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Stash with PSP Enabled Cluster
Stash comes with built-in support for Pod Security Policy (PSP) enabled cluster. Stash may use two different Kubernets recommended PSP based on your setup.
Baseline PSP
By default Stash uses minimally restrictive baseline PSP. Both Stash Community Edition and Stash Enterprise Edition uses baseline PSP. Here, is the YAML of the baseline PSP that uses by Stash operator.
# ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/security/pod-security-standards/#policy-instantiation
apiVersion: policy/v1beta1
kind: PodSecurityPolicy
metadata:
name: baseline
annotations:
"helm.sh/hook": pre-install,pre-upgrade
"helm.sh/hook-delete-policy": before-hook-creation
{{- if .Values.security.apparmor.enabled }}
# Optional: Allow the default AppArmor profile, requires setting the default.
apparmor.security.beta.kubernetes.io/allowedProfileNames: 'runtime/default'
apparmor.security.beta.kubernetes.io/defaultProfileName: 'runtime/default'
{{- end }}
{{- if .Values.security.seccomp.enabled }}
# Optional: Allow the default seccomp profile, requires setting the default.
seccomp.security.alpha.kubernetes.io/allowedProfileNames: 'docker/default,runtime/default,unconfined'
seccomp.security.alpha.kubernetes.io/defaultProfileName: 'unconfined'
{{- end }}
spec:
privileged: false
# The moby default capability set, defined here:
# https://github.com/moby/moby/blob/0a5cec2833f82a6ad797d70acbf9cbbaf8956017/oci/caps/defaults.go#L6-L19
allowedCapabilities:
- 'CHOWN'
- 'DAC_OVERRIDE'
- 'FSETID'
- 'FOWNER'
- 'MKNOD'
- 'NET_RAW'
- 'SETGID'
- 'SETUID'
- 'SETFCAP'
- 'SETPCAP'
- 'NET_BIND_SERVICE'
- 'SYS_CHROOT'
- 'KILL'
- 'AUDIT_WRITE'
# Allow all volume types except hostpath
volumes:
# 'core' volume types
- 'configMap'
- 'emptyDir'
- 'projected'
- 'secret'
- 'downwardAPI'
# Assume that persistentVolumes set up by the cluster admin are safe to use.
- 'persistentVolumeClaim'
# Allow all other non-hostpath volume types.
- 'awsElasticBlockStore'
- 'azureDisk'
- 'azureFile'
- 'cephFS'
- 'cinder'
- 'csi'
- 'fc'
- 'flexVolume'
- 'flocker'
- 'gcePersistentDisk'
- 'gitRepo'
- 'glusterfs'
- 'iscsi'
- 'nfs'
- 'photonPersistentDisk'
- 'portworxVolume'
- 'quobyte'
- 'rbd'
- 'scaleIO'
- 'storageos'
- 'vsphereVolume'
hostNetwork: false
hostIPC: false
hostPID: false
readOnlyRootFilesystem: false
runAsUser:
rule: 'RunAsAny'
seLinux:
rule: 'RunAsAny'
supplementalGroups:
rule: 'RunAsAny'
fsGroup:
rule: 'RunAsAny'
Privileged PSP
If you are using an NFS server as backend with Stash Enterprise Edition, you may need to give Stash operator privileged permission. In this case, Stash will use privileged PSP. Here, is the YAML of privileged PSP that is used by Stash Enterprise Edition when you uses NFS server as backend,
apiVersion: policy/v1beta1
kind: PodSecurityPolicy
metadata:
name: privileged
annotations:
seccomp.security.alpha.kubernetes.io/allowedProfileNames: '*'
spec:
privileged: true
allowPrivilegeEscalation: true
allowedCapabilities:
- '*'
volumes:
- '*'
hostNetwork: true
hostPorts:
- min: 0
max: 65535
hostIPC: true
hostPID: true
runAsUser:
rule: 'RunAsAny'
seLinux:
rule: 'RunAsAny'
supplementalGroups:
rule: 'RunAsAny'
fsGroup:
rule: 'RunAsAny'
You can use your own PodSecurityPolicy with Stash. In this case, you have to create the PSP manually and provide the PSP names during installation. You can provide the custom PSP names during installation as below,
$ helm install stash appscode/stash \
-n kube-system \
--set podSecurityPolicies[0]=abc \
--set podSecurityPolicies[1]=xyz