This document describes a threat finding type in Security Command Center. Threat findings are generated by threat detectors when they detect a potential threat in your cloud resources. For a full list of available threat findings, see Threat findings index.
Finding description
A known network utility, Netcat, was executed in a manner consistent with remote code execution attempts. This could indicate an attacker is using Netcat to establish a reverse shell, transfer files, or create unauthorized network tunnels within the container. Such activity is a serious security concern, because it suggests an attempt to gain remote control over the container, bypass security controls, or pivot to other systems within the network. Unauthorized remote code execution can lead to privilege escalation, data exfiltration, or further exploitation of the environment.
To respond to this finding, do the following:
Step 1: Review finding details
Open an
Execution: Netcat Remote Code Execution In Container
finding as directed in Reviewing findings. The details panel for the finding opens to the Summary tab.On the Summary tab, review the information in the following sections:
- What was detected, especially the following fields:
- Program binary: the absolute path of the executed binary.
- Arguments: the arguments passed during binary execution.
- Affected resource, especially the following fields:
- Resource full name: the full resource name of the cluster including the project number, location, and cluster name.
- What was detected, especially the following fields:
In the detail view of the finding, click the JSON tab.
In the JSON, note the following fields.
resource
:project_display_name
: the name of the project that contains the cluster.
finding
:processes
:binary
:path
: the full path of the executed binary.
args
: the arguments that were provided while executing the binary.
sourceProperties
:Pod_Namespace
: the name of the Pod's Kubernetes namespace.Pod_Name
: the name of the GKE Pod.Container_Name
: the name of the affected container.Container_Image_Uri
: the name of the container image being deployed.VM_Instance_Name
: the name of the GKE node where the Pod executed.
Identify other findings that occurred at a similar time for this container. Related findings might indicate that this activity was malicious, instead of a failure to follow best practices.
Step 2: Review cluster and node
In the Google Cloud console, go to the Kubernetes clusters page.
On the Google Cloud console toolbar, select the project listed in
resource.project_display_name
, if necessary.Select the cluster listed on the Resource full name row in the Summary tab of the finding details. Note any metadata about the cluster and its owner.
Click the Nodes tab. Select the node listed in
VM_Instance_Name
.Click the Details tab and note the
container.googleapis.com/instance_id
annotation.
Step 3: Review Pod
In the Google Cloud console, go to the Kubernetes Workloads page.
On the Google Cloud console toolbar, select the project listed in
resource.project_display_name
, if necessary.Filter on the cluster listed on the Resource full name row in the Summary tab of the finding details and the Pod namespace listed in
Pod_Namespace
, if necessary.Select the Pod listed in
Pod_Name
. Note any metadata about the Pod and its owner.
Step 4: Check logs
In the Google Cloud console, go to Logs Explorer.
On the Google Cloud console toolbar, select the project listed in
resource.project_display_name
, if necessary.Set Select time range to the period of interest.
On the page that loads, do the following:
- Find Pod logs for
Pod_Name
by using the following filter:resource.type="k8s_container"
resource.labels.project_id="RESOURCE.PROJECT_DISPLAY_NAME"
resource.labels.location="LOCATION"
resource.labels.cluster_name="CLUSTER_NAME"
resource.labels.namespace_name="POD_NAMESPACE"
resource.labels.pod_name="POD_NAME"
- Find cluster audit logs by using the following filter:
logName="projects/RESOURCE.PROJECT_DISPLAY_NAME/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com%2Factivity"
resource.type="k8s_cluster"
resource.labels.project_id="RESOURCE.PROJECT_DISPLAY_NAME"
resource.labels.location="LOCATION"
resource.labels.cluster_name="CLUSTER_NAME"
POD_NAME
- Find GKE node console logs by using the following filter:
resource.type="gce_instance"
resource.labels.instance_id="INSTANCE_ID"
- Find Pod logs for
Step 5: Investigate running container
If the container is still running, it might be possible to investigate the container environment directly.
Go to the Google Cloud console.
On the Google Cloud console toolbar, select the project listed in
resource.project_display_name
, if necessary.Click Activate Cloud Shell
Obtain GKE credentials for your cluster by running the following commands.
For zonal clusters:
gcloud container clusters get-credentials CLUSTER_NAME \ --zone LOCATION \ --project PROJECT_NAME
For regional clusters:
gcloud container clusters get-credentials CLUSTER_NAME \ --region LOCATION \ --project PROJECT_NAME
Replace the following:
CLUSTER_NAME
: the cluster listed inresource.labels.cluster_name
LOCATION
: the location listed inresource.labels.location
PROJECT_NAME
: the project name listed inresource.project_display_name
Retrieve the executed binary:
kubectl cp \ POD_NAMESPACE/POD_NAME:PROCESS_BINARY_FULLPATH \ -c CONTAINER_NAME \ LOCAL_FILE
Replace
local_file
with a local file path to store the added binary.Connect to the container environment by running the following command:
kubectl exec \ --namespace=POD_NAMESPACE \ -ti POD_NAME \ -c CONTAINER_NAME \ -- /bin/sh
This command requires the container to have a shell installed at
/bin/sh
.
Step 6: Research attack and response methods
- Review MITRE ATT&CK framework entries for this finding type: Command and Scripting Interpreter: Unix Shell.
- To develop a response plan, combine your investigation results with MITRE research.
Step 7: Implement your response
The following response plan might be appropriate for this finding, but might also impact operations. Carefully evaluate the information you gather in your investigation to determine the best way to resolve findings.
- Contact the owner of the project with the compromised container.
- Stop or delete the compromised container and replace it with a new container.
What's next
- Learn how to work with threat findings in Security Command Center.
- Refer to the Threat findings index.
- Learn how to review a finding through the Google Cloud console.
- Learn about the services that generate threat findings.