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mirror of https://github.com/aquasecurity/kube-bench.git synced 2024-11-28 10:58:20 +00:00
kube-bench/cfg/gke-1.6.0/node.yaml
Abubakr-Sadik Nii Nai Davis a15e8acaa3
Add GKE 1.6 CIS benchmark for GCP environment (#1672)
* Add config entries for GKE 1.6 controls

* Add gke1.6 control plane recommendations

* Add gke-1.6.0 worker node recommendations

* Add gke-1.6.0 policy recommendations

* Add managed services and policy recommendation

* Add master recommendations

* Fix formatting across gke-1.6.0 files

* Add gke-1.6.0 benchmark selection based on k8s version

* Workaround: hardcode kubelet config path for gke-1.6.0

* Fix tests for makeIPTablesUtilChaings

* Change scored field for all node tests to true

* Fix kubelet file permission to check for

---------

Co-authored-by: afdesk <work@afdesk.com>
2024-10-11 10:49:35 +06:00

507 lines
21 KiB
YAML

---
controls:
version: "gke-1.6.0"
id: 3
text: "Worker Node Security Configuration"
type: "node"
groups:
- id: 3.1
text: "Worker Node Configuration Files"
checks:
- id: 3.1.1
text: "Ensure that the proxy kubeconfig file permissions are set to 644 or more restrictive (Manual)"
audit: '/bin/sh -c ''if test -e $proxykubeconfig; then stat -c permissions=%a $proxykubeconfig; fi'' '
tests:
test_items:
- flag: "permissions"
compare:
op: bitmask
value: "644"
remediation: |
Run the below command (based on the file location on your system) on each worker node.
For example,
chmod 644 $proxykubeconfig
scored: true
- id: 3.1.2
text: "Ensure that the proxy kubeconfig file ownership is set to root:root (Manual)"
audit: '/bin/sh -c ''if test -e $proxykubeconfig; then stat -c %U:%G $proxykubeconfig; fi'' '
tests:
test_items:
- flag: root:root
remediation: |
Run the below command (based on the file location on your system) on each worker node.
For example:
chown root:root $proxykubeconfig
scored: true
- id: 3.1.3
text: "Ensure that the kubelet configuration file has permissions set to 600 (Manual)"
audit: '/bin/sh -c ''if test -e /home/kubernetes/kubelet-config.yaml; then stat -c permissions=%a /home/kubernetes/kubelet-config.yaml; fi'' '
tests:
test_items:
- flag: "permissions"
compare:
op: bitmask
value: "600"
remediation: |
Run the following command (using the kubelet config file location)
chmod 644 /home/kubernetes/kubelet-config.yaml
scored: true
- id: 3.1.4
text: "Ensure that the kubelet configuration file ownership is set to root:root (Manual)"
audit: '/bin/sh -c ''if test -e /home/kubernetes/kubelet-config.yaml; then stat -c %U:%G /home/kubernetes/kubelet-config.yaml; fi'' '
tests:
test_items:
- flag: root:root
remediation: |
Run the following command (using the config file location identied in the Audit step)
chown root:root /home/kubernetes/kubelet-config.yaml
scored: true
- id: 3.2
text: "Kubelet"
checks:
- id: 3.2.1
text: "Ensure that the Anonymous Auth is Not Enabled (Automated)"
audit: "/bin/ps -fC $kubeletbin"
audit_config: "/bin/cat /home/kubernetes/kubelet-config.yaml"
tests:
test_items:
- flag: "--anonymous-auth"
path: '{.authentication.anonymous.enabled}'
compare:
op: eq
value: false
remediation: |
Remediation Method 1:
If configuring via the Kubelet config file, you first need to locate the file.
To do this, SSH to each node and execute the following command to find the kubelet
process:
ps -ef | grep kubelet
The output of the above command provides details of the active kubelet process, from
which we can see the location of the configuration file provided to the kubelet service
with the --config argument. The file can be viewed with a command such as more or
less, like so:
sudo less /home/kubernetes/kubelet-config.yaml
Disable Anonymous Authentication by setting the following parameter:
"authentication": { "anonymous": { "enabled": false } }
Remediation Method 2:
If using executable arguments, edit the kubelet service file on each worker node and
ensure the below parameters are part of the KUBELET_ARGS variable string.
For systems using systemd, such as the Amazon EKS Optimised Amazon Linux or
Bottlerocket AMIs, then this file can be found at
/etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d/10-kubelet-args.conf. Otherwise,
you may need to look up documentation for your chosen operating system to determine
which service manager is configured:
--anonymous-auth=false
For Both Remediation Steps:
Based on your system, restart the kubelet service and check the service status.
The following example is for operating systems using systemd, such as the Amazon
EKS Optimised Amazon Linux or Bottlerocket AMIs, and invokes the systemctl
command. If systemctl is not available then you will need to look up documentation for
