SaaS runners on Windows (FREE SAAS BETA)
SaaS runner on Windows autoscale by launching virtual machines on the Google Cloud Platform. This solution uses an autoscaling driver developed by GitLab for the custom executor.
These SaaS runners are in Beta and aren't recommended for production workloads.
We want to keep iterating to get Windows runners in a stable state and generally available. You can follow our work towards this goal in the related epic.
Machine types available for Windows
Runner Tag | vCPUs | Memory | Storage |
---|---|---|---|
shared-windows |
2 | 7.5 GB | 75 GB |
Supported Windows versions
The Windows runner virtual machine instances do not use the GitLab Docker executor. This means that you can't specify
image
or services
in your pipeline configuration.
Instead you have to select the tags
for the desired Windows version.
You can execute your job in one of the following Windows versions:
Version tag | Status |
---|---|
windows-1809 |
Beta |
You can find a full list of available pre-installed software in the pre-installed software documentation.
NOTE: Each time you run a job that requires tooling or dependencies not available in the base image, those components must be installed to the newly provisioned VM increasing the total job duration.
Supported shell
SaaS runners on Windows have PowerShell configured as the shell.
The script
section of your .gitlab-ci.yml
file therefore requires PowerShell commands.
.gitlab-ci.yml
file
Example Below is a sample .gitlab-ci.yml
file that shows how to start using the runners for Windows:
.shared_windows_runners:
tags:
- shared-windows
- windows-1809
before_script:
- Set-Variable -Name "time" -Value (date -Format "%H:%m")
- echo ${time}
- echo "started by ${GITLAB_USER_NAME}"
stages:
- build
- test
build:
extends:
- .shared_windows_runners
stage: build
script:
- echo "running scripts in the build job"
test:
extends:
- .shared_windows_runners
stage: test
script:
- echo "running scripts in the test job"
Known issues
- For more information about support for Beta features, see Beta.
- The average provisioning time for a new Windows virtual machine (VM) is five minutes, so you might notice slower start times for builds on the Windows runner fleet during the Beta. Updating the autoscaler to enable the pre-provisioning of virtual machines is proposed in a future release. This update is intended to significantly reduce the time it takes to provision a VM on the Windows fleet. For more information, see issue 32.
- The Windows runner fleet may be unavailable occasionally for maintenance or updates.
- The job may stay in a pending state for longer than the Linux runners.
- There is the possibility that we introduce breaking changes which will require updates to pipelines that are using the Windows runner fleet.