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https://github.com/aquasecurity/kube-bench.git
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f8e0171c09
* Update aks-1.0 to match official CIS Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) Benchmark v1.0.0 * fix typo * fix empty remediation Co-authored-by: Yoav Rotem <yoavrotems97@gmail.com>
145 lines
5.7 KiB
YAML
145 lines
5.7 KiB
YAML
---
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controls:
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version: "aks-1.0"
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id: 5
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text: "Managed Services"
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type: "managedservices"
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groups:
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- id: 5.1
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text: "Image Registry and Image Scanning"
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checks:
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- id: 5.1.1
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text: "Ensure Image Vulnerability Scanning using Azure Defender image scanning or a third party provider (Manual)"
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type: "manual"
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remediation: "No remediation"
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scored: false
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- id: 5.1.2
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text: "Minimize user access to Azure Container Registry (ACR) (Manual)"
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type: "manual"
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remediation: |
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Azure Container Registry
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If you use Azure Container Registry (ACR) as your container image store, you need to grant
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permissions to the service principal for your AKS cluster to read and pull images. Currently,
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the recommended configuration is to use the az aks create or az aks update command to
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integrate with a registry and assign the appropriate role for the service principal. For
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detailed steps, see Authenticate with Azure Container Registry from Azure Kubernetes
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Service.
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To avoid needing an Owner or Azure account administrator role, you can configure a
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service principal manually or use an existing service principal to authenticate ACR from
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AKS. For more information, see ACR authentication with service principals or Authenticate
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from Kubernetes with a pull secret.
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scored: false
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- id: 5.1.3
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text: "Minimize cluster access to read-only for Azure Container Registry (ACR) (Manual)"
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type: "manual"
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remediation: "No remediation"
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scored: false
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- id: 5.1.4
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text: "Minimize Container Registries to only those approved (Manual)"
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type: "manual"
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remediation: "No remediation"
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scored: false
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- id: 5.2
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text: "Access and identity options for Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS)"
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checks:
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- id: 5.2.1
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text: "Prefer using dedicated AKS Service Accounts (Manual)"
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type: "manual"
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remediation: |
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Azure Active Directory integration
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The security of AKS clusters can be enhanced with the integration of Azure Active Directory
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(AD). Built on decades of enterprise identity management, Azure AD is a multi-tenant,
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cloud-based directory, and identity management service that combines core directory
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services, application access management, and identity protection. With Azure AD, you can
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integrate on-premises identities into AKS clusters to provide a single source for account
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management and security.
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Azure Active Directory integration with AKS clusters
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With Azure AD-integrated AKS clusters, you can grant users or groups access to Kubernetes
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resources within a namespace or across the cluster. To obtain a kubectl configuration
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context, a user can run the az aks get-credentials command. When a user then interacts
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with the AKS cluster with kubectl, they're prompted to sign in with their Azure AD
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credentials. This approach provides a single source for user account management and
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password credentials. The user can only access the resources as defined by the cluster
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administrator.
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Azure AD authentication is provided to AKS clusters with OpenID Connect. OpenID Connect
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is an identity layer built on top of the OAuth 2.0 protocol. For more information on OpenID
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Connect, see the Open ID connect documentation. From inside of the Kubernetes cluster,
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Webhook Token Authentication is used to verify authentication tokens. Webhook token
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authentication is configured and managed as part of the AKS cluster.
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scored: false
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- id: 5.3
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text: "Key Management Service (KMS)"
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checks:
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- id: 5.3.1
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text: "Ensure Kubernetes Secrets are encrypted (Manual)"
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type: "manual"
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remediation: "No remediation"
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scored: false
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- id: 5.4
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text: "Cluster Networking"
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checks:
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- id: 5.4.1
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text: "Restrict Access to the Control Plane Endpoint (Manual)"
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type: "manual"
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remediation: "No remediation"
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scored: false
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- id: 5.4.2
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text: "Ensure clusters are created with Private Endpoint Enabled and Public Access Disabled (Manual)"
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type: "manual"
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remediation: "No remediation"
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scored: false
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- id: 5.4.3
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text: "Ensure clusters are created with Private Nodes (Manual)"
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type: "manual"
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remediation: "No remediation"
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scored: false
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- id: 5.4.4
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text: "Ensure Network Policy is Enabled and set as appropriate (Manual)"
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type: "manual"
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remediation: "No remediation"
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scored: false
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- id: 5.4.5
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text: "Encrypt traffic to HTTPS load balancers with TLS certificates (Manual)"
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type: "manual"
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remediation: "No remediation"
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scored: false
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- id: 5.5
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text: "Authentication and Authorization"
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checks:
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- id: 5.5.1
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text: "Manage Kubernetes RBAC users with Azure AD (Manual)"
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type: "manual"
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remediation: "No remediation"
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scored: false
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- id: 5.5.2
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text: "Use Azure RBAC for Kubernetes Authorization (Manual)"
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type: "manual"
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remediation: "No remediation"
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scored: false
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- id: 5.6
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text: "Other Cluster Configurations"
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checks:
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- id: 5.6.1
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text: "Restrict untrusted workloads (Manual)"
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type: "manual"
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remediation: "No remediation"
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scored: false
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- id: 5.6.2
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text: "Hostile multi-tenant workloads (Manual)"
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type: "manual"
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remediation: "No remediation"
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scored: false
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