Chapter 7. Security Profiles Operator
7.1. Security Profiles Operator overview
OpenShift Container Platform Security Profiles Operator (SPO) provides a way to define secure computing (seccomp) profiles and SELinux profiles as custom resources, synchronizing profiles to every node in a given namespace. For the latest updates, see the release notes.
The SPO can distribute custom resources to each node while a reconciliation loop ensures that the profiles stay up-to-date. See Understanding the Security Profiles Operator.
The SPO manages SELinux policies and seccomp profiles for namespaced workloads. For more information, see Enabling the Security Profiles Operator.
You can create seccomp and SELinux profiles, bind policies to pods, record workloads, and synchronize all worker nodes in a namespace.
Use Advanced Security Profile Operator tasks to enable the log enricher, configure webhooks and metrics, or restrict profiles to a single namespace.
Troubleshoot the Security Profiles Operator as needed, or engage Red Hat support.
You can Uninstall the Security Profiles Operator by removing the profiles before removing the Operator.
7.2. Security Profiles Operator release notes
The Security Profiles Operator provides a way to define secure computing (seccomp) and SELinux profiles as custom resources, synchronizing profiles to every node in a given namespace.
These release notes track the development of the Security Profiles Operator in OpenShift Container Platform.
For an overview of the Security Profiles Operator, see Security Profiles Operator Overview.
7.2.1. Security Profiles Operator 0.9.0
The following advisory is available for the Security Profiles Operator 0.9.0: RHBA-2025:15655 - OpenShift Security Profiles Operator update
This update manages security profiles as cluster-wide resources rather than namespace resources. To update Security Profiles Operator to a version later than 0.8.6 requires manual migration. For migration instructions, see Security Profiles Operator 0.9.0 Update Migration Guide.
7.2.1.1. Bug fixes
- 
								Before this update, the spod pods could fail to start and enter into a CrashLoopBackOffstate due to an error in parsing the semanage configuration file. This issue is caused by a change to the RHEL 9 image naming convention beginning in OpenShift Container Platform 4.19. (OCPBUGS-55829)
- 
								Before this update, the Security Profiles Operator would fail to apply a RawSelinuxProfileto newly added nodes due to a reconciler type mismatch error. With this update, the operator now correctly handlesRawSelinuxProfileobjects and policies are applied to all nodes as expected. (OCPBUGS-33718)
7.2.2. Security Profiles Operator 0.8.6
The following advisory is available for the Security Profiles Operator 0.8.6:
This update includes upgraded dependencies in underlying base images.
7.2.3. Security Profiles Operator 0.8.5
The following advisory is available for the Security Profiles Operator 0.8.5:
7.2.3.1. Bug fixes
- When attempting to install the Security Profile Operator from the web console, the option to enable Operator-recommended cluster monitoring was unavailable for the namespace. With this update, you can now enabled Operator-recommend cluster monitoring in the namespace. (OCPBUGS-37794)
- Previously, the Security Profiles Operator would intermittently be not visible in the OperatorHub, which caused limited access to install the Operator via the web console. With this update, the Security Profiles Operator is present in the OperatorHub.
7.2.4. Security Profiles Operator 0.8.4
The following advisory is available for the Security Profiles Operator 0.