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Licence: BSD-3-Clause License
Universal Kubernetes mutating operator

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KubeMod

KubeMod is a universal Kubernetes mutating operator.

It introduces ModRule — a custom Kubernetes resource which allows you to intercept the deployment of any Kubernetes object and apply targeted modifications to it or reject it before it is deployed to the cluster.

Use KubeMod to:

  • Customize opaque Helm charts and Kubernetes operators.
  • Build a system of policy rules to reject misbehaving resources.
  • Develop your own sidecar container injections - no coding required.

Table of contents


Installation

As a Kubernetes operator, KubeMod is deployed into its own namespace — kubemod-system.
Run the following commands to deploy KubeMod.

# Make KubeMod ignore Kubernetes' system namespace.
kubectl label namespace kube-system admission.kubemod.io/ignore=true --overwrite
# Deploy KubeMod.
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubemod/kubemod/v0.14.0/bundle.yaml

By default KubeMod allows you to target a limited set of high-level resource types, such as deployments and services.

See target resources for the full list as well as instructions on how to expand or limit it.

Upgrade

If you are upgrading from a previous version of KubeMod, run the following:

# Delete the KubeMod certificate generation job in case KubeMod has already been installed.
kubectl delete job kubemod-crt-job -n kubemod-system
# Make KubeMod ignore Kubernetes' system namespace.
kubectl label namespace kube-system admission.kubemod.io/ignore=true --overwrite
# Upgrade KubeMod operator.
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubemod/kubemod/v0.14.0/bundle.yaml

Uninstall

To uninstall KubeMod and all its resources, run:

kubectl delete -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubemod/kubemod/v0.14.0/bundle.yaml

Note: Uninstalling KubeMod will also remove all your ModRules deployed to all Kubernetes namespaces.

Deploying our first ModRule

Once KubeMod is installed, you can deploy ModRules to intercept the creation and update of specific resources and perform modifications on them.

For example, here's a ModRule which intercepts the creation of Deployment resources whose app labels equal nginx and include at least one container of nginx version 1.14.*.

The ModRule patches the matching Deployments on-the-fly to enforce a specific securityContext and add annotation my-annotation.

Since KubeMod intercepts and patches resources before they are deployed to Kubernetes, we are able to patch read-only fields such as securityContext without the need to drop and recreate existing resources.

apiVersion: api.kubemod.io/v1beta1
kind: ModRule
metadata:
  name: my-modrule
spec:
  type: Patch

  match:
    # Match deployments ...
    - select: '$.kind'
      matchValue: Deployment

    # ... with label app = nginx ...
    - select: '$.metadata.labels.app'
      matchValue: 'nginx'

    # ... and at least one container whose image matches nginx:1.14.* ...
    - select: '$.spec.template.spec.containers[*].image'
      matchRegex: 'nginx:1\.14\..*'

    # ... but has no explicit runAsNonRoot security context.
    # Note: "negate: true" flips the meaning of the match.
    - select: '$.spec.template.spec.securityContext.runAsNonRoot == true'
      negate: true

  patch:
    # Add custom annotation.
    - op: add
      path: /metadata/annotations/my-annotation
      value: whatever

    # Enforce non-root securityContext and make nginx run as user 101.
    - op: add
      path: /spec/template/spec/securityContext
      value: |-
        fsGroup: 101
        runAsGroup: 101
        runAsUser: 101
        runAsNonRoot: true

Save the above ModRule to file my-modrule.yaml and deploy it to the default namespace of your Kubernetes cluster:

kubectl apply -f my-modrule.yaml

After the ModRule is created, the creation of any nginx Kubernetes Deployment resource in the same namespace will be intercepted by KubeMod, and if the Deployment resource matches the ModRule's match section, the resource will be patched with the collection of patch operations.

To list all ModRules deployed to a namespace, run the following:

kubectl get modrules

Common use cases

The development of KubeMod was motivated by the proliferation of Kubernetes Operators and Helm charts which are sometimes opaque to customizations and lead to runtime issues.

For example, consider these issues:

Oftentimes these issues are showstoppers that render the chart/operator impossible to use for certain use cases.

