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kube-bench/docs/flags-and-commands.md
2022-10-10 22:31:36 +03:00

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Commands

Command Description
help Prints help about any command
run List of components to run
version Print kube-bench version

Flags

Flag Description
--alsologtostderr log to standard error as well as files
--asff Send findings to AWS Security Hub for any benchmark tests that fail or that generate a warning. See [this page][kube-bench-aws-security-hub] for more information on how to enable the kube-bench integration with AWS Security Hub.
--benchmark Manually specify CIS benchmark version
-c, --check A comma-delimited list of checks to run as specified in Benchmark document.
--config config file (default is ./cfg/config.yaml)
--exit-code Specify the exit code for when checks fail
--group Run all the checks under this comma-delimited list of groups.
--include-test-output Prints the actual result when test fails.
--json Prints the results as JSON
--junit Prints the results as JUnit
--log_backtrace_at traceLocation when logging hits line file:N, emit a stack trace (default :0)
--logtostderr log to standard error instead of files
--noremediations Disable printing of remediations section to stdout.
--noresults Disable printing of results section to stdout.
--nototals Disable calculating and printing of totals for failed, passed, ... checks across all sections
--outputfile Writes the results to output file when run with --json or --junit
--pgsql Save the results to PostgreSQL
--scored Run the scored CIS checks (default true)
--skip string List of comma separated values of checks to be skipped
--stderrthreshold severity logs at or above this threshold go to stderr (default 2)
-v, --v Level log level for V logs (default 0)
--unscored Run the unscored CIS checks (default true)
--version string Manually specify Kubernetes version, automatically detected if unset
--vmodule moduleSpec comma-separated list of pattern=N settings for file-filtered logging

Examples

Report kube-bench findings to AWS Security Hub

You can configure kube-bench with the --asff option to send findings to AWS Security Hub for any benchmark tests that fail or that generate a warning. See this page for more information on how to enable the kube-bench integration with AWS Security Hub.

Specifying the benchmark or Kubernetes version

kube-bench uses the Kubernetes API, or access to the kubectl or kubelet executables to try to determine the Kubernetes version, and hence which benchmark to run. If you wish to override this, or if none of these methods are available, you can specify either the Kubernetes version or CIS Benchmark as a command line parameter.

You can specify a particular version of Kubernetes by setting the --version flag or with the KUBE_BENCH_VERSION environment variable. The value of --version takes precedence over the value of KUBE_BENCH_VERSION.

For example, run kube-bench using the tests for Kubernetes version 1.13:

kube-bench --version 1.13

You can specify --benchmark to run a specific CIS Benchmark version:

kube-bench --benchmark cis-1.5

Note: It is an error to specify both --version and --benchmark flags together

Specifying Benchmark sections

If you want to run specific CIS Benchmark sections (i.e master, node, etcd, etc...) you can use the run --targets subcommand.

kube-bench run --targets master,node

or

kube-bench run --targets master,node,etcd,policies

If no targets are specified, kube-bench will determine the appropriate targets based on the CIS Benchmark version and the components detected on the node. The detection is done by verifying which components are running, as defined in the config files (see Configuration.

Run specific check or group

kube-bench supports running individual checks by specifying the check's id as a comma-delimited list on the command line with the --check | -c flag. kube-bench --check="1.1.1,1.1.2,1.2.1,1.3.3"

kube-bench supports running all checks under group by specifying the group's id as a comma-delimited list on the command line with the --group | -g flag. kube-bench --check="1.1,2.2" Will run all checks 1.1.X and 2.2.X.

Skip specific check or group

kube-bench supports skipping checks or groups by specifying the id as a comma-delimited list on the command line with the --skip flag. kube-bench --skip="1.1,1.2.1,1.3.3" Will skip 1.1.X group and individual checks 1.2.1, 1.3.3. Skipped checks returns [INFO] output.

Exit code

kube-bench supports using uniqe exit code when failing a check or more. kube-bench --exit-code 42 Will return 42 if one check or more failed, and 0 incase none failed. Note: [WARN] is not [FAIL].

Output manipulation flags

There are four output states:

  • [PASS] indicates that the test was run successfully, and passed.
  • [FAIL] indicates that the test was run successfully, and failed. The remediation output describes how to correct the configuration, or includes an error message describing why the test could not be run.
  • [WARN] means this test needs further attention, for example it is a test that needs to be run manually. Check the remediation output for further information.
  • [INFO] is informational output that needs no further action.

Note:

  • Some tests with Automated in their description must still be run manually
  • If the user has to run a test manually, this always generates WARN
  • If the test is Scored, and kube-bench was unable to run the test, this generates FAIL (because the test has not been passed, and as a Scored test, if it doesn't pass then it must be considered a failure).
  • If the test is Not Scored, and kube-bench was unable to run the test, this generates WARN.
  • If the test is Scored, type is empty, and there are no test_items present, it generates a WARN. This is to highlight tests that appear to be incompletely defined.

kube-bench supports multiple output manipulation flags. kube-bench --include-test-output will print failing checks output in the results section

[INFO] 1 Master Node Security Configuration
[INFO] 1.1 Master Node Configuration Files
[FAIL] 1.1.1 Ensure that the API server pod specification file permissions are set to 644 or more restrictive (Automated)
         **permissions=777**

Note: --noresults --noremediations and --include-test-output will not effect the json output but only stdout. Only --nototals will effect the json output and thats because it will not call the function to calculate totals.

Troubleshooting

Running kube-bench with the -v 3 parameter will generate debug logs that can be very helpful for debugging problems.

If you are using one of the example job*.yaml files, you will need to edit the command field, for example ["kube-bench", "-v", "3"]. Once the job has run, the logs can be retrieved using kubectl logs on the job's pod.