enforce-policy-as-code
Über
Diese Fähigkeit implementiert Policy-as-Code-Durchsetzung in Kubernetes unter Verwendung von OPA Gatekeeper oder Kyverno, um Ressourcen gemäß organisatorischer Richtlinien zu validieren und zu mutieren. Sie behandelt Admission Control, Audit-Modus und CI/CD-Integration für Shift-Left-Validierung. Nutzen Sie sie, um Konfigurationsstandards durchzusetzen, Sicherheitsfehlkonfigurationen zu verhindern und Compliance vor der Bereitstellung sicherzustellen.
Schnellinstallation
Claude Code
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Dokumentation
Enforce Policy as Code
Declarative policy enforce → OPA Gatekeeper or Kyverno. K8s resource validate + mutate.
Use When
- Enforce org standards (labels, annotations, limits)
- Prevent security misconfig (privileged containers, host namespaces, insecure images)
- Compliance before deploy
- Standardize naming + metadata
- Auto remediate via mutation
- Audit existing resources no block
- CI/CD shift-left
In
- Required: K8s cluster w/ admin
- Required: Engine choice (OPA Gatekeeper or Kyverno)
- Required: Policy list (security, compliance, ops)
- Optional: Existing resources to audit
- Optional: Exemption patterns (namespaces/resources)
- Optional: CI/CD config for pre-deploy validate
Do
See Extended Examples for complete configuration files and templates.
Step 1: Install Engine
Deploy OPA Gatekeeper or Kyverno as admission controller.
OPA Gatekeeper:
# Install Gatekeeper using Helm
helm repo add gatekeeper https://open-policy-agent.github.io/gatekeeper/charts
helm repo update
# Install with audit enabled
helm install gatekeeper gatekeeper/gatekeeper \
--namespace gatekeeper-system \
--create-namespace \
--set audit.replicas=2 \
--set replicas=3 \
--set validatingWebhookFailurePolicy=Fail \
--set auditInterval=60
# Verify installation
kubectl get pods -n gatekeeper-system
kubectl get crd | grep gatekeeper
# Check webhook configuration
kubectl get validatingwebhookconfigurations gatekeeper-validating-webhook-configuration -o yaml
Kyverno:
# Install Kyverno using Helm
helm repo add kyverno https://kyverno.github.io/kyverno/
helm repo update
# Install with HA setup
helm install kyverno kyverno/kyverno \
--namespace kyverno \
--create-namespace \
--set replicaCount=3 \
--set admissionController.replicas=3 \
--set backgroundController.replicas=2 \
--set cleanupController.replicas=2
# Verify installation
kubectl get pods -n kyverno
kubectl get crd | grep kyverno
# Check webhook configurations
kubectl get validatingwebhookconfigurations kyverno-resource-validating-webhook-cfg
kubectl get mutatingwebhookconfigurations kyverno-resource-mutating-webhook-cfg
NS exclusions:
# gatekeeper-config.yaml
apiVersion: config.gatekeeper.sh/v1alpha1
kind: Config
metadata:
name: config
namespace: gatekeeper-system
spec:
match:
- excludedNamespaces:
- kube-system
- kube-public
- kube-node-lease
- gatekeeper-system
processes:
- audit
- webhook
validation:
traces:
- user: system:serviceaccount:gatekeeper-system:gatekeeper-admin
kind:
group: ""
version: v1
kind: Namespace
→ Engine pods HA. CRDs installed (ConstraintTemplate, Constraint / ClusterPolicy, Policy). Webhooks active. Audit running.
If err:
- Pod logs:
kubectl logs -n gatekeeper-system -l app=gatekeeper --tail=50 - Endpoints:
kubectl get endpoints -n gatekeeper-system - Port/cert issues in webhook logs
- Resources sufficient (~500MB/replica)
- RBAC:
kubectl auth can-i create constrainttemplates --as=system:serviceaccount:gatekeeper-system:gatekeeper-admin
Step 2: Define Templates + Policies
Reusable templates + constraints.
OPA Gatekeeper Template:
# required-labels-template.yaml
apiVersion: templates.gatekeeper.sh/v1
kind: ConstraintTemplate
metadata:
name: k8srequiredlabels
annotations:
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)
Kyverno ClusterPolicy:
# kyverno-policies.yaml
apiVersion: kyverno.io/v1
kind: ClusterPolicy
metadata:
name: require-labels
annotations:
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)
Apply:
# Apply Gatekeeper templates and constraints
kubectl apply -f required-labels-template.yaml
# Apply Kyverno policies
kubectl apply -f kyverno-policies.yaml
# Verify constraint/policy status
kubectl get constraints
kubectl get clusterpolicies
# Check for any policy errors
kubectl describe k8srequiredlabels require-app-labels
kubectl describe clusterpolicy require-labels
→ Templates/Policies created. Status "True" enforce. No err. Webhook evals new resources.
If err:
- Rego syntax (Gatekeeper):
opa testlocally or check status - YAML:
kubectl apply --dry-run=client -f policy.yaml - Status:
kubectl get constraint -o yaml | grep -A 10 status - Simple first, add complexity
- Match criteria correct (kinds, namespaces)
Step 3: Test Enforcement
Validate block non-compliant, allow compliant.
Test manifests:
# test-non-compliant.yaml
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: test-no-labels
namespace: production
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)
Test:
# Attempt to create non-compliant resource (should fail)
kubectl apply -f test-non-compliant.yaml
# Expected: Error with policy violation message
# Create compliant resource (should succeed)
kubectl apply -f test-compliant.yaml
# Expected: deployment.apps/test-compliant created
# Test with dry-run for validation
kubectl apply -f test-non-compliant.yaml --dry-run=server
# Shows policy violations without actually creating resource
# Clean up
kubectl delete -f test-compliant.yaml
Policy reporting (Kyverno):
# Check policy reports
kubectl get policyreports -A
kubectl get clusterpolicyreports
# View detailed report
kubectl get policyreport -n production -o yaml
# Check policy rule results
kubectl get policyreport -n production -o jsonpath='{.items[0].results}' | jq .