With the help of KubeMod we can make those charts and operators work for us. Just deploy a ModRule which targets the problematic primitive resource and patch it on the fly at the time it is created.

See the following sections for a number of typical use cases for KubeMod.

Modification of behavior

Here's a typical black-box operator issue which can be fixed with KubeMod: elastic/cloud-on-k8s#2328.

The issue is that when the Elastic Search operator creates Persistent Volume Claims, it attaches an ownerReference to them such that they are garbage-collected after the operator removes the Elastic Search stack of resources.

This makes sense when we plan to dynamically scale Elastic Search up and down, but it doesn't make sense if we don't plan to scale dynamically, but we do want to keep the Elastic Search indexes during Elastic Search reinstallation (see comments here and here).

A solution to this issue would be the following ModRule which simply removes the ownerReference from PVCs created by the Elastic Search operator at the time they are deployed, thus excluding those resources from Kubernetes garbage collection:

apiVersion: api.kubemod.io/v1beta1
kind: ModRule
metadata:
  name: my-modrule
spec:
  type: Patch

  matches:
    # Match persistent volume claims ...
    - select: '$.kind'
      matchValue: PersistentVolumeClaim

    # ... created by the elasticsearch operator.
    - select: '$.metadata.labels["common.k8s.elastic.co/type"]'
      matchValue: elasticsearch

  patch:
    # Remove the ownerReference if it exists, thus excluding the resource from Kubernetes garbage collection.
    - op: remove
      path: /metadata/ownerReferences/0

Modification of metadata

With the help of ModRules, one can dynamically modify the resources generated by one operator such that another operator can detect those resources.

For example, Istio's sidecar injection can be controlled by pod annotation sidecar.istio.io/inject. If another operator creates a deployment which we want to explicitly exclude from Istio's injection mechanism, we can create a ModRule which modifies that deployment by adding this annotation with value "false".

The following ModRule explicitly excludes the Jaeger collector deployment created by the Jaeger Operator from Istio sidecar injection:

apiVersion: api.kubemod.io/v1beta1
kind: ModRule
metadata:
  name: my-modrule
spec:
  type: Patch

  match:
    # Match deployments ...
    - select: '$.kind'
      matchValue: Deployment

    # ... with label app = jaeger ...
    - select: '$.metadata.labels.app'
      matchValue: jaeger

    # ... and label app.kubernetes.io/component = collector ...
    - select: '$.metadata.labels["app.kubernetes.io/component"]'
      matchValue: collector

    # ... but with and no annotation sidecar.istio.io/inject.
    - select: '$.metadata.annotations["sidecar.istio.io/inject"]'
      negate: true

  patch:
    # Add Istio annotation sidecar.istio.io/inject=false to exclude this deployment from Istio injection.
    - op: add
      path: /metadata/annotations/sidecar.istio.io~1inject
      value: '"false"'

Sidecar injection

With the help of ModRules, one can dynamically inject arbitrary sidecar containers into Deployment and StatefulSet resources. The patch part of the ModRule is a Golang template which takes the target resource object as an intrinsic context allowing for powerful declarative rules such as the following one which injects a Jaeger Agent sidecar into any Deployment tagged with annotation my-inject-annotation set to "true":

apiVersion: api.kubemod.io/v1beta1
kind: ModRule
metadata:
  name: my-modrule
spec:
  type: Patch

  match:
    # Match deployments ...
    - select: '$.kind'
      matchValue: Deployment
    # ... with annotation  my-inject-annotation = true ...
    - select: '$.metadata.annotations["my-inject-annotation"]'
      matchValue: '"true"'
    # ... but ensure that there isn't already a jaeger-agent container injected in the pod template to avoid adding more containers on UPDATE operations.
    - select: '$.spec.template.spec.containers[*].name'
      matchValue: 'jaeger-agent'
      negate: true

  patch:
    - op: add
      # Use -1 to insert the new container at the end of the containers list.
      path: /spec/template/spec/containers/-1
      value: |-
        name: jaeger-agent
        image: jaegertracing/jaeger-agent:1.18.1
        imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
        args:
          - --jaeger.tags=deployment.name={{ .Target.metadata.name }},pod.namespace={{ .Namespace }},pod.id=${POD_ID:},host.ip=${HOST_IP:}
          - --reporter.grpc.host-port=dns:///jaeger-collector-headless.{{ .Namespace }}:14250
          - --reporter.type=grpc
        env:
          - name: POD_ID
            valueFrom:
              fieldRef:
                apiVersion: v1
                fieldPath: metadata.uid
          - name: HOST_IP
            valueFrom:
              fieldRef:
                apiVersion: v1
                fieldPath: status.hostIP
        ports:
        - containerPort: 6832
          name: jg-binary-trft
          protocol: UDP

