406 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
406 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
# Securing Linux Containers
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## 1. Table of contents
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<!--toc:start-->
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- [Securing Linux Containers](#securing-linux-containers)
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- [1. Table of contents](#1-table-of-contents)
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- [2. Introduction](#2-introduction)
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- [3. Secrets](#3-secrets)
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- [3.1 Alternatives](#31-alternatives)
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- [3.1.1 Files](#311-files)
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- [3.1.2 Secrets Management Services (kubernetes)](#312-secrets-management-services-kubernetes)
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- [4. Users and groups](#4-users-and-groups)
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- [Setting user and group](#setting-user-and-group)
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- [Containerfile/Dockerfile](#containerfiledockerfile)
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- [Changing user/group arbitrarily on container startup](#changing-usergroup-arbitrarily-on-container-startup)
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- [Additional security](#additional-security)
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- [5. Filesystem](#5-filesystem)
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- [Read-only](#read-only)
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- [Additional Protection with nosuid, noexec, and nodev](#additional-protection-with-nosuid-noexec-and-nodev)
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- [6. Resources limits](#6-resources-limits)
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- [CPU](#cpu)
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- [RAM](#ram)
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- [7. Network](#7-network)
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- [Desktop tools](#desktop-tools)
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- [Kubernetes](#kubernetes)
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- [8. Images](#8-images)
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- [8.1 Building](#81-building)
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- [8.2 Scanning](#82-scanning)
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- [9. Selinux](#9-selinux)
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<!--toc:end-->
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## 2. Introduction
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This document is a collection of simple, very generic tips and best
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practices related to security of Linux containers. Contenerization is
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considered safer by default, but then one can hear about discovered
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vulnerabilities that are primarly bad for applications in containers
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(Example: [CVE-2023-49103](https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2023-49103)).
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Tips and best practices collected here should help raise awarness about
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how to keep containers really secure. Contents are kept container-engine
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agnostic, but examples will be based on actual implementations (Podman, k8s).
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## 3. Secrets
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Secret is the most vulnerable data, as it usually can open access to other
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private data. They might also allow modification of the environment, which
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means possibilities for further access or many other forms of attack.
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> [!WARNING]
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> Don't use environment variables for secrets
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Container isolation made providing and managing secrets somewhat harder, as
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they need to cross the additional barier. This casued the rather dangerous
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trend of providing secrets among many other configuration data in form of
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environment variables. At first sight it might look like good idea, but when
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actually compared to other means of storing secrets it turns out that
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environment variables might be much easier to access by attacker, than
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for example arbitrary files. [CVE-2023-49103](https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2023-49103)
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is only an example of vulnerability which was considered to be more
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dangerous for contenerized apps, because of the vulnerability
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being based on gaining access to env variables.
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### 3.1 Alternatives
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#### 3.1.1 Files
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Files with secrets are common and broadly supported. With proper setup they can
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be also very secure.
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- Keep configuration and secret files on entirely different path than other data
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- If application runs main process under different user than worker processes
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(worker usually have direct contact with user interaction), the configuration
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should not be readable by the worker process user.
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- Depending on the technology used, storage of the secret files inside of a
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container could be temporary/volatile. In kubernetes Secret objects are mounted
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as tmpfs. Example for mounting secret as tmpfs in pod:
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```yaml
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: Pod
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metadata:
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name: app
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spec:
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containers:
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- name: app
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image: registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora-minimal:latest
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command: [ "sleep", "infinity" ]
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volumeMounts:
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- mountPath: /config
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name: config
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volumes:
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- name: config
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secret:
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secretName: config
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```
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This produces readonly tmpfs mount inside:
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```bash
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bash-5.2# df -h /config/
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Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
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tmpfs 4.8G 4.0K 4.8G 1% /config
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bash-5.2# ls -la /config/
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total 0
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drwxrwxrwt. 3 root root 100 Nov 9 14:00 .
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drwxr-xr-x. 1 root root 24 Nov 9 14:00 ..
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drwxr-xr-x. 2 root root 60 Nov 9 14:00 ..2024_11_09_14_00_47.4065932771
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lrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 32 Nov 9 14:00 ..data -> ..2024_11_09_14_00_47.4065932771
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lrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 18 Nov 9 14:00 secret.conf -> ..data/secret.conf
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```
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#### 3.1.2 Secrets Management Services (kubernetes)
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There are sophisticated tools for secret management and their deployment,
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available for kubernetes. For example HashiCorp Vault. It offers dynamic
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secrets, secret rotation, and access policies. Such tools are most helpfull in
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large environments and infrastructures, where secret management is split
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among many people.
