Policy Controller constraint objects enable you to enforce policies for your Kubernetes clusters. To help test your policies, you can add an enforcement action to your constraints. You can then view violations in constraint objects and logs.
This page is for IT administrators and Operators who want to ensure that all resources running within the cloud platform meet organizational compliance requirements by providing and maintaining automation to audit or enforce, and who manage the lifecycle of the underlying tech infrastructure. To learn more about common roles and example tasks that we reference in Google Cloud content, see Common GKE Enterprise user roles and tasks.
Types of enforcement actions
There are three enforcement actions: deny
, dryrun
, and warn
.
deny
is the default enforcement action. It's automatically enabled, even if
you don't add an enforcement action in your constraint. Use deny
to prevent a
given cluster operation from occurring when there's a violation.
dryrun
lets you monitor violations of your rules without actively blocking
transactions. You can use it to test if your constraints are working as
intended, prior to enabling active enforcement using the deny
action. Testing
constraints this way can prevent disruptions caused by an incorrectly configured
constraint.
warn
is similar to dryrun
, but also provides an immediate message about the
violations that occur at admission time.
It's recommended when testing new constraints or performing migration actions,
like upgrading platforms, to switch enforcement actions from deny
to warn
or
dryrun
so that you can test that your policies work as expected.
Adding enforcement actions
You can add enforcementAction: deny
or enforcementAction: dryrun
to a
constraint.
The following example constraint, named audit.yaml
, adds the dryrun
action.
#audit.yaml
apiVersion: constraints.gatekeeper.sh/v1beta1
kind: K8sPSPAllowedUsers
metadata:
name: user-must-be-3333
spec:
enforcementAction: dryrun
match:
kinds:
- apiGroups: [""]
kinds: ["Pod"]
parameters:
runAsUser:
rule: MustRunAs
ranges:
- min: 3333
max: 3333
Create the constraint. For example, apply it using kubectl apply -f
:
kubectl apply -f audit.yaml
Viewing audit results
Audited violations are appended to the Constraint objects and are also written to the logs. Violations that the admission controller rejects do not appear in the logs.
Viewing audit results in constraint objects
To see violations of a given constraint, run the following command and view the
spec.status
fields.
kubectl get constraint-kind constraint-name -o yaml
Example
To see the output of the constraint from audit.yaml
, run the
following command:
kubectl get K8sPSPAllowedUsers user-must-be-3333 -o yaml
The output you see is similar to the following:
apiVersion: constraints.gatekeeper.sh/v1beta1
kind: K8sPSPAllowedUsers
metadata:
creationTimestamp: "2020-05-22T01:34:22Z"
generation: 1
name: user-must-be-3333
resourceVersion: "13351707"
selfLink: /apis/constraints.gatekeeper.sh/v1beta1/k8spspallowedusers/user-must-be-3333
uid: 5d0b39a8-9bcc-11ea-bb38-42010a80000c
spec:
enforcementAction: dryrun
match:
kinds:
- apiGroups:
- ""
kinds:
- Pod
parameters:
runAsUser:
ranges:
- max: 3333
min: 3333
rule: MustRunAs
status:
auditTimestamp: "2020-05-22T01:39:05Z"
byPod:
- enforced: true
id: gatekeeper-controller-manager-6b665d4c4d-lwnz5
observedGeneration: 1
totalViolations: 5
violations:
- enforcementAction: dryrun
kind: Pod
message: Container git-sync is attempting to run as disallowed user 65533
name: git-importer-86564db8cb-5r4gs
namespace: config-management-system
- enforcementAction: dryrun
kind: Pod
message: Container manager is attempting to run as disallowed user 1000
name: gatekeeper-controller-manager-6b665d4c4d-lwnz5
namespace: gatekeeper-system
- enforcementAction: dryrun
kind: Pod
message: Container kube-proxy is attempting to run without a required securityContext/runAsUser
name: kube-proxy-gke-fishy131-default-pool-7369b17c-cckf
namespace: kube-system
- enforcementAction: dryrun
kind: Pod
message: Container kube-proxy is attempting to run without a required securityContext/runAsUser
name: kube-proxy-gke-fishy131-default-pool-7369b17c-jnhb
namespace: kube-system
- enforcementAction: dryrun
kind: Pod
message: Container kube-proxy is attempting to run without a required securityContext/runAsUser
name: kube-proxy-gke-fishy131-default-pool-7369b17c-xrd8
namespace: kube-system
Viewing audit results in logs
You can use the Logs Explorer to retrieve, view, and analyze log data for Policy Controller.
To get all Policy Controller logs, run the following command:
kubectl logs -n gatekeeper-system -l gatekeeper.sh/system=yes
The audit results have "process":"audit"
in the log lines, so you can pipe
the output to another command and filter by these lines. For example,
you could use jq
, which parses JSON files and lets you set a filter for
a specific log type.
Example audit result from logging:
{
"level":"info",
"ts":1590111401.9769812,
"logger":"controller",
"msg":"Container kube-proxy is attempting to run without a required securityContext/runAsUser",
"process":"audit",
"audit_id":"2020-05-22T01:36:24Z",
"event_type":"violation_audited",
"constraint_kind":"K8sPSPAllowedUsers",
"constraint_name":"user-must-be-3333",
"constraint_namespace":"",
"constraint_action":"dryrun",
"resource_kind":"Pod",
"resource_namespace":"kube-system",
"resource_name":"kube-proxy-gke-fishy131-default-pool-7369b17c-xrd8"
}
What's next
- Read more about Creating constraints
- Use the constraint template library
- Learn how to use constraints instead of PodSecurityPolicies