

Overview of GitLab Next Runner Autoscaling

GitLab Runner Autoscaler supported public cloud instances

The following autoscaling options are supported for public cloud compute instances.

 Next Runner Autoscaler (Experiment)GitLab Runner Docker Machine Autoscaler (GA)
Amazon Web Services EC2 instances Yes Yes
Google Compute Engine Yes Yes
Microsoft Azure Virtual Machines Yes Yes

GitLab Runner Autoscaler supported platforms

ExecutorLinuxmacOSWindows
Instance executor Yes Yes Yes
Docker Autoscaler executor Yes No Yes

Configure the runner manager

You must configure the runner manager to use GitLab Runner Autoscaling, both the Docker Machine Autoscaling solution and the GitLab Runner Autoscaler.

The runner manager is a type of runner that creates multiple runners for autoscaling. It continuously polls GitLab for jobs and interacts with the public cloud infrastructure to create a new instance to execute jobs. The runner manager must run on a host machine that has GitLab Runner installed. Choose a distribution that Docker and GitLab Runner supports, like Ubuntu, Debian, CentOS, or RHEL.

  1. Create an instance to host the runner manager. This must not be a spot instance (AWS), or spot virtual machine (GCP, Azure).
  2. Install GitLab Runner on the instance.
  3. Add the cloud provider credentials to the Runner Manager host machine.

Example credentials configuration for the GitLab Runner Autoscaler

## credentials_file

[default]
aws_access_key_id=__REDACTED__
aws_secret_access_key=__REDACTED__

Example credentials configuration for GitLab Runner Docker Machine Autoscaling

This snippet is in the runners.machine section of the config.toml file.

  [runners.machine]
    IdleCount = 1
    IdleTime = 1800
    MaxBuilds = 10
    MachineDriver = "amazonec2"
    MachineName = "gitlab-docker-machine-%s"
    MachineOptions = [
      "amazonec2-access-key=XXXX",
      "amazonec2-secret-key=XXXX",
      "amazonec2-region=us-central-1",
      "amazonec2-vpc-id=vpc-xxxxx",
      "amazonec2-subnet-id=subnet-xxxxx",
      "amazonec2-zone=x",
      "amazonec2-use-private-address=true",
      "amazonec2-security-group=xxxxx",
    ]

Configure runner autoscaling executors

After you configure the runner manager, configure the executors specific to autoscaling:

note
You should use the Instance and Docker Autoscaling executors, as these comprise the technology that will replace the Docker Machine autoscaler.