your chosen operating system to determine which service manager is configured:
systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl restart kubelet.service
systemctl status kubelet -l
scored: true
- id: 3.2.2
text: "Ensure that the --authorization-mode argument is not set to AlwaysAllow (Automated)"
audit: "/bin/ps -fC $kubeletbin"
audit_config: "/bin/cat /home/kubernetes/kubelet-config.yaml"
tests:
test_items:
- flag: --authorization-mode
path: '{.authorization.mode}'
compare:
op: nothave
value: AlwaysAllow
remediation: |
Remediation Method 1:
If configuring via the Kubelet config file, you first need to locate the file.
To do this, SSH to each node and execute the following command to find the kubelet
process:
ps -ef | grep kubelet
The output of the above command provides details of the active kubelet process, from
which we can see the location of the configuration file provided to the kubelet service
with the --config argument. The file can be viewed with a command such as more or
less, like so:
sudo less /path/to/kubelet-config.json
Enable Webhook Authentication by setting the following parameter:
"authentication": { "webhook": { "enabled": true } }
Next, set the Authorization Mode to Webhook by setting the following parameter:
"authorization": { "mode": "Webhook }
Finer detail of the authentication and authorization fields can be found in the
Kubelet Configuration documentation (https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/config-api/kubelet-config.v1beta1/).
Remediation Method 2:
If using executable arguments, edit the kubelet service file on each worker node and
ensure the below parameters are part of the KUBELET_ARGS variable string.
For systems using systemd, such as the Amazon EKS Optimised Amazon Linux or
Bottlerocket AMIs, then this file can be found at
/etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d/10-kubelet-args.conf. Otherwise,
you may need to look up documentation for your chosen operating system to determine
which service manager is configured:
--authentication-token-webhook
--authorization-mode=Webhook
For Both Remediation Steps:
Based on your system, restart the kubelet service and check the service status.
The following example is for operating systems using systemd, such as the Amazon
EKS Optimised Amazon Linux or Bottlerocket AMIs, and invokes the systemctl
command. If systemctl is not available then you will need to look up documentation for
your chosen operating system to determine which service manager is configured:
systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl restart kubelet.service
systemctl status kubelet -l
scored: true
- id: 3.2.3
text: "Ensure that a Client CA File is Configured (Automated)"
audit: "/bin/ps -fC $kubeletbin"
audit_config: "/bin/cat /home/kubernetes/kubelet-config.yaml"
tests:
test_items:
- flag: --client-ca-file
path: '{.authentication.x509.clientCAFile}'
set: true
remediation: |
Remediation Method 1:
If configuring via the Kubelet config file, you first need to locate the file.
To do this, SSH to each node and execute the following command to find the kubelet
process:
ps -ef | grep kubelet
The output of the above command provides details of the active kubelet process, from
which we can see the location of the configuration file provided to the kubelet service
with the --config argument. The file can be viewed with a command such as more or
less, like so:
sudo less /path/to/kubelet-config.json
Configure the client certificate authority file by setting the following parameter
appropriately:
"authentication": { "x509": {"clientCAFile": <path/to/client-ca-file> } }"
Remediation Method 2:
If using executable arguments, edit the kubelet service file on each worker node and
ensure the below parameters are part of the KUBELET_ARGS variable string.
For systems using systemd, such as the Amazon EKS Optimised Amazon Linux or
Bottlerocket AMIs, then this file can be found at
/etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d/10-kubelet-args.conf. Otherwise,
you may need to look up documentation for your chosen operating system to determine
which service manager is configured:
--client-ca-file=<path/to/client-ca-file>
For Both Remediation Steps:
Based on your system, restart the kubelet service and check the service status.
The following example is for operating systems using systemd, such as the Amazon
EKS Optimised Amazon Linux or Bottlerocket AMIs, and invokes the systemctl
command. If systemctl is not available then you will need to look up documentation for
your chosen operating system to determine which service manager is configured:
systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl restart kubelet.service
systemctl status kubelet -l
scored: true
- id: 3.2.4
