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Certified Kubernetes Security Specialist Masterclass

Certified Kubernetes Security Specialist Ultimate Preparation Guide Masterclass | Theory | Hands-on | Labs | Complete

Description

Cluster Setup

  1. Use Network security policies to restrict cluster level access
  2. Use CIS benchmark to review the security configuration of Kubernetes components (etcd, kubelet, kubedns, kubeapi)
  3. Properly set up Ingress objects with security control
  4. Protect node metadata and endpoints
  5. Minimize use of, and access to, GUI elements
  6. Verify platform binaries before deploying

Cluster Hardening

  1. Restrict access to Kubernetes API
  2. Use Role Based Access Controls to minimize exposure
  3. Exercise caution in using service accounts e.g. disable defaults, minimize permissions on newly created ones
  4. Update Kubernetes frequently

System Hardening

  1. Minimize host OS footprint (reduce attack surface)
  2. Minimize IAM roles
  3. Minimize external access to the network
  4. Appropriately use kernel hardening tools such as AppArmor, seccomp

Minimize Microservice Vulnerabilities

  1. Setup appropriate OS level security domains
  2. Manage Kubernetes secrets
  3. Use container runtime sandboxes in multi-tenant environments (e.g. gvisor, kata containers)
  4. Implement pod to pod encryption by use of mTLS

Supply Chain Security

  1. Minimize base image footprint
  2. Secure your supply chain: whitelist allowed registries, sign and validate images
  3. Use static analysis of user workloads (e.g.Kubernetes resources, Docker files)
  4. Scan images for known vulnerabilities

Monitoring, Logging and Runtime Security

  1. Perform behavioral analytics of syscall process and file activities at the host and container level to detect malicious activities
  2. Detect threats within physical infrastructure, apps, networks, data, users and workloads
  3. Detect all phases of attack regardless where it occurs and how it spreads
  4. Perform deep analytical investigation and identification of bad actors within environment
  5. Ensure immutability of containers at runtime
  6. Use Audit Logs to monitor access

What you’ll learn

  • Use Network security policies to restrict cluster level access
  • Use CIS benchmark to review the security configuration of Kubernetes components (etcd, kubelet, kubedns, kubeapi)
  • Properly set up Ingress objects with security control
  • Protect node metadata and endpoints
  • Minimize use of, and access to, GUI elements
  • Verify platform binaries before deploying
  • Restrict access to Kubernetes API
  • Use Role Based Access Controls to minimize exposure
  • Exercise caution in using service accounts e.g. disable defaults, minimize permissions on newly created ones
  • Update Kubernetes frequently
  • Minimize host OS footprint (reduce attack surface)
  • Minimize IAM roles
  • Minimize external access to the network
  • Appropriately use kernel hardening tools such as AppArmor, seccomp
  • Setup appropriate OS level security domains
  • Manage Kubernetes secrets
  • Use container runtime sandboxes in multi-tenant environments (e.g. gvisor, kata containers)
  • Implement pod to pod encryption by use of mTLS
  • Minimize base image footprint
  • Secure your supply chain: whitelist allowed registries, sign and validate images
  • Use static analysis of user workloads (Kubernetes resources, Docker files)
  • Scan images for known vulnerabilities
  • Perform behavioral analytics of syscall process and file activities at the host and container level to detect malicious activities
  • Detect threats within physical infrastructure, apps, networks, data, users and workloads
  • Detect all phases of attack regardless where it occurs and how it spreads
  • Perform deep analytical investigation and identification of bad actors within environment
  • Ensure immutability of containers at runtime
  • Use Audit Logs to monitor access

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