# Securing Kubernetes
The following guide covers how to secure Kubernetes (opens new window) using Pomerium.
# Kubernetes
This tutorial uses an example Kubernetes cluster created with kind
(opens new window). First create a config file (kind-config.yaml
):
# kind-config.yaml kind: Cluster apiVersion: kind.x-k8s.io/v1alpha4 nodes: - role: control-plane extraPortMappings: - containerPort: 30443 hostPort: 30443
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Next create the cluster:
kind create cluster --config=./kind-config.yaml
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# Pomerium Service Account
Pomerium uses a single service account and user impersonation headers to authenticate and authorize users in Kubernetes. To create the Pomerium service account use the following config: (pomerium-k8s.yaml
)
# pomerium-k8s.yaml --- apiVersion: v1 kind: ServiceAccount metadata: namespace: default name: pomerium --- apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1 kind: ClusterRole metadata: name: pomerium-impersonation rules: - apiGroups: - "" resources: - users - groups - serviceaccounts verbs: - impersonate - apiGroups: - "authorization.k8s.io" resources: - selfsubjectaccessreviews verbs: - create --- apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1 kind: ClusterRoleBinding metadata: name: pomerium roleRef: apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io kind: ClusterRole name: pomerium-impersonation subjects: - kind: ServiceAccount name: pomerium namespace: default
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Apply it with:
kubectl apply -f ./pomerium-k8s.yaml
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# User Permissions
To grant access to users within Kubernetes, you will need to configure RBAC permissions. For example:
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1 kind: ClusterRoleBinding metadata: name: cluster-admin-crb roleRef: apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io kind: ClusterRole name: cluster-admin subjects: - apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io kind: User name: someuser@example.com
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Permissions can also be granted to groups the Pomerium user is a member of.
# Certificates
For this tutorial we will generate wildcard certificates for the *.localhost.pomerium.io
domain using mkcert
(opens new window):
mkcert '*.localhost.pomerium.io'
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This creates two files:
_wildcard.localhost.pomerium.io-key.pem
_wildcard.localhost.pomerium.io.pem
# Pomerium
# Configuration
Our Pomerium configuration will route requests from k8s.localhost.pomerium.io:30443
to the kube-apiserver. Create a Kubernetes YAML configuration file (pomerium.yaml
):
apiVersion: apps/v1 kind: Deployment metadata: namespace: default name: pomerium labels: app: pomerium spec: replicas: 1 selector: matchLabels: app: pomerium template: metadata: labels: app: pomerium spec: containers: - name: pomerium image: pomerium/pomerium:master ports: - containerPort: 30443 env: - name: ADDRESS value: "0.0.0.0:30443" - name: AUTHENTICATE_SERVICE_URL value: "https://authenticate.localhost.pomerium.io:30443" - name: CERTIFICATE value: "..." # $(base64 -w 0 <./_wildcard.localhost.pomerium.io.pem) - name: CERTIFICATE_KEY value: "..." # $(base64 -w 0 <./_wildcard.localhost.pomerium.io-key.pem) - name: COOKIE_SECRET value: "..." # $(head -c32 /dev/urandom | base64 -w 0) - name: IDP_PROVIDER value: google - name: IDP_CLIENT_ID value: "..." - name: IDP_CLIENT_SECRET value: "..." - name: POLICY value: "..." #$(echo "$_policy" | base64 -w 0) --- apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: namespace: default name: pomerium spec: type: NodePort selector: app: pomerium ports: - port: 30443 targetPort: 30443 nodePort: 30443
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Make sure to fill in the appropriate values as indicated.
The policy should be a base64-encoded block of yaml:
- from: https://k8s.localhost.pomerium.io:30443 to: https://kubernetes.default.svc tls_skip_verify: true allow_spdy: true policy: - allow: or: - domain: is: pomerium.com kubernetes_service_account_token: "..." #$(kubectl get secret/"$(kubectl get serviceaccount/pomerium -o json | jq -r '.secrets[0].name')" -o json | jq -r .data.token | base64 -d)
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Applying this configuration will create a Pomerium deployment and service within kubernetes that is accessible from *.localhost.pomerium.io:30443
.
# Kubectl
Pomerium uses a custom Kubernetes exec-credential provider for kubectl access. This provider will open up a browser window to the Pomerium authenticate service and generate an authorization token that will be used for Kubernetes API calls.
The Pomerium Kubernetes exec-credential provider can be installed via go-get:
env GO111MODULE=on GOBIN=$HOME/bin go get github.com/pomerium/pomerium/cmd/pomerium-cli@master
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Make sure $HOME/bin
is on your path.
To use the Pomerium Kubernetes exec-credential provider, update your kubectl config:
# Add Cluster kubectl config set-cluster via-pomerium --server=https://k8s.localhost.pomerium.io:30443 # Add Context kubectl config set-context via-pomerium --user=via-pomerium --cluster=via-pomerium # Add credentials command kubectl config set-credentials via-pomerium --exec-command=pomerium-cli --exec-arg=k8s,exec-credential,https://k8s.localhost.pomerium.io:30443
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Here's the resulting configuration:
Cluster:
clusters: - cluster: server: https://k8s.localhost.pomerium.io:30443 name: via-pomerium
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contexts: - context: cluster: via-pomerium user: via-pomerium name: via-pomerium
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- name: via-pomerium user: exec: apiVersion: client.authentication.k8s.io/v1beta1 args: - k8s - exec-credential - https://k8s.localhost.pomerium.io:30443 command: pomerium-cli env: null
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With kubectl
configured you can now query the Kubernetes API via pomerium:
kubectl --context=via-pomerium cluster-info
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You should be prompted to login and see the resulting cluster info.