Note the use of {{ .Target.metadata.name }} in the patch value to dynamically access the name of the deployment being patched and pass it to the Jaeger agent as a tracer tag.

When a patch is evaluated, KubeMod executes the patch value as a Golang template and passes the following intrinsic items accessible through the template's context:

  • .Target — the original resource object being patched with all its properties.
  • .Namespace — the namespace of the resource object.
  • .SelectedItem — when select was used for the patch, .SelectedItem yields the current result of the select evaluation. See second example below.
  • .SelectKeyParts — when select was used for the patch, .SelectKeyParts can be used in value to access the wildcard/filter values captured for this patch operation.

Resource rejection

There are two types of ModRules — Patch and Reject.

All of the examples we've seen so far have been of type Patch.

Reject ModRules are simpler as they only have a match section.

If a resource matches the match section of a Reject ModRule, its creation/update will be rejected. This enables the development of a system of policy ModRules which enforce certain security restrictions in the namespace they are deployed to.

For example, here's a Reject ModRule which prevents the infamous CVE-2020-8554: Man in the middle using ExternalIPs:

apiVersion: api.kubemod.io/v1beta1
kind: ModRule
metadata:
  name: reject-malicious-external-ips
spec:
  type: Reject

  rejectMessage: 'One or more of the following external IPs are not allowed {{ .Target.spec.externalIPs }}'

  match:
    # Reject Service resources...
    - select: '$.kind'
      matchValue: Service

    # ...with non-empty externalIPs...
    - select: 'length($.spec.externalIPs) > 0'

    # ...where some of the IPs were not part of the allowed subnet 123.45.67.0/24.
    - select: '$.spec.externalIPs[*]'
      matchFor: All
      matchRegex: '123\.45\.67\.*'
      negate: true

Here's another ModRule which rejects the deployment of any Deployment or StatefulSet resource that does not explicitly require non-root containers:

apiVersion: api.kubemod.io/v1beta1
kind: ModRule
metadata:
  name: reject-root-access-workloads
spec:
  type: Reject

  rejectMessage: 'All workloads must run as non-root user'
  
  match:
    # Reject Deployments and StatefulSets...
    - select: '$.kind'
      matchValues:
        - Deployment
        - StatefulSet

    # ...that have no explicit runAsNonRoot security context.
    - select: "$.spec.template.spec.securityContext.runAsNonRoot == true"
      negate: true

Anatomy of a ModRule

A ModRule consists of a type, a match section, and a patch section.

It also includes the optional targetNamespaceRegex and rejectMessage fields.

apiVersion: api.kubemod.io/v1beta1
kind: ModRule

spec:
  type: ...

  match:
    ...

  patch:
    ...

The type of a ModRule can be one of the following:

  • Patch — this type of ModRule applies patches to objects that match the match section of the rule. Section patch is required for Patch ModRules.
  • Reject — this type of ModRule rejects objects which match the match section. When type is Reject, the spec accepts an optional rejectMessage field.

Section match is an array of individual criteria items used to determine if the ModRule applies to a Kubernetes object.

Section patch is an array of patch operations.

Match section

Section match of a ModRule is an array of individual criteria items.

When a new object is deployed to Kubernetes, or an existing one is updated, KubeMod intercepts the operation and attempts to match the object's definition against all ModRules deployed to the namespace where the object is being deployed.

A ModRule is considered to have a match with the Kubernetes object definition when all criteria items in its match section yield a positive match.

A criteria item contains a required select expression and optional matchValue, matchValues, matchRegex and negate fields.

