Linux kernel security constraints for Pods and containers

Overview of Linux kernel security modules and constraints that you can use to harden your Pods and containers.

This page describes some of the security features that are built into the Linux kernel that you can use in your Kubernetes workloads. To learn how to apply these features to your Pods and containers, refer to Configure a SecurityContext for a Pod or Container. You should already be familiar with Linux and with the basics of Kubernetes workloads.

Run workloads without root privileges

When you deploy a workload in Kubernetes, use the Pod specification to restrict that workload from running as the root user on the node. You can use the Pod securityContext to define the specific Linux user and group for the processes in the Pod, and explicitly restrict containers from running as root users. Setting these values in the Pod manifest takes precedence over similar values in the container image, which is especially useful if you’re running images that you don’t own.

Caution:

Ensure that the user or group that you assign to the workload has the permissions required for the application to function correctly. Changing the user or group to one that doesn’t have the correct permissions could lead to file access issues or failed operations.

Configuring the kernel security features on this page provides fine-grained control over the actions that processes in your cluster can take, but managing these configurations can be challenging at scale. Running containers as non-root, or in user namespaces if you need root privileges, helps to reduce the chance that you’ll need to enforce your configured kernel security capabilities.

Security features in the Linux kernel

Kubernetes lets you configure and use Linux kernel features to improve isolation and harden your containerized workloads. Common features include the following:

  • Secure computing mode (seccomp): Filter which system calls a process can make
  • AppArmor: Restrict the access privileges of individual programs
  • Security Enhanced Linux (SELinux): Assign security labels to objects for more manageable security policy enforcement

To configure settings for one of these features, the operating system that you choose for your nodes must enable the feature in the kernel. For example, Ubuntu 7.10 and later enable AppArmor by default. To learn whether your OS enables a specific feature, consult the OS documentation.

You use the securityContext field in your Pod specification to define the constraints that apply to those processes. The securityContext field also supports other security settings, such as specific Linux capabilities or file access permissions using UIDs and GIDs. To learn more, refer to Configure a SecurityContext for a Pod or Container.

seccomp

Some of your workloads might need privileges to perform specific actions as the root user on your node’s host machine. Linux uses capabilities to divide the available privileges into categories, so that processes can get the privileges required to perform specific actions without being granted all privileges. Each capability has a set of system calls (syscalls) that a process can make. seccomp lets you restrict these individual syscalls. It can be used to sandbox the privileges of a process, restricting the calls it is able to make from userspace into the kernel.

In Kubernetes, you use a container runtime on each node to run your containers. Example runtimes include CRI-O, Docker, or containerd. Each runtime allows only a subset of Linux capabilities by default. You can further limit the allowed syscalls individually by using a seccomp profile. Container runtimes usually include a default seccomp profile. Kubernetes lets you automatically apply seccomp profiles loaded onto a node to your Pods and containers.

Note:

Kubernetes also has the allowPrivilegeEscalation setting for Pods and containers. When set to false, this prevents processes from gaining new capabilities and restricts unprivileged users from changing the applied seccomp profile to a more permissive profile.

To learn how to implement seccomp in Kubernetes, refer to Restrict a Container’s Syscalls with seccomp.

To learn more about seccomp, see Seccomp BPF in the Linux kernel documentation.

Considerations for seccomp

seccomp is a low-level security configuration that you should only configure yourself if you require fine-grained control over Linux syscalls. Using seccomp, especially at scale, has the following risks:

  • Configurations might break during application updates
  • Attackers can still use allowed syscalls to exploit vulnerabilities
  • Profile management for individual applications becomes challenging at scale

Recommendation: Use the default seccomp profile that’s bundled with your container runtime. If you need a more isolated environment, consider using a sandbox, such as gVisor. Sandboxes solve the preceding risks with custom seccomp profiles, but require more compute resources on your nodes and might have compatibility issues with GPUs and other specialized hardware.

AppArmor and SELinux: policy-based mandatory access control

You can use Linux policy-based mandatory access control (MAC) mechanisms, such as AppArmor and SELinux, to harden your Kubernetes workloads.

AppArmor

AppArmor is a Linux kernel security module that supplements the standard Linux user and group based permissions to confine programs to a limited set of resources. AppArmor can be configured for any application to reduce its potential attack surface and provide greater in-depth defense. It is configured through profiles tuned to allow the access needed by a specific program or container, such as Linux capabilities, network access, and file permissions. Each profile can be run in either enforcing mode, which blocks access to disallowed resources, or complain mode, which only reports violations.

AppArmor can help you to run a more secure deployment by restricting what containers are allowed to do, and/or provide better auditing through system logs. The container runtime that you use might ship with a default AppArmor profile, or you can use a custom profile.