→ Non-compliant rejected w/ clear msg. Compliant created. Reports show pass/fail. Dry-run works.
If err:
- Audit mode not enforce:
validationFailureAction: audit - Webhook processing:
kubectl logs -n gatekeeper-system -l app=gatekeeper - NS exclusions exempting test ns
- Webhook connectivity:
kubectl run test --rm -it --image=busybox --restart=Never - Failure policy (Ignore vs Fail)
Step 4: Mutation Policies
Auto remediate via mutation.
Gatekeeper:
# gatekeeper-mutations.yaml
apiVersion: mutations.gatekeeper.sh/v1beta1
kind: Assign
metadata:
name: add-default-labels
spec:
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)
Kyverno:
# kyverno-mutations.yaml
apiVersion: kyverno.io/v1
kind: ClusterPolicy
metadata:
name: add-default-labels
spec:
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)
Apply + test:
# Apply mutation policies
kubectl apply -f gatekeeper-mutations.yaml
# OR
kubectl apply -f kyverno-mutations.yaml
# Test mutation with a deployment
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)
→ Mutations auto add labels/resources/modify images. Mutated values visible. Logged. No err.
If err:
- Mutation webhook enabled:
kubectl get mutatingwebhookconfiguration - Syntax: JSON paths + conditions
- Logs:
kubectl logs -n kyverno deploy/kyverno-admission-controller - No conflicts (multiple mutations same field)
- Mutation before validation (order matters)
Step 5: Audit + Reporting
Audit identifies violations no block.
Gatekeeper audit:
# Audit runs automatically based on auditInterval setting
# Check audit results
kubectl get constraints -o json | \
jq '.items[] | {name: .metadata.name, violations: .status.totalViolations}'
# Get detailed violation information
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)
Kyverno audit + reporting:
# Generate policy reports for existing resources
kubectl create job --from=cronjob/kyverno-cleanup-controller -n kyverno manual-report-gen
# View policy reports
kubectl get policyreport -A
kubectl get clusterpolicyreport
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)
Dashboard:
# prometheus-rules.yaml
apiVersion: monitoring.coreos.com/v1
kind: PrometheusRule
metadata:
name: policy-alerts
namespace: monitoring
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)
→ Audit finds violations no block. Reports generated pass/fail. Exportable. Metrics. Alerts.
If err:
- Audit controller:
kubectl get pods -n gatekeeper-system -l gatekeeper.sh/operation=audit - Audit interval setting
- Audit logs:
kubectl logs -n gatekeeper-system -l gatekeeper.sh/operation=audit - RBAC read all resource types
- CRD status populated:
kubectl get constraint -o yaml | grep -A 20 status
Step 6: CI/CD Integration
Pre-deploy validation → shift-left.
CI/CD script:
#!/bin/bash
# validate-policies.sh
set -e
echo "=== Policy Validation for CI/CD ==="
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)
GitHub Actions:
# .github/workflows/policy-validation.yaml
name: Policy Validation
on:
pull_request:
paths:
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)
Pre-commit:
#!/bin/bash
# .git/hooks/pre-commit
# Validate Kubernetes manifests against policies
if git diff --cached --name-only | grep -E 'manifests/.*\.yaml$'; then
echo "Validating Kubernetes manifests against policies..."
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)
→ Pipeline validates pre-deploy. Violations fail w/ clear msg. Reports on PR. Pre-commit catches early. Devs notified pre-cluster.
If err:
- CLI tools in PATH
- kubeconfig creds valid
- Test locally:
kyverno apply policy.yaml --resource manifest.yaml - Policies synced complete
- Policy CLI logs for specific errs
Check
- Engine pods HA
- Webhooks active + reachable
- Templates + policies created no err
- Non-compliant rejected clear msg
- Compliant deploy OK
- Mutations auto remediate
- Audit finds violations existing
- Reports generated + accessible
- Metrics exposed
- CI/CD validates pre-deploy
- Pre-commit prevents
- NS exclusions appropriate
Traps
- Webhook Failure Policy:
failurePolicy: Failblocks all if webhook down.Ignorenon-critical, understand security. Test availability before enforce. - Too Strict Initial: Strict enforce breaks workloads. Audit first, review, communicate, enforce gradual.
- Missing Resource Specs: Must specify API groups/versions/kinds.
kubectl api-resources. Wildcards (*) convenient but slow. - Mutation Order: Mutation before validation. No conflicts. Test together.
- NS Exclusions: Exclude system ns necessary but not over-exclude. Review regularly.
- Rego Complexity (Gatekeeper): Complex Rego hard debug. Simple first,
opa testlocally,trace()logging, gator offline. - Perf Impact: Policy eval adds latency. Efficient policies, right match criteria, monitor webhook latency.
- Policy Conflicts: Multiple policies same field → issues. Coordinate teams, policy libs, test combos.
- Bg Scanning: Full cluster scan expensive large clusters. Adjust interval.
- Version Compat: CRD versions change. Gatekeeper v3 →
v1beta1, Kyverno v1.11 →kyverno.io/v1. Check docs.
→
manage-kubernetes-secrets- Secret validation policiessecurity-audit-codebase- Complementary security scanningdeploy-to-kubernetes- App deployment w/ policy validatesetup-service-mesh- Mesh authz policies complement admissionconfigure-api-gateway- Gateway policies alongside admissionimplement-gitops-workflow- GitOps w/ policy validate in pipeline
GitHub Repository
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