For example, the following match section has two criteria items. This ModRule will match all resources whose kind is equal to Deployment and have a container name that's either container-1 or container-2 .

...
  match:
    - select: '$.kind'
      matchValue: Deployment

    - select: '$.spec.template.spec.containers[*].name'
      matchValues:
        - 'container-1'
        - 'container-2'

A criteria item is considered a positive match when:

  • its select expression yields a single boolean true value.
  • its select expression yields one or more non-boolean values and one of the following is true:
    • Fields matchValue, matchValues and matchRegex are not specified.
    • matchValue is specified and:
      • matchFor is set to Any (or unspecified) and one or more of the values resulting from select exactly matches the value of matchValue.
      • matchFor is set to All and all of the values resulting from select exactly match the value of matchValue.
    • matchValues is specified and:
      • matchFor is set to Any (or unspecified) and one or more of the values resulting from select exactly matches one of the values in matchValues.
      • matchFor is set to All and all of the values resulting from select exactly match one of the values in matchValues.
    • matchRegex is specified and:
      • matchFor is set to Any (or unspecified) and one or more of the values resulting from select matches that regular expression.
      • matchFor is set to All and all of the values resulting from select match that regular expression.

The result of a criteria item can be inverted by setting its negate field to true.

A criteria item whose select expression yields no results is considered non-matching unless it is negated.

select (string : required)

The select field of a criteria item is a JSONPath expression.

See more on KubeMod's version of JSONPath.

When a select expression is evaluated against a Kubernetes object definition, it yields zero or more values.

Let's consider the following JSONPath select expression:

$.spec.template.spec.containers[*].name

When this expression is evaluated against a Deployment resource definition whose specification includes three containers, the result of this select expression will be a list of the names of those three containers.

If select yields a single boolean value, that value is considered to be the result of the match regardless of the values of matchValue, matchValues and matchRegex.

For any other case, KubeMod converts the result of the select expression to a list of strings, regardless of what the original type of the target field is.

Here's another example:

$.spec.template.spec.containers[*].ports[*].containerPort

This expression will yield a list of all containerPort values for all ports and all containers. The values in the list will be the string representation of those port numbers.

select filters

KubeMod select expressions includes an extension to JSONPath — filters.

A filter is an expression in the form of [? <filter expression>] and can be used in place of JSONPath's [*] to filter the elements of an array.

Let's take a look at the following select expression:

$.spec.template.spec.containers[*].ports[? @.containerPort == 8080]

The expression [? @.containerPort == 8080] filters the result of the select to include only containers that include a port with whose containerPort field equals 8080.

The filter expression could be any JavaScript boolean expression.

The special character @ represents the current object the filter is iterating over. In the above filter expression, that is the current element of the ports array.

matchFor (string: optional)

Field matchFor controls how select results are evaluated against matchValue, matchValues and matchRegex.

The value of matchFor can be either Any or All. When not specified, matchFor defaults to Any.

See below for more information on how matchFor impacts the results of a match.

matchValue (string: optional)

When present, the value of field matchValue is matched against the results of select.

If matchFor is set to Any and any of the items returned by select match matchValue, the match criteria is considered a positive match.

If matchFor is set to All and all of the items returned by select match matchValue, the match criteria is considered a positive match.

The match performed by matchValue is case sensitive. If you need case insensitive matches, use matchRegex.

matchValues (array of strings: optional)

Field matchValues is an array of strings which are tested against the results of select.

If matchFor is set to Any and any of the items returned by select match any of the matchValues, the match criteria is considered a positive match.

If matchFor is set to All and all of the items returned by select match any of the matchValues, the match criteria is considered a positive match.

This match is case sensitive. If you need case insensitive matches, use matchRegex.

matchRegex (string: optional)

Field matchRegex is a regular expression matched against the results of select.

If matchFor is set to Any and any of the items returned by select match matchRegex, the match criteria is considered a positive match.

If matchFor is set to All and all of the items returned by select match matchRegex, the match criteria is considered a positive match.

negate (boolean: optional)

Field negate can be used to flip the outcome of the criteria item match. Its default value is false.

Patch section

Section patch is an array of RFC6902 JSON Patch operations.