To learn how to use AppArmor in Kubernetes, refer to Restrict a Container’s Access to Resources with AppArmor.

SELinux

SELinux is a Linux kernel security module that lets you restrict the access that a specific subject, such as a process, has to the files on your system. You define security policies that apply to subjects that have specific SELinux labels. When a process that has an SELinux label attempts to access a file, the SELinux server checks whether that process’ security policy allows the access and makes an authorization decision.

In Kubernetes, you can set an SELinux label in the securityContext field of your manifest. The specified labels are assigned to those processes. If you have configured security policies that affect those labels, the host OS kernel enforces these policies.

To learn how to use SELinux in Kubernetes, refer to Assign SELinux labels to a container.

Differences between AppArmor and SELinux

The operating system on your Linux nodes usually includes one of either AppArmor or SELinux. Both mechanisms provide similar types of protection, but have differences such as the following:

  • Configuration: AppArmor uses profiles to define access to resources. SELinux uses policies that apply to specific labels.
  • Policy application: In AppArmor, you define resources using file paths. SELinux uses the index node (inode) of a resource to identify the resource.

Summary of features

The following table describes the use cases and scope of each security control. You can use all of these controls together to build a more hardened system.

Summary of Linux kernel security features
Security featureDescriptionHow to useExample
seccompRestrict individual kernel calls in the userspace. Reduces the likelihood that a vulnerability that uses a restricted syscall would compromise the system.Specify a loaded seccomp profile in the Pod or container specification to apply its constraints to the processes in the Pod.Reject the unshare syscall, which was used in CVE-2022-0185.
AppArmorRestrict program access to specific resources. Reduces the attack surface of the program. Improves audit logging.Specify a loaded AppArmor profile in the container specification.Restrict a read-only program from writing to any file path in the system.
SELinuxRestrict access to resources such as files, applications, ports, and processes using labels and security policies.Specify access restrictions for specific labels. Tag processes with those labels to enforce the access restrictions related to the label.Restrict a container from accessing files outside its own filesystem.

Note:

Mechanisms like AppArmor and SELinux can provide protection that extends beyond the container. For example, you can use SELinux to help mitigate CVE-2019-5736.

Considerations for managing custom configurations

seccomp, AppArmor, and SELinux usually have a default configuration that offers basic protections. You can also create custom profiles and policies that meet the requirements of your workloads. Managing and distributing these custom configurations at scale might be challenging, especially if you use all three features together. To help you to manage these configurations at scale, use a tool like the Kubernetes Security Profiles Operator.

Kernel-level security features and privileged containers

Kubernetes lets you specify that some trusted containers can run in privileged mode. Any container in a Pod can run in privileged mode to use operating system administrative capabilities that would otherwise be inaccessible. This is available for both Windows and Linux.

Privileged containers explicitly override some of the Linux kernel constraints that you might use in your workloads, as follows:

  • seccomp: Privileged containers run as the Unconfined seccomp profile, overriding any seccomp profile that you specified in your manifest.
  • AppArmor: Privileged containers ignore any applied AppArmor profiles.
  • SELinux: Privileged containers run as the unconfined_t domain.

Privileged containers

Any container in a Pod can enable Privileged mode if you set the privileged: true field in the securityContext field for the container. Privileged containers override or undo many other hardening settings such as the applied seccomp profile, AppArmor profile, or SELinux constraints. Privileged containers are given all Linux capabilities, including capabilities that they don’t require. For example, a root user in a privileged container might be able to use the CAP_SYS_ADMIN and CAP_NET_ADMIN capabilities on the node, bypassing the runtime seccomp configuration and other restrictions.

In most cases, you should avoid using privileged containers, and instead grant the specific capabilities required by your container using the capabilities field in the securityContext field. Only use privileged mode if you have a capability that you can’t grant with the securityContext. This is useful for containers that want to use operating system administrative capabilities such as manipulating the network stack or accessing hardware devices.

In Kubernetes version 1.26 and later, you can also run Windows containers in a similarly privileged mode by setting the windowsOptions.hostProcess flag on the security context of the Pod spec. For details and instructions, see Create a Windows HostProcess Pod.

Recommendations and best practices

  • Before configuring kernel-level security capabilities, you should consider implementing network-level isolation. For more information, read the Security Checklist.
  • Unless necessary, run Linux workloads as non-root by setting specific user and group IDs in your Pod manifest and by specifying runAsNonRoot: true.

Additionally, you can run workloads in user namespaces by setting hostUsers: false in your Pod manifest. This lets you run containers as root users in the user namespace, but as non-root users in the host namespace on the node. This is still in early stages of development and might not have the level of support that you need. For instructions, refer to Use a User Namespace With a Pod.

What’s next