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## 4. Users and groups
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Users and groups are standard mechanisms for security and permissions limiting
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in unix-like systems. Contenerization engines usually have possibility to
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arbitrarily assign them to the contenerized program process.
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> [!NOTE]
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> Both user and group can always be specified by numeric id even if no actual
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> user or group is assigned to them. When specifying with string name, the user
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> or group must exist **inside** of the container (`/etc/passwd`, `/etc/group`)
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> [!NOTE]
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> Processes of rootless containers or containers with uid/gid mapping have
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> different id's inside of container and outside. This can complicate things
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> even more, but that also usually greatly increases security.
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> In some scenarios such mapping can also cause trouble with files in
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> container image, if their id's are out of mapping range.
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### Setting user and group
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Containers have default user and group specified by Containerfile, but
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it can be changed when starting the container.
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#### Containerfile/Dockerfile
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In Containerfile the user/group assignment might take place many times in
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single build. Typical reason for that is to have high privilige (root) during
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build, and then set default to unpriviliged user at the end of build, so that
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containers will use it by default.
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Setting just user to "user1"
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```Dockerfile
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USER user1
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```
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Setting both user and group
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```Dockerfile
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USER user1:group1
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```
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Setting just group
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```Dockerfile
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USER :group1
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```
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#### Changing user/group arbitrarily on container startup
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Podman and Docker uses `--user` or shorter `-u` flag to specify both user and
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group. The syntax is the same as shown for Containerfile. Example of
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setting both user and group to bin, but user is specified with number ID:
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```bash
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❯ podman run --rm -it --user 1:bin registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora-minimal
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bash-5.2$ whoami
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bin
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bash-5.2$ groups
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bin
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bash-5.2$ grep ^bin /etc/passwd
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bin:x:1:1:bin:/bin:/usr/sbin/nologin
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bash-5.2$ grep ^bin /etc/group
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bin:x:1:
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```
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For Kubernetes, the user and group specification is located in pod definition:
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```yaml
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: Pod
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spec:
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securityContext:
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runAsUser: 1
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runAsGroup: 1
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```
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> [!NOTE]
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> In kubernetes you can't specify user nor group using string name.
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> Only numeric values are allowed.
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### Additional security
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Linux kernel provides usefull feature - [No New Privileges Flag](https://docs.kernel.org/userspace-api/no_new_privs.html).
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If set for process, it prevents the process from gaining more privileges than
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parent process. This effectively blocks use of capabilities, and setgid,setuid
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flags on files, which are known and powerfull tools for exploitation.
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In Podman and Docker, the flag can be enabled using parameter `--security-opt no-new-privileges`
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In Kubernetes, there is section related to security context per container:
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```yaml
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(....)
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containers:
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- name: mycontainer
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securityContext:
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allowPrivilegeEscalation: false
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(....)
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```
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## 5. Filesystem
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By default the filesystem security of containers is quite good, specially
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when used with other mechanisms like selinux or mapped UIDs/GIDs, but it
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still have field for improvement.
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### Read-only
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Both base filesystem and mounted volumes can be set to readonly.
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When using a read-only filesystem, certain directories may still need to be
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writable, such as /tmp or /var/tmp. This is where tmpfs (temporary filesystem)
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can be used. tmpfs filesystem mounts a temporary filesystem in memory, allowing these
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directories to be writable without compromising the overall read-only nature
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of the filesystem. The directory will be empty and will vanish on container
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shutdown which also increases security, if the temporary data is vulnerable.
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Running Podman container with readonly base filesystem using `--read-only`:
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```bash
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podman run --rm -it --read-only registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora-minimal
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```
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> [!Note]
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> Podman simplifies use of --read-only by automatically creating read-write
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> tmpfs mounts inside in places where it is usually needed, like `/dev/shm`,
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> `/tmp`, `/run`, etc...
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Mounting tmpfs dir with specific size limit to Podman container using `--tmpfs`:
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```bash
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podman run --rm -it --read-only --tmpfs /tmp:rw,size=64m registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora-minimal
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```
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Mounting podman volume as read-only is done by specifying `ro` mount option
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after `:` separator, for example `--tmpfs /test:ro`, `-v /host/path:/container/path:ro`
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On Kubernetes to set base filesystem of a container to read-only, there is
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`readOnlyRootFilesystem: true` attribute in container security context, and to
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mount any volume as read-only, there is attribute `readOnly: true` in mount
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section.