KubeMod's variant of JSON Patch includes the following extensions to RFC6902:

  • Negative array indices mean starting at the end of the array.
  • Operations which attempt to remove a non-existent path in the JSON object are ignored.

A patch operation contains fields op, select, path and value.

For example, the following patch section applies two patch operations executed against every Deployment object deployed to the namespace where the ModRule resides.

...
  match:
    - select: '$.kind'
      matchValue: Deployment

  patch:
    - op: add
      path: /metadata/labels/color
      value: blue

    # Change all nginx containers' ports from 80 to 8080
    - op: add
      select: '$.spec.template.spec.containers[? @.image =~ "nginx" ].ports[? @.containerPort == 80]'
      path: '/spec/template/spec/containers/#0/ports/#1/containerPort'
      value: '8080'

The first patch operation adds a new color label to the target object.

The second one switches the containerPort of all nginx containers present in the target Deployment object from 80 to 8080.

Following is a break-down of each field of a patch operation.

op (string: required)

Field op indicates the type of patch operation to be performed against the target object. It can be one of the following:

  • replace — this type of operation replaces the value of element represented by path with the value of field value. If path points to a non-existent element, the operation fails.
  • add — this type of operation adds the element represented by path with the value of field value. If the element already exists, add behaves like replace.
  • remove — this type of operation removes the element represented by path. If path points to a non-existent element, the operation is ignored.

select (string: optional) and path (string: required)

The select field of a patch item is a JSONPath expression.

When a select expression is evaluated against a Kubernetes object definition, it yields zero or more values.

For more information about select expressions, see Match item select expressions.

When select is used in a patch operation, the patch is executed once for each item yielded by select.

If the select field of a patch item uses JSONPatch wildcards (such as .. or [*]) and/or select filters, KubeMod captures the zero-based index of each wildcard/filter result and makes it available for use in the target path field.

The path field of a patch item points to the target element which should be patched. The path components are separated by slashes (/). A slash in the name of a path component is escaped with the special ~1. When targeting elements of an array, index -1 is relative and means "the element after the last one in the array".

Let's consider the following example:

op: add
select: '$.spec.template.spec.containers[*].ports[? @.containerPort == 80]'
path: '/spec/template/spec/containers/#0/ports/#1/containerPort'
value: '8080'

The select expression includes a wildcard to loop over all containers (containers[*]), and then a filter (ports[? @.containerPort == 80]) to select only the ports whose containerPort is equal to 80.

If we evaluate this select expression against a Deployment with the following four containers and port objects...

...
  containers:
    - name: c1
      ports:
        - containerPort: 100
          name: abc
        - containerPort: 200
          name: xyz

    - name: c2
      ports:
        - containerPort: 100
          name: abc
        - containerPort: 80
          name: xyz

    - name: c3
      ports:
        - containerPort: 100
          name: abc
        - containerPort: 200
          name: xyz

    - name: c4
      ports:
        - containerPort: 80
          name: abc
        - containerPort: 200
          name: xyz
        - containerPort: 300
          name: foo
...

... the select expression will yield the following two items:

  • Item 1: The second port object of the second container
  • Item 2: The first port object of the fourth container

The zero-based wildcard/filter indexes captured by KubeMod for this select will be as follows:

  • Item 1:
    • container index: 1
    • port index: 1
  • Item 2:
    • container index: 3
    • port index: 0

The indexes above can be used when constructing the path of the patch operation.

For example:

path: '/spec/template/spec/containers/#0/ports/#1/containerPort'

The index placeholders #0 and #1 refers to the first and the second index captured by KubeMod when evaluating the select expression.

In our previous select example, #0 would be the placeholder for the container index, and #1 would be the placeholder for the port index.

When KubeMod performs patch operations, it constructs the path by replacing the index placeholders with the value of the corresponding indexes.

For the above select and path examples executed against our sample Deployment, KubeMod will generate two patch operations which will target the following paths:

  • /spec/template/spec/containers/1/ports/1/containerPort
  • /spec/template/spec/containers/3/ports/0/containerPort

Combining select expressions with paths with index placeholders gives us the ability to perform sophisticated targeted resource modifications.

