Container Instrumentation and Enforcement System for Runtime Security of Kubernetes Platform with eBPFopen access
- Authors
- Gwak, Songi; Doan, Thien-Phuc; Jung, Souhwan
- Issue Date
- Jun-2023
- Publisher
- TECH SCIENCE PRESS
- Keywords
- Container; kubernetes; runtime security; eBPF; enforcement
- Citation
- INTELLIGENT AUTOMATION AND SOFT COMPUTING, v.37, no.2, pp 1773 - 1786
- Pages
- 14
- Journal Title
- INTELLIGENT AUTOMATION AND SOFT COMPUTING
- Volume
- 37
- Number
- 2
- Start Page
- 1773
- End Page
- 1786
- URI
- https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/ssu/handle/2018.sw.ssu/44221
- DOI
- 10.32604/iasc.2023.039565
- ISSN
- 1079-8587
2326-005X
- Abstract
- Containerization is a fundamental component of modern cloudnative infrastructure, and Kubernetes is a prominent platform of container orchestration systems. However, containerization raises significant security concerns due to the nature of sharing a kernel among multiple containers, which can lead to container breakout or privilege escalation. Kubernetes cannot avoid it as well. While various tools, such as container image scanning and configuration checking, can mitigate container workload vulnerabilities, these are not foolproof and cannot guarantee perfect isolation or prevent every active threat in runtime. As such, a policy enforcement solution is required to tackle the problem, and existing solutions based on LSM (Linux Security Module) frameworks may not be adequate for some situations. To address this, we propose an enforcement system based on BPF-LSM, which leverages eBPF (extended Berkeley Packet Filter) technology to provide fine-grained control and dynamic adoption of security policies. In this paper, we compare different LSM implementations to highlight the challenges of current enforcement solutions before detailing the design of our eBPF-based Kubernetes Runtime Instrumentation and Enforcement System (KRSIE). Finally, we evaluate the effectiveness of our system using a real-world scenario, as measuring the performance of a policy enforcement system is a complex task. Our results show that KRSIE can successfully control containers' behaviors using LSM hooks at container runtime, offering improved container security for cloudnative infrastructure.
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