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Full kubernetes example of read-only base filesystem and example volume:
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```yaml
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: Pod
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metadata:
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name: readonly-pod
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spec:
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containers:
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- name: mycontainer
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image: registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora-minimal:latest
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command: ["sleep", "infinity"]
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securityContext:
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readOnlyRootFilesystem: true
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volumeMounts:
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- mountPath: /test
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readOnly: true
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name: tmpfs
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volumes:
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- name: tmpfs
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emptyDir:
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medium: Memory
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sizeLimit: 64Mi
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```
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### Additional Protection with nosuid, noexec, and nodev
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To further enhance security, you can use the nosuid, noexec, and nodev mount
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options for volumes. They can also be used for tmpfs mounts.
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- nosuid: Prevents the execution of set-user-identifier or set-group-identifier programs.
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- noexec: Prevents the execution of any binaries on the mounted filesystem.
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- nodev: Prevents the use of device files on the mounted filesystem.
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Example using Podman:
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```bash
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❯ podman run --rm -it --read-only --tmpfs /test:nodev,nosuid,noexec registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora-minimal
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bash-5.2# mount | grep /test
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tmpfs on /test type tmpfs (rw,nosuid,nodev,noexec,relatime,context="system_u:object_r:container_file_t:s0:c240,c646",uid=1000,gid=1000,inode64)
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```
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## 6. Resources limits
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Setting resource limits for containers is required to ensure that no single
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container can consume excessive resources, which could impact the performance
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and stability of the entire system or neighbour systems.
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### CPU
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Since there is no virtualization, the cpu is visible with all its cores and
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threads inside of a container. Therefore cpu limiting is done by limiting
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cpu time using scheduler. Usually the limitation unit is vCPU. In Podman
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you can set the limit using `--cpus` flag. For example `--cpus=2` will limit
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cpu time to 2/X of total cpu time current host have. In case of cpu with 16
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threads this means that container can use up to 12.5% of whole cpu power. This
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does not mean assigning the cpu time to specific physical threads, therefore
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high load in that container will be loadbalanced on all physical threads.
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In case of Kubernetes this works the same, limits are specified per container:
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```yaml
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(....)
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spec:
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containers:
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- name: app
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resources:
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limits:
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cpu: "2"
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(....)
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```
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### RAM
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Limiting RAM for container looks similar to cpu limiting. Except that
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when software inside of a container tries to cross the limits, it will be
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handled more brutally - RAM hungry process will be killed. This might be
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not that intuitive for application, as here again the app sees all the memory
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available in host system, and it does not know about the limits (unless
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configured).
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Podman have simple flag `--memory` which configures the limit. `--memory=512MiB`
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will limit to 512MiB.
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Kubernetes works similar:
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```yaml
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(....)
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spec:
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containers:
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- name: app
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resources:
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limits:
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memory: "512Mi"
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(....)
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```
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## 7. Network
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For network isolation, Linux containers leverage network namespaces.
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A network namespace is a feature provided by the Linux kernel that allows for
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the creation of isolated, independent network stacks. Each network namespace
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has its own separate set of network interfaces, routing tables, firewall
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rules, and other network-related resources. This gives complex possibilities
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for network configuration, but it stimulates differences between
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container engine implementations.
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Additionally rootless containers, which are considered safer, need
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to fallback to different network components, with reduced
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possibilities, as managing network is strictly root based.
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### Desktop tools
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Container engines suitable for desktop like Podman usage usually have limited
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options for network configuration. They allow to isolate pods from host and
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each other with different network addresses pools, and even disabling the
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network at all, which is very safe, but very rare.
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For such tools there could be few rules that should increase security:
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- Don't disable isolation. Isolation makes access harder for remote attacker,
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even if he can access any port on the container host machine.
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- when opening ports to access the app from outside, set binding to the least
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accessible but sufficient interface/address. For example If you expect only
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to access the app locally over localhost, you could bind to localhost in
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Podman using flag: `-p 127.0.0.1:8080:8080` to open the port 8080
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only for localhost
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### Kubernetes
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Kubernetes gives much greater possibilities for both ingress and egress.
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Primary tools for that are NetworkPolcicies, which are implemented via plugins
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(therefore they might be not available on some k8s clusters).
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## 8. Images
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## 8.1 Building
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## 8.2 Scanning
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## 9. Selinux
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