proposalbot fce24afa88 Changes to cce_umn from docs/doc-exports#609 (CCE UMN 20230213 version for new c
Reviewed-by: Eotvos, Oliver <oliver.eotvos@t-systems.com>
Co-authored-by: proposalbot <proposalbot@otc-service.com>
Co-committed-by: proposalbot <proposalbot@otc-service.com>
2023-04-04 09:19:26 +00:00

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:original_name: cce_bestpractice_0320.html
.. _cce_bestpractice_0320:
Secret Security
===============
Currently, CCE has configured static encryption for secret resources. The secrets created by users will be encrypted and stored in etcd of the CCE cluster. Secrets can be used in two modes: environment variable and file mounting. No matter which mode is used, CCE still transfers the configured data to users. Therefore, it is recommended that:
#. Do not record sensitive information in logs.
#. For the secret that uses the file mounting mode, the default file permission mapped in the container is 0644. Configure stricter permissions for the file. For example:
.. code-block::
apiversion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: mypod
spec:
containers:
- name: mypod
image: redis
volumeMounts:
- name: foo
mountPath: "/etc/foo"
volumes:
- name: foo
secret:
secretName: mysecret
defaultMode: 256
In **defaultMode: 256**, **256** is a decimal number, which corresponds to the octal number **0400**.
#. When the file mounting mode is used, configure the secret file name to hide the file in the container.
.. code-block::
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: dotfile-secret
data:
.secret-file: dmFsdWUtMg0KDQo=
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata;
name: secret-dotfiles-pod
spec:
volumes:
- name: secret-volume
secret:
secretName: dotfile-secret
containers:
- name: dotfile-test-container
image: k8s.gcr.io/busybox
command:
- ls
- "-1"
- "/etc/secret-volume"
volumeMounts:
- name: secret-volume
readOnly: true
mountPath: "/etc/secret-volume"
In this way, **.secret-file** cannot be viewed by running the **ls -l** command in the **/etc/secret-volume/** directory, but can be viewed by running the **ls -al** command.
#. Encrypt sensitive information before creating a secret and decrypt the information when using it.
Using a Bound ServiceAccount Token to Access a Cluster
------------------------------------------------------
The secret-based ServiceAccount token does not support expiration time or auto update. In addition, after the mounting pod is deleted, the token is still stored in the secret. Token leakage may incur security risks. A bound ServiceAccount token is recommended for CCE clusters of version 1.23 or later. In this mode, the expiration time can be set and is the same as the pod lifecycle, reducing token leakage risks. Example:
.. code-block::
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: security-token-example
namespace: security-example
spec:
replicas: 1
selector:
matchLabels:
app: security-token-example
label: security-token-example
template:
metadata:
annotations:
seccomp.security.alpha.kubernetes.io/pod: runtime/default
labels:
app: security-token-example
label: security-token-example
spec:
serviceAccountName: test-sa
containers:
- image: ...
imagePullPolicy: Always
name: security-token-example
volumes:
- name: test-projected
projected:
defaultMode: 420
sources:
- serviceAccountToken:
expirationSeconds: 1800
path: token
- configMap:
items:
- key: ca.crt
path: ca.crt
name: kube-root-ca.crt
- downwardAPI:
items:
- fieldRef:
apiVersion: v1
fieldPath: metadata.namespace
path: namespace
For details, visit https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/access-authn-authz/service-accounts-admin/.