If select is not specified, path is rendered as-is and is not subject to index placeholder interpolation.

value (string)

value is required for add and replace operations.

value is the string representation of a YAML value. It can represent a primitive value or a complex YAML object or array.

Here are a few examples:

Number (note the quotes - value itself is a string, but its "value" evaluates to a YAML number):

value: '8080'

String:

value: hello
# or
value: 'hello'

String representation of a number (note the double-quotes):

value: '"8080"'

Boolean:

value: 'false'

String representation of a boolean:

value: '"false"'

YAML object (note |- which makes value a multi-line string):

value: |-
  name: jaeger-agent
  image: jaegertracing/jaeger-agent:1.18.1
  imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
  ports:
  - containerPort: 6832
    name: jg-binary-trft
    protocol: UDP

Golang Template

When value contains {{ ... }}, it is evaluated as a Golang template.

In addition, the Golang template engine used by KubeMod is extended with the Sprig library of template functions.

The following intrinsic items are accessible through the template's context:

  • .Target — the original resource object being patched.
  • .Namespace — the namespace of the target object.
  • .SelectedItem — when select was used for the patch, .SelectedItem yields the current result of the select evaluation. See second example below.
  • .SelectKeyParts — when select was used for the patch, .SelectKeyParts can be used in value to access the wildcard/filter values captured for this patch operation.

For example, the following excerpt of a Jaeger side-car injection ModRule includes a value which uses {{ .Target.metadata.name }} to access the name of the Deployment being patched.

...
value: |-
  name: jaeger-agent
  image: jaegertracing/jaeger-agent:1.18.1
  imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
  args:
    - --jaeger.tags=deployment.name={{ .Target.metadata.name }}
  ports:
  - containerPort: 6832
    name: jg-binary-trft
    protocol: UDP
...

See full example of the above ModRule here.

Advanced use of SelectedItem

The presence of .SelectedItem in the value template unlocks some advanced scenarios.

For example, the following patch rule will match all containers from image repository their-repo and will replace the repository part of the image with my-repo, keeping the rest of the image name intact:

...
patch:
  - op: replace
    # Select only containers whose image belongs to container registry "their-repo".
    select: '$.spec.containers[? @.image =~ "their-repo/.+"].image'
    path: /spec/containers/#0/image
    # Replace the existing value by running Sprig's regexReplaceAll function against .SelectedItem.
    value: '{{ regexReplaceAll "(.+)/(.*)" .SelectedItem "my-repo/${2}" }}'

Note that .SelectedItem points to the part of the resource selected by the select expression.

In the above example, the select expression is $.spec.containers[? @.image =~ "repo-1/.+"].image so .SelectedItem is a string with the value of the image field.

On the other hand, if the select expression was $.spec.containers[? @.image =~ "repo-1/.+"], then .SelectedItem would be a map with the named properties of the container object.

In that case, to access any of the properties of the container, one would use the index Golang template function.

For example, {{ index .SelectedItem "image" }} or {{ index .SelectedItem "imagePullPolicy" }}.

targetNamespaceRegex (string: optional)

Field targetNamespaceRegex is an optional regular expression which is used to match namespaced object. It only applies to ModRules deployed to namespace kubemod-system.

Setting this field allows for the deployment of ModRules which apply to resources deployed across namespaces.

rejectMessage (string: optional)

Field rejectMessage is an optional message displayed when a resource is rejected by a Reject ModRule. The field is a Golang template evaluated in the context of the object being rejected

Miscellaneous

Namespaced and cluster-wide resources

KubeMod can patch/reject both namespaced and cluster-wide resources.

If a ModRule is deployed to any namespace other than kubemod-system, the ModRule applies only to objects deployed/updated in that same namespace.

ModRules deployed to namespace kubemod-system are treated differently.

  • If a ModRule is deployed to kubemod-system and its targetNamespaceRegex is empty or equal to .*, this rule applies to cluster-wide resources such as Namespace or ClusterRole.
  • If a ModRule is deployed to kubemod-system and its targetNamespaceRegex is non-empty, this rule applies to all namespaced resources in namespaces that match the regular expression in targetNamespaceRegex.

