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67 lines
1.6 KiB
Markdown
67 lines
1.6 KiB
Markdown
# Forgejo Runner with systemd User Services
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It is possible to use systemd's user services together with
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[podman](https://podman.io/) to run `forgejo-runner` using a normal user
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account without any privileges and automatically start on boot.
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This was last tested on Fedora 39 on 2024-02-19, but should work elsewhere as
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well.
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Place the `forgejo-runner` binary in `/usr/local/bin/forgejo-runner` and make
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sure it can be executed (`chmod +x /usr/local/bin/forgejo-runner`).
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Install and enable `podman` as a user service:
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```bash
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$ sudo dnf -y install podman
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```
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You *may* need to reboot your system after installing `podman` as it
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modifies some system configuration(s) that may need to be activated. Without
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rebooting the system my runner errored out when trying to set firewall rules, a
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reboot fixed it.
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Enable `podman` as a user service:
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```
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$ systemctl --user start podman.socket
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$ systemctl --user enable podman.socket
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```
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Make sure processes remain after your user account logs out:
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```bash
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$ loginctl enable-linger
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```
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Create the file `/etc/systemd/user/forgejo-runner.service` with the following
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content:
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```
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[Unit]
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Description=Forgejo Runner
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[Service]
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Type=simple
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ExecStart=/usr/local/bin/forgejo-runner daemon
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Restart=on-failure
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[Install]
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WantedBy=default.target
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```
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Now activate it as a user service:
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```bash
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$ systemctl --user daemon-reload
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$ systemctl --user start forgejo-runner
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$ systemctl --user enable forgejo-runner
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```
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To see/follow the log of `forgejo-runner`:
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```bash
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$ journalctl -f -t forgejo-runner
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```
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If you reboot your system, all should come back automatically.
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