Writing Custom Configuration Audit Policies¶
Starboard ships with a set of Built-in Configuration Audit Policies defined as OPA Rego policies. You can also define custom policies and associate them with applicable Kubernetes resources to extend basic configuration audit functionality.
This tutorial will walk through the process of creating and testing a new configuration audit policy that fails whenever
a Kubernetes resource doesn't specify app.kubernetes.io/name
or app.kubernetes.io/version
labels.
Writing a Policy¶
To define such a policy, you must first define its metadata. This includes setting a unique identifier, title, severity
(CRITICAL
, HIGH
, MEDIUM
, LOW
), descriptive text, and remediation steps. In Rego it's defined as the
__rego_metadata__
rule, which defines the following composite value:
package starboard.policy.k8s.custom
__rego_metadata__ := {
"id": "recommended_labels",
"title": "Recommended labels",
"severity": "LOW",
"type": "Kubernetes Security Check",
"description": "A common set of labels allows tools to work interoperably, describing objects in a common manner that all tools can understand.",
"recommended_actions": "Take full advantage of using recommended labels and apply them on every resource object.",
"url": "https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/common-labels/",
}
Note that the recommended_labels
policy in scoped to the starboard.policy.k8s.custom
package to avoid naming
collision with built-in policies that are pre-installed with Starboard.
Once we've got our metadata defined, we need to create the logic of the policy, which is done in the deny
or warn
rule.
recommended_labels := [
"app.kubernetes.io/name",
"app.kubernetes.io/version",
]
deny[res] {
provided := {label | input.metadata.labels[label]}
required := {label | label := recommended_labels[_]}
missing := required - provided
count(missing) > 0
msg := sprintf("You must provide labels: %v", [missing])
res := {"msg": msg}
}
These matches are essentially Rego assertions, so anyone familiar with writing rules for OPA or other tools that use
Rego should find the process familiar. In this case, it’s pretty straightforward. We subtract the set of labels
specified by the input
resource object from the set of recommended labels. The resulting set is stored in the variable
called missing
. Finally, we check if the missing
set is empty. If not, the deny
rule fails with the appropriate
message.
The input
document is set by Starboard to a Kubernetes resource when the policy is evaluated. For pods, it would look
something like the following listing:
{
"apiVersion": "v1",
"kind": "Pod",
"metadata": {
"name": "nginx",
"labels": {
"run": "nginx"
}
},
"spec": {
"containers": [
{
"name": "nginx",
"image": "nginx:1.16",
}
]
}
}
The labels set on the pod resource above can be retrieved with the following Rego expression:
provided := {label | input.metadata.labels[label]}
You can find the complete Rego code listing in recommended_labels.rego.
Testing a Policy¶
Now that you've created the policy, you need to test it to make sure it works as intended. To do that, add policy code to
the starboard-policies-config
ConfigMap and associate it with any (*
) Kubernetes resource kind:
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: starboard-policies-config
namespace: starboard-system
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: starboard-operator
app.kubernetes.io/instance: starboard-operator
app.kubernetes.io/version: "0.15.12"
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: kubectl
data:
policy.recommended_labels.kinds: "*"
policy.recommended_labels.rego: |
package starboard.policy.k8s.custom
__rego_metadata__ := {
"id": "recommended_labels",
"title": "Recommended labels",
"severity": "LOW",
"type": "Kubernetes Security Check",
"description": "A common set of labels allows tools to work interoperably, describing objects in a common manner that all tools can understand",
"recommended_actions": "Take full advantage of using recommended labels and apply them on every resource object.",
"url": "https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/common-labels/",
}
recommended_labels := [
"app.kubernetes.io/name",
"app.kubernetes.io/version",
]
deny[res] {
provided := {label | input.metadata.labels[label]}
required := {label | label := recommended_labels[_]}
missing := required - provided
count(missing) > 0
msg := sprintf("You must provide labels: %v", [missing])
res := {"msg": msg}
}
In this example, to add a new policy, you must define two data entries in the starboard-policies-config
ConfigMap:
- The
policy.<your_policy_name>.kinds
entry is used to designate applicable Kubernetes resources as a comma separated list of Kubernetes kinds (e.g.,Pod,ConfigMap,NetworkPolicy
). There is also a special value (Workload
) that you can use to select all Kubernetes workloads, and (*
) to select all Kubernetes resources recognized by Starboard. - The
policy.<your_policy_name>.rego
entry holds the policy Rego code.
Starboard automatically detects policies added to the starboard-policies-config
ConfigMap and immediately rescans
applicable Kubernetes resources.
Let's create the test
ConfigMap without recommended labels:
$ kubectl create cm test --from-literal=foo=bar
configmap/test created
When you retrieve the corresponding configuration audit report, you'll see that there is one check with LOW
severity
that's failing:
$ kubectl get configauditreport configmap-test -o wide
NAME SCANNER AGE CRITICAL HIGH MEDIUM LOW
configmap-test Starboard 24s 0 0 0 1
If you describe the report you'll see that it's failing because of our custom policy:
apiVersion: aquasecurity.github.io/v1alpha1
kind: ConfigAuditReport
metadata:
labels:
starboard.resource.kind: ConfigMap
starboard.resource.name: test
starboard.resource.namespace: default
plugin-config-hash: df767ff5f
resource-spec-hash: 7c96769cf
name: configmap-test
namespace: default
ownerReferences:
- apiVersion: v1
blockOwnerDeletion: false
controller: true
kind: ConfigMap
name: test
report:
scanner:
name: Starboard
vendor: Aqua Security
version: v0.15.12
summary:
criticalCount: 0
highCount: 0
lowCount: 1
mediumCount: 0
checks:
- checkID: recommended_labels # (1)
title: Recommended labels # (2)
severity: LOW # (3)
category: Kubernetes Security Check # (4)
description: | # (5)
A common set of labels allows tools to work interoperably,
describing objects in a common manner that all tools can
understand.
success: false # (6)
messages: # (7)
- 'You must provide labels: {"app.kubernetes.io/name", "app.kubernetes.io/version"}'
- The
checkID
property corresponds to the policy identifier, i.e.__rego_meatadata__.id
. - The
title
property as defined by the policy metadata in__rego_metadata__.title
. - The
severity
property as defined by the policy metadata in__rego_metadata__.severity
. - The
category
property as defined by the policy metadata in__rego_metadata__.type
. - The
description
property as defined by the policy metadata in__rego_metadata__.description
. - The flag indicating whether the configuration audit check has failed or passed.
- The array of messages with details in case of failure.