Note that matching targetNamespaceRegex to the namespace of a resource does not guarantee an actual match for the rule. It only guarantees that the rule will be considered for a match — the final outcome will be decided by evaluating the rule's Matchcriteria against the resource's definition.

Note on ignored namespaces

If a namespace has label admission.kubemod.io/ignore equal to "true", KubeMod will not monitor resources created in that namespace.

By default, the following namespaces are tagged with the above label:

  • kube-system
  • kubemod-system

Target resources

By default, KubeMod targets the following list of resources:

  • namespaces
  • nodes
  • configmaps
  • persistentvolumeclaims
  • persistentvolumes
  • secrets
  • services
  • daemonsets
  • deployments
  • replicasets
  • statefulsets
  • horizontalpodautoscalers
  • ingresses
  • pods
  • cronjobs
  • jobs
  • serviceaccounts
  • clusterrolebindings
  • clusterroles
  • rolebindings
  • roles

If you need to expand or limit this list create a patch file patch.yaml with the following content and populate the resources list with the full list of resources you want to target:

webhooks:
- name: dragnet.kubemod.io
  rules:
  - apiGroups:
    - '*'
    apiVersions:
    - '*'
    scope: '*'
    operations:
    - CREATE
    - UPDATE
    resources:
    - namespaces
    - nodes
    - configmaps
    - persistentvolumeclaims
    - persistentvolumes
    - secrets
    - services
    - daemonsets
    - deployments
    - replicasets
    - statefulsets
    - horizontalpodautoscalers
    - ingresses
    - pods
    - cronjobs
    - jobs
    - serviceaccounts
    - clusterrolebindings
    - clusterroles
    - rolebindings
    - roles

Save the file and run the following:

kubectl patch mutatingwebhookconfiguration kubemod-mutating-webhook-configuration --patch "$(cat patch.yaml)"

You can get the full list of Kubernetes API resources by running:

kubectl api-resources --verbs list -o name

Note on idempotency

Make sure your patch ModRules are idempotent — executing them multiple times against the same object should lead to no changes beyond the first execution.

This is important because Kubernetes will pass the same object through KubeMod every time its state changes. For example, when a Deployment resource is created, its status field changes multiple times after its creation.

We want to make sure KubeMod will not apply cumulative patch operations against objects that have already been patched.

Here's an example of an idempotent sidecar injection ModRule:

apiVersion: api.kubemod.io/v1beta1
kind: ModRule
metadata:
  name: my-sidecar-injection-rule
spec:
  type: Patch

  match:
    # Match Deployments...
    - select: '$.kind'
      matchValue: Deployment
    
    # ...which have label app = whatever...
    - select: '$.metadata.labels.app'
      matchValue: 'whatever'

    # ...and have not yet received the injection.
    - select: '$.spec.template.spec.containers[*].name'
      matchValue: 'my-sidecar'
      negate: true
    
  patch:
    # Operations on non-array fields are idempotent by default.
    - op: add
      path: /metadata/labels/color
      value: blue

    # Careful - add and remove operations against relative array elements (-1) are not idempotent.
    # We need to protect against cumulative patches through a negate select rule in the match section (see above).
    - op: add
      path: /spec/template/spec/containers/-1
      value: |-
        name: my-sidecar
        image: alpine:3
        command:
          - sh
          - -c
          - while true; do sleep 5; done;

The first add operation in section patch is performed against a non-array field /metadata/labels/color. Such an operation is idempotent by default. If a color label does not exist, it will be created and its value will be set to blue. If it does exist, its value will be overwritten by value blue.

Now let's take a look at the next add operation.

It targets path /spec/template/spec/containers/-1 to inject a sidecar container into the Deployment's manifest.

Index -1 is relative — it indicates the index after the last element of an array. This rule is not idempotent. Running it multiple times against the same deployment will inject my-sidecar container multiple times.

To prevent that, we add a negate:true select statement in the match section, which basically says "don't run this rule against objects that already have a container named my-sidecar".

Debugging ModRules

To list the ModRules deployed to a namespace, run the following command:

kubectl get modrules

When a ModRule does not behave as expected, your best bet is to analyze KubeMod's operator logs.

