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Kube PodSecurityPolicy Advisor

kube-psp-advisor is a tool that makes it easier to create K8s Pod Security Policies (PSPs) or OPA Policy from either a live K8s environment or from a single .yaml file containing a pod specification (Deployment, DaemonSet, Pod, etc).

It has 2 subcommands, kube-psp-advisor inspect and kube-psp-advisor convert. inspect connects to a K8s API server, scans the security context of workloads in a given namespace or the entire cluster, and generates a PSP or an OPA Policy based on the security context. convert works without connecting to an API Server, reading a single .yaml file containing a object with a pod spec and generating a PSP or OPA Policy based on the file.

Installation as a Krew Plugin

Follow the instructions to install krew. Then run the following command:

kubectl krew install advise-psp

The plugin will be available as kubectl advise-psp.

Build and Run locally

  1. make build
  2. ./kube-psp-advisor inspect to generate Pod Security Policy based on running cluster configuration
    • 2.1 ./kube-psp-advisor inspect --report to print the details reports (why this PSP is recommended for the cluster)
    • 2.2 ./kube-psp-advisor inspect --grant to print PSPs, roles and rolebindings for service accounts (refer to psp-grant.yaml)
    • 2.3 ./kube-psp-advisor inspect --namespace=<ns> to print report or PSP(s) within a given namespace (default to all)
    • 2.4 ./kube-psp-advisor inspect --policy opa to generate OPA Policy based on running cluster configuration
    • 2.5 ./kube-psp-advisor inspect --policy opa --deny-by-default to generate an OPA Policy, where OPA Default Rule is Deny ALL
  3. ./kube-psp-advisor convert --podFile <path> --pspFile <path> to generate a PSP from a single .yaml file.
    • 4.1 ./kube-psp-advisor convert --podFile <path> --pspFile <path> --opa to generate an OPA Policy from a single .yaml file.
    • 4.2 ./kube-psp-advisor convert --podFile <path> --pspFile <path> --opa --deny-by-default to generate an OPA Policy from a single .yaml file, where OPA Default Rule is Deny ALL.

Build and Run as Container

  1. docker build -t <Image Name> -f container/Dockerfile .
  2. docker run -v ~/.kube:/root/.kube -v ~/.aws:/root/.aws <Image Name> (the .aws folder mount is optional and totally depends on your clould provider)

Use Cases

  1. Help verify the deployment, daemonset settings in cluster and plan to reduce unnecessary privileges/resources
  2. Apply Pod Security Policy or OPA policy to the target cluster
  3. Using flag --namespace=<namespace> with --report to debug and narrow down the security context per namespace

Attributes Aggregated for Pod Security Policy

  • allowPrivilegeEscalation
  • allowedCapabilities
  • allowedHostPaths
    • readOnly
  • hostIPC
  • hostNetwork
  • hostPID
  • privileged
  • readOnlyRootFilesystem
  • runAsUser
  • runAsGroup
  • Volume
  • hostPorts
  • allowedUnsafeSysctls

Limitations

Some attributes(e.g. capabilities) required gathering runtime information in order to provide the followings:

  • Least privilege (capabilities captured from runtime)

High-level todo list

  • Basic functionalities;
  • Create PSP's for common charts
  • Kubectl plugin

Sample Pod Security Policy

Command: ./kube-psp-advisor inspect --namespace=psp-test

apiVersion: policy/v1beta1
kind: PodSecurityPolicy
metadata:
  creationTimestamp: null
  name: pod-security-policy-20181130114734
spec:
  allowedCapabilities:
  - SYS_ADMIN
  - NET_ADMIN
  allowedHostPaths:
  - pathPrefix: /bin
  - pathPrefix: /tmp
  - pathPrefix: /usr/sbin
  - pathPrefix: /usr/bin
  fsGroup:
    rule: RunAsAny
  hostIPC: false
  hostNetwork: false
  hostPID: false
  privileged: true
  runAsUser:
    rule: RunAsAny
  seLinux:
    rule: RunAsAny
  supplementalGroups:
    rule: RunAsAny
  volumes:
  - hostPath
  - configMap
  - secret

Sample Report

Command: ./kube-psp-advisor inspect --namespace=psp-test --report | jq .podSecuritySpecs

{
  "hostIPC": [
    {
      "metadata": {
        "name": "busy-rs",
        "kind": "ReplicaSet"
      },
      "namespace": "psp-test",
      "hostPID": true,
      "hostNetwork": true,
      "hostIPC": true,
      "volumeTypes": [
        "configMap"
      ]
    },
    {
      "metadata": {
        "name": "busy-job",
        "kind": "Job"
      },
      "namespace": "psp-test",
      "hostIPC": true,
      "volumeTypes": [
        "hostPath"
      ],
      "mountedHostPath": [
        "/usr/bin"
      ]
    }
  ],
  "hostNetwork": [
    {
      "metadata": {
        "name": "busy-rs",
        "kind": "ReplicaSet"
      },
      "namespace": "psp-test",
      "hostPID": true,
      "hostNetwork": true,
      "hostIPC": true,
      "volumeTypes": [
        "configMap"
      ]
    },
    {
      "metadata": {
        "name": "busy-pod",
        "kind": "Pod"
      },
      "namespace": "psp-test",
      "hostNetwork": true,
      "volumeTypes": [
        "hostPath",
        "secret"
      ],
      "mountedHostPath": [
        "/usr/bin"
      ]
    }
  ],
  "hostPID": [
    {
      "metadata": {
        "name": "busy-deploy",
        "kind": "Deployment"
      },
      "namespace": "psp-test",
      "hostPID": true,
      "volumeTypes": [
        "hostPath"
      ],
      "mountedHostPath": [
        "/tmp"
      ]
    },
    {
      "metadata": {
        "name": "busy-rs",
        "kind": "ReplicaSet"
      },
      "namespace": "psp-test",
      "hostPID": true,
      "hostMetwork": true,
      "hostIPC": true,
      "volumeTypes": [
        "configMap"
      ]
    }
  ]
}

Commercial

Generating PSPs based on runtime activity, simulating PSPs and managing different PSPs across Kubernetes namespaces can simplify the life of every Kubernetes operator. Check out how Sysdig Secure can help - https://sysdig.com/blog/psp-in-production/