## Common Network Related Issues ### Common things that can cause the runner to not working properly - Bug in the runner or the dotnet framework that causes actions runner can't make Http request in a certain network environment. - Proxy/Firewall block certain HTTP method, like it block all POST and PUT calls which the runner will use to upload logs. - Proxy/Firewall only allows requests with certain user-agent to pass through and the actions runner user-agent is not in the allow list. - Proxy try to decrypt and exam HTTPS traffic for security purpose but cause the actions-runner to fail to finish SSL handshake due to the lack of trusting proxy's CA. - Proxy try to modify the HTTPS request (like add or change some http headers) and causes the request become incompatible with the Actions Service (ASP.NetCore), Ex: [Nginx](https://github.com/dotnet/aspnetcore/issues/17081) - Firewall rules that block action runner from accessing certain hosts, ex: `*.github.com`, `*.actions.githubusercontent.com`, etc. ### Identify and solve these problems The key is to figure out where is the problem, the network environment, or the actions runner? Use a 3rd party tool to make the same requests as the runner did would be a good start point. - Use `nslookup` to check DNS - Use `ping` to check Ping - Use `traceroute`, `tracepath`, or `tracert` to check the network route between the runner and the Actions service - Use `curl -v` to check the network stack, good for verifying default certificate/proxy settings. - Use `Invoke-WebRequest` from `pwsh` (`PowerShell Core`) to check the dotnet network stack, good for verifying bugs in the dotnet framework. If the 3rd party tool is also experiencing the same error as the runner does, then you might want to contact your network administrator for help. Otherwise, contact GitHub customer support or log an issue at https://github.com/actions/runner