You can avoid installing kube-bench on the host by running it inside a container using the host PID namespace.
You can avoid installing kube-bench on the host by running it inside a container using the host PID namespace.
```
```
docker run --pid=host aquasec/kube-bench:latest <master|node>
docker run --pid=host -t aquasec/kube-bench:latest <master|node>
```
```
You can even use your own configs by mounting them over the default ones in `/opt/kube-bench/cfg/`
You can even use your own configs by mounting them over the default ones in `/opt/kube-bench/cfg/`
```
```
docker run --pid=host -v path/to/my-config.yaml:/opt/kube-bench/cfg/config.yaml aquasec/kube-bench:latest <master|node>
docker run --pid=host -t -v path/to/my-config.yaml:/opt/kube-bench/cfg/config.yaml aquasec/kube-bench:latest <master|node>
```
```
> Note: the tests require either the kubelet or kubectl binary in the path in order to know the Kubernetes version. You can pass `-v $(which kubectl):/usr/bin/kubectl` to the above invocations to resolve this.