Comment by Storment33

19 days ago

I mean...

They told you why it takes so long no? the runners come by default with loads of programming languages installed like Rust, Haskell, Node, Python, .Net etc so it sets all that up per user add.

I would also question why your adding users on an ephemeral runner.

> I would also question why your adding users on an ephemeral runner.

We use runners for things that aren't quite "CI for software source code" that does some "weird" stuff.

For instance, we require that new developer system setup be automated - so we have a set of scripts to do that, and a CI runner that runs on those scripts.

  • Fair enough if you've some development environment automation and you want the CI to run it as well so CI is consistent with local development.

    Don't know exactly what your doing but others(myself included) are using Mise or Nix on a per project basis to automate the development environment setup and that works well on GitHub Actions.

    But I don't think useradd taking 30's on GitHub Actions is a bug or something they need to fix, they've explained why. Unsure about the sudo issues, did not read it carefully.

    • > Fair enough if you've some development environment automation and you want the CI to run it as well so CI is consistent with local development.

      Oh we don't even run it in applications' CI, the environment automation is an entirely separate CI workflow. The intention isn't consistency between dev/CI, the environment automation CI effectively just serves to ensure that the automations actually run without error, and adds some explicit responsibility for anyone who's adding a new dependency.

      > But I don't think useradd taking 30's on GitHub Actions is a bug or something they need to fix, they've explained why. Unsure about the sudo issues, did not read it carefully.

      Yeah, agreed. Tangential, our dev setup CI is fairly slow, which tends to be fine - it runs a couple orders of magnitude less frequently than our app CI.