enforce-policy-as-code
À propos
Cette compétence met en œuvre l'application de politiques sous forme de code dans Kubernetes en utilisant OPA Gatekeeper ou Kyverno pour valider et transformer les ressources conformément aux politiques organisationnelles. Elle couvre le contrôle d'admission, le mode audit et l'intégration CI/CD pour une validation en amont (shift-left). Utilisez-la pour appliquer des standards de configuration, prévenir les erreurs de configuration de sécurité et garantir la conformité avant le déploiement.
Installation rapide
Claude Code
Recommandénpx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanacgit clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/enforce-policy-as-codeCopiez et collez cette commande dans Claude Code pour installer cette compétence
Documentation
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
Dépôt GitHub
Compétences associées
content-collections
MétaCette compétence propose une configuration éprouvée en production pour Content Collections, un outil axé sur TypeScript qui transforme des fichiers Markdown/MDX en collections de données typées de manière sûre avec une validation Zod. Utilisez-la lors de la création de blogs, de sites de documentation ou d'applications Vite + React riches en contenu pour garantir la sécurité de typage et la validation automatique du contenu. Elle couvre tout, de la configuration du plugin Vite et de la compilation MDX à l'optimisation des déploiements et la validation des schémas.
polymarket
MétaCette compétence permet aux développeurs de créer des applications avec la plateforme de marchés prédictifs Polymarket, incluant l'intégration d'API pour le trading et les données de marché. Elle fournit également une diffusion de données en temps réel via WebSocket pour surveiller les transactions en direct et l'activité du marché. Utilisez-la pour mettre en œuvre des stratégies de trading ou pour créer des outils traitant les mises à jour de marché en direct.
creating-opencode-plugins
MétaCette compétence aide les développeurs à créer des plugins OpenCode qui s'interconnectent avec plus de 25 types d'événements tels que les commandes, les fichiers et les opérations LSP. Elle fournit la structure du plugin, les spécifications de l'API événementielle et les modèles d'implémentation pour les modules JavaScript/TypeScript. Utilisez-la lorsque vous avez besoin d'intercepter, de surveiller ou d'étendre le cycle de vie de l'assistant IA OpenCode avec une logique personnalisée pilotée par les événements.
sglang
MétaSGLang est un framework de service LLM haute performance spécialisé dans la génération rapide et structurée pour les workflows JSON, regex et agentiques grâce à son cache de préfixe RadixAttention. Il offre une inférence nettement plus rapide, particulièrement pour les tâches avec des préfixes répétés, ce qui le rend idéal pour les sorties complexes et structurées ainsi que les conversations multi-tours. Choisissez SGLang plutôt que des alternatives comme vLLM lorsque vous avez besoin d'un décodage contraint ou que vous construisez des applications avec un partage étendu de préfixes.