Follow these steps:

  • Deploy your ModRule to the namespace where you will be deploying the Kubernetes resources the ModRule should intercept.
  • Find the KubeMod operator pod - run the following command and grab the name of the pod that begins with kubemod-operator:
kubectl get pods -n kubemod-system
  • Tail the logs of the pod:
kubectl logs kubemod-operator-xxxxxxxx-xxxx -n kubemod-system -f
  • In another terminal deploy the Kubernetes object your ModRule is designed to intercept.
  • Watch the operator pod logs.

If your ModRule is a Patch rule, KubeMod operator will log the full JSON Patch applied to the target Kubernetes object at the time of interception.

If there are any errors at the time the patch is calculated, you will see them in the logs.

If the operator log is silent at the time you deploy the target object, this means that your ModRule's match criteria did not yield a positive match for the target object.

Declarative kubectl apply

KubeMod is aligned with Kubernetes' approach to declarative object management.

When an object is patched by a ModRule, if the object has a kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration annotation, KubeMod patches the contents of that annotation as well.

KubeMod supports both client-side and server-side declarative management through kubectl apply.

KubeMod's version of JSONPath

KubeMod implements a modified (extended) version of JSONPath.

This version introduces the following new features:

Value undefined

  • Includes internal representation of value undefined.
  • Resolves each path that includes undefined properties to value undefined. For example $.a.b.c will resolve to undefined if any of the a, b or c properties do not exist.
  • Filters out all undefined values on partial matches.
  • Makes all equality and arithmetic comparisons to undefined return false. For example, assuming that $.a.b.c is a path to undefined property, all of the following expressions will yield false:
    • $.a.b.c == 12
    • $.a.b.c != 12
    • $.a.b.c > 12
    • $.a.b.c < 12
    • $.a.b.c == true
    • $.a.b.c == false
  • Makes all boolean operators (&& and ||) require boolean operands.

undefined-based functions

  • isDefined() - returns true if the passed in path leads to a defined property, otherwise return false.
  • isUndefined() - returns true if the passed in path leads to an undefined property, otherwise return false.
  • isEmpty() - returns true if the passed in path leads to one of the following values:
    • An empty array
    • An empty object
    • An empty string
    • Null
    • undefined
  • isNotEmpty() - equivalent to evaluating !isEmpty()
  • length() - returns the length of arrays, objects and strings. Returns 0 for Nulls and undefined.

Note on presence check

KubeMod uses the above undefined based functions to provide both presence (isDefined) and negative-presence (isUndefined) filters - see next section for an example.

These functions should be used in place of the standard JSONPath's presence-based [?(@.property)] filter discussed here.

Usage in ModRules

For example, to patch all deployments' containers which have either no securityContext defined, or securityContext is empty, one would use the following KubeMod rule.

apiVersion: api.kubemod.io/v1beta1
kind: ModRule
metadata:
  name: kubemod-patch-deployments-containers-securitycontext
  namespace: kubemod-system
spec:
  targetNamespaceRegex: .*
  type: Patch
  match:
    - matchValue: Deployment
      select: $.kind
  patch:
    - op: add
      select: '$.spec.template.spec.containers[? isEmpty(@.securityContext)]'
      path: '/spec/template/spec/containers/#0/securityContext'
      value: |-
        runAsNonRoot: true
        capabilities:
          drop:
          - ALL

The rule uses isEmpty which returns true when the passed in path is not defined or if it points to an empty object.

If we wanted to only patch the containers which have no securityContext defined, but leave the ones which have an empty securityContext, we would use the following select:

select: '$.spec.template.spec.containers[? isUndefined(@.securityContext)]'

If we wanted to only patch the containers which have an empty securityContext, but leave the ones which have no securityContext defined, we would use the following select:

select: '$.spec.template.spec.containers[? isDefined(@.securityContext) && isEmpty(@.securityContext)]'

Gotchas

When multiple ModRules match the same resource object, all of the ModRule patches are executed against the object in an indeterminate order.

This is by design.

Be careful when creating ModRules such that their match criteria and patch sections don't overlap leading to unexpected behavior.

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