1
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://github.com/kyverno/kyverno.git synced 2024-12-14 11:57:48 +00:00
Cloud Native Policy Management
Find a file
2019-05-21 11:00:09 -07:00
client rename pkg to kyverno 2019-05-21 11:00:09 -07:00
cmd rename pkg to kyverno 2019-05-21 11:00:09 -07:00
definitions Updated install.yaml due to the policy-v2 specifications 2019-05-13 16:08:02 +03:00
documentation start docs 2019-05-20 20:43:38 -07:00
examples PR code review changes 2019-05-21 09:27:04 -07:00
gh-pages rename pkg to kyverno 2019-05-21 11:00:09 -07:00
pkg rename pkg to kyverno 2019-05-21 11:00:09 -07:00
scripts Added version arg for compile-image.sh 2019-05-14 14:18:16 +03:00
test replace typed client with dynamic client 2019-05-21 09:43:45 -07:00
.gitignore update git ignore 2019-05-12 15:15:05 -07:00
Gopkg.toml Support Mutate from command line 2019-05-20 13:02:55 -07:00
init.go rename pkg to kyverno 2019-05-21 11:00:09 -07:00
main.go rename pkg to kyverno 2019-05-21 11:00:09 -07:00
README.md rename pkg to kyverno 2019-05-21 11:00:09 -07:00

Kyverno - Kubernetes Native Policy Management

logo

Kyverno is a policy engine designed for Kubernetes.

Kubernetes supports declarative management of objects using configurations written in YAML or JSON. Often, parts of the configuration will need to vary based on the runtime environment. For portability, and for separation of concerns, its best to mantain environment specific configurations separately from workload configurations.

Kyverno allows cluster adminstrators to manage environment specific configurations independently of workload configurations and enforce configuration best practices for their clusters.

Kyverno policies are Kubernetes resources that can be written in YAML or JSON. Kyverno policies can validate, mutate, and generate any Kubernetes resources.

Kyverno runs as a dynamic admission controller in a Kubernetes cluster. Kyverno receives validating and mutating admission webhook HTTP callbacks from the kube-apiserver and applies matching polcies to return results that enforce admission policies or reject requests.

Kyverno policies can match resources using the resource kind, name, and label selectors. Wildcards are supported in names.

Mutating policies can be written as overlays (similar to Kustomize) or as a JSON Patch. Validating policies also use an overlay style syntax, with support for pattern matching and conditional (if-then-else) processing.

Policy enforcement is captured using Kubernetes events. Kyverno also reports policy violations for existing resources.

Examples

1. Validating resources

This policy requires that all pods have CPU and memory resource requests and limits:

apiVersion: policy.nirmata.io/v1alpha1
kind: Policy
metadata:
  name: check-cpu-memory
spec:
  rules:
  - name: check-pod-resources
    resource:
      kind: Pod
    validate:
      message: "CPU and memory resource requests and limits are required"
      pattern:
        spec:
          containers:
          # 'name: *' selects all containers in the pod
          - name: "*"
            resources:
              limits:
                # '?' requires a value (at least 1 character) 
                memory: "?"
                cpu: "?"
              requests:
                memory: "?"
                cpu: "?"

2. Mutating resources

This policy sets the imagePullPolicy to Always if the image tag is latest:

apiVersion: policy.nirmata.io/v1alpha1
kind: Policy
metadata:
  name: set-image-pull-policy
spec:
  rules:
  - name: set-image-pull-policy
    resource:
      kind: Pod
    mutate:
      overlay:
        spec:
          containers:
            # match images which end with :latest   
            - image: "(*:latest)"
              # set the imagePullPolicy to "Always"
              imagePullPolicy: "Always"

3. Generating resources

This policy sets the Zookeeper and Kafka connection strings for all namespaces with a label key 'kafka'.

apiVersion: policy.nirmata.io/v1alpha1
kind: Policy
metadata:
  name: "zk-kafka-address"
spec:
  rules:
  - name: "zk-kafka-address"
    resource:
      kind : Namespace
      selector:
        matchExpressions:
        - {key: kafka, operator: Exists}
    generate:
      kind: ConfigMap
      name: zk-kafka-address
      data:
        ZK_ADDRESS: "192.168.10.10:2181,192.168.10.11:2181,192.168.10.12:2181"
        KAFKA_ADDRESS: "192.168.10.13:9092,192.168.10.14:9092,192.168.10.15:9092"

4. More examples

Additional examples are available in examples.

Status

Kyverno is under active development and not ready for production use. Key components and policy definitions are likely to change as we complete core features.

Documentation

Roadmap

Here are some the major features we plan on completing before a 1.0 release:

  • Events
  • Policy Violations
  • Generate any resource
  • Conditionals on existing resources
  • Extend CLI to operate on cluster resources

Getting help

For feature requests and bugs, file an [issue][https://github.com/nirmata/kyverno/issues].