text: "Ensure that the --read-only-port argument is disabled (Automated)"
audit: "/bin/ps -fC $kubeletbin"
audit_config: "/bin/cat /home/kubernetes/kubelet-config.yaml"
tests:
test_items:
- flag: "--read-only-port"
path: '{.readOnlyPort}'
set: false
- flag: "--read-only-port"
path: '{.readOnlyPort}'
compare:
op: eq
value: 0
bin_op: or
remediation: |
If modifying the Kubelet config file, edit the kubelet-config.json file
/etc/kubernetes/kubelet/kubelet-config.json and set the below parameter to 0
"readOnlyPort": 0
If using executable arguments, edit the kubelet service file
/etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d/10-kubelet-args.conf on each
worker node and add the below parameter at the end of the KUBELET_ARGS variable
string.
--read-only-port=0
For each remediation:
Based on your system, restart the kubelet service and check status
systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl restart kubelet.service
systemctl status kubelet -l
scored: true
- id: 3.2.5
text: "Ensure that the --streaming-connection-idle-timeout argument is not set to 0 (Automated)"
audit: "/bin/ps -fC $kubeletbin"
audit_config: "/bin/cat /home/kubernetes/kubelet-config.yaml"
tests:
test_items:
- flag: --streaming-connection-idle-timeout
path: '{.streamingConnectionIdleTimeout}'
compare:
op: noteq
value: 0
- flag: --streaming-connection-idle-timeout
path: '{.streamingConnectionIdleTimeout}'
set: false
bin_op: or
remediation: |
Remediation Method 1:
If modifying the Kubelet config file, edit the kubelet-config.json file
/etc/kubernetes/kubelet-config.yaml and set the below parameter to a non-zero
value in the format of #h#m#s
"streamingConnectionIdleTimeout": "4h0m0s"
You should ensure that the kubelet service file
/etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d/10-kubelet-args.conf does not
specify a --streaming-connection-idle-timeout argument because it would
override the Kubelet config file.
Remediation Method 2:
If using executable arguments, edit the kubelet service file
/etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d/10-kubelet-args.conf on each
worker node and add the below parameter at the end of the KUBELET_ARGS variable
string.
--streaming-connection-idle-timeout=4h0m0s
Remediation Method 3:
If using the api configz endpoint consider searching for the status of
"streamingConnectionIdleTimeout": by extracting the live configuration from the
nodes running kubelet.
**See detailed step-by-step configmap procedures in Reconfigure a Node's Kubelet in a
Live Cluster (https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/administer-cluster/reconfigure-kubelet/),
and then rerun the curl statement from audit process to check for kubelet
configuration changes
kubectl proxy --port=8001 &
export HOSTNAME_PORT=localhost:8001 (example host and port number)
export NODE_NAME=gke-cluster-1-pool1-5e572947-r2hg (example node name from
"kubectl get nodes")
curl -sSL "http://${HOSTNAME_PORT}/api/v1/nodes/${NODE_NAME}/proxy/configz"
For all three remediations:
Based on your system, restart the kubelet service and check status
systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl restart kubelet.service
systemctl status kubelet -l
scored: true
- id: 3.2.6
text: "Ensure that the --make-iptables-util-chains argument is set to true (Automated)"
audit: "/bin/ps -fC $kubeletbin"
audit_config: "/bin/cat /home/kubernetes/kubelet-config.yaml"
tests:
test_items:
- flag: --make-iptables-util-chains
path: '{.makeIPTablesUtilChains}'
compare:
op: eq
value: true
- flag: --make-iptables-utils-chains
path: '{.makeIPTablesUtilChains}'
set: false
bin_op: or
remediation: |
Remediation Method 1:
If modifying the Kubelet config file, edit the kubelet-config.json file
/etc/kubernetes/kubelet/kubelet-config.json and set the below parameter to
true
"makeIPTablesUtilChains": true
Ensure that /etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d/10-kubelet-args.conf
does not set the --make-iptables-util-chains argument because that would
override your Kubelet config file.
Remediation Method 2:
If using executable arguments, edit the kubelet service file
/etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d/10-kubelet-args.conf on each
worker node and add the below parameter at the end of the KUBELET_ARGS variable
string.
--make-iptables-util-chains:true
Remediation Method 3:
If using the api configz endpoint consider searching for the status of
"makeIPTablesUtilChains.: true by extracting the live configuration from the nodes
running kubelet.
**See detailed step-by-step configmap procedures in Reconfigure a Node's Kubelet in a
Live Cluster (https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/administer-cluster/reconfigure-kubelet/),
and then rerun the curl statement from audit process to check for kubelet
configuration changes
kubectl proxy --port=8001 &
export HOSTNAME_PORT=localhost:8001 (example host and port number)
export NODE_NAME=gke-cluster-1-pool1-5e572947-r2hg (example node name from
"kubectl get nodes")
curl -sSL "http://${HOSTNAME_PORT}/api/v1/nodes/${NODE_NAME}/proxy/configz"
For all three remediations:
Based on your system, restart the kubelet service and check status
systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl restart kubelet.service
systemctl status kubelet -l
scored: true
- id: 3.2.7
text: "Ensure that the --eventRecordQPS argument is set to 0 or a level which ensures appropriate event capture (Automated)"
audit: "/bin/ps -fC $kubeletbin"
audit_config: "/bin/cat /etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d/10-kubeadm.conf"
tests:
test_items:
- flag: --event-qps
path: '{.eventRecordQPS}'
set: true
compare:
op: eq
value: 0
remediation: |
If using a Kubelet config file, edit the file to set eventRecordQPS: to an appropriate level.
If using command line arguments, edit the kubelet service file /etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d/10-kubeadm.conf
on each worker node and set the below parameter in KUBELET_SYSTEM_PODS_ARGS variable.
Based on your system, restart the kubelet service. For example:
systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl restart kubelet.service
scored: true
- id: 3.2.8
text: "Ensure that the --rotate-certificates argument is not present or is set to true (Automated)"
audit: "/bin/ps -fC $kubeletbin"
audit_config: "/bin/cat /home/kubernetes/kubelet-config.yaml"
tests:
test_items:
- flag: --rotate-certificates
path: '{.rotateCertificates}'
compare:
op: eq
value: true
- flag: --rotate-certificates
path: '{.rotateCertificates}'
set: false
bin_op: or
remediation: |
Remediation Method 1:
If modifying the Kubelet config file, edit the kubelet-config.yaml file
/etc/kubernetes/kubelet/kubelet-config.yaml and set the below parameter to
true
"RotateCertificate":true
Additionally, ensure that the kubelet service file
/etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d/10-kubelet-args.conf does not set the --RotateCertificate
executable argument to false because this would override the Kubelet
config file.
Remediation Method 2:
If using executable arguments, edit the kubelet service file
/etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d/10-kubelet-args.conf on each
worker node and add the below parameter at the end of the KUBELET_ARGS variable
string.
--RotateCertificate=true
scored: true
- id: 3.2.9
text: "Ensure that the RotateKubeletServerCertificate argument is set to true (Automated)"
audit: "/bin/ps -fC $kubeletbin"
audit_config: "/bin/cat /home/kubernetes/kubelet-config.yaml"
tests:
test_items:
- flag: RotateKubeletServerCertificate
path: '{.featureGates.RotateKubeletServerCertificate}'
compare:
op: eq
value: true
remediation: |
Remediation Method 1:
If modifying the Kubelet config file, edit the kubelet-config.json file
/etc/kubernetes/kubelet-config.yaml and set the below parameter to true
"featureGates": {
"RotateKubeletServerCertificate":true
},
Additionally, ensure that the kubelet service file
/etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d/10-kubelet-args.conf does not set
the --rotate-kubelet-server-certificate executable argument to false because
this would override the Kubelet config file.
Remediation Method 2:
If using executable arguments, edit the kubelet service file
/etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d/10-kubelet-args.conf on each
worker node and add the below parameter at the end of the KUBELET_ARGS variable
string.
--rotate-kubelet-server-certificate=true
Remediation Method 3:
If using the api configz endpoint consider searching for the status of
"RotateKubeletServerCertificate": by extracting the live configuration from the
nodes running kubelet.
**See detailed step-by-step configmap procedures in Reconfigure a Node's Kubelet in a
Live Cluster (https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/administer-cluster/reconfigure-kubelet/),
and then rerun the curl statement from audit process to check for kubelet
configuration changes
kubectl proxy --port=8001 &
export HOSTNAME_PORT=localhost:8001 (example host and port number)
export NODE_NAME=gke-cluster-1-pool1-5e572947-r2hg (example node name from
"kubectl get nodes")
curl -sSL "http://${HOSTNAME_PORT}/api/v1/nodes/${NODE_NAME}/proxy/configz"
For all three remediation methods:
Restart the kubelet service and check status. The example below is for when using
systemctl to manage services:
systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl restart kubelet.service
systemctl status kubelet -l
scored: true