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Run individual controls or full compliance benchmarks for NSA CISA Kubernetes Hardening Guidance across all of your Kubernetes clusters using Powerpipe and Steampipe.

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turbot/steampipe-mod-kubernetes-compliance

Kubernetes Compliance Mod for Powerpipe

Multiple checks covering industry defined security best practices for Kubernetes. The mod supports parsing and analyzing Kubernetes manifest files, allowing you to assess compliance directly on your configuration files before deployment. Includes support for CIS, National Security Agency (NSA) and Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) Cybersecurity technical report for Kubernetes hardening.

Run checks in a dashboard: image

Or in a terminal: image

Documentation

Getting Started

Installation

Install Powerpipe (https://powerpipe.io/downloads), or use Brew:

brew install turbot/tap/powerpipe

This mod also requires Steampipe with the Kubernetes plugin as the data source. Install Steampipe (https://steampipe.io/downloads), or use Brew:

brew install turbot/tap/steampipe
steampipe plugin install kubernetes

Steampipe will automatically use your default Kubernetes credentials. Optionally, you can setup multiple context connections or customize Kubernetes credentials.

Finally, install the mod:

mkdir dashboards
cd dashboards
powerpipe mod init
powerpipe mod install github.com/turbot/steampipe-mod-kubernetes-compliance

Browsing Dashboards

Start Steampipe as the data source:

steampipe service start

Start the dashboard server:

powerpipe server

Browse and view your dashboards at http://localhost:9033.

Running Checks in Your Terminal

Instead of running benchmarks in a dashboard, you can also run them within your terminal with the powerpipe benchmark command:

List available benchmarks:

powerpipe benchmark list

Run a benchmark:

powerpipe benchmark run kubernetes_compliance.benchmark.cis_v170

Different output formats are also available, for more information please see Output Formats.

Common and Tag Dimensions

The benchmark queries use common properties (like connection_name, context_name, namespace, path and source_type) and tags that are defined in the form of a default list of strings in the variables.sp file. These properties can be overwritten in several ways:

It's easiest to setup your vars file, starting with the sample:

cp powerpipe.ppvars.example powerpipe.ppvars
vi powerpipe.ppvars

Alternatively you can pass variables on the command line:

powerpipe benchmark run kubernetes_compliance.benchmark.cis_v170 --var 'tag_dimensions=["Environment", "Owner"]'

Or through environment variables:

export PP_VAR_common_dimensions='["connection_name", "context_name", "namespace", "path", "source_type"]'
export PP_VAR_tag_dimensions='["Environment", "Owner"]'
powerpipe benchmark run kubernetes_compliance.benchmark.cis_v170

Open Source & Contributing

This repository is published under the Apache 2.0 license. Please see our code of conduct. We look forward to collaborating with you!

Steampipe and Powerpipe are products produced from this open source software, exclusively by Turbot HQ, Inc. They are distributed under our commercial terms. Others are allowed to make their own distribution of the software, but cannot use any of the Turbot trademarks, cloud services, etc. You can learn more in our Open Source FAQ.

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Run individual controls or full compliance benchmarks for NSA CISA Kubernetes Hardening Guidance across all of your Kubernetes clusters using Powerpipe and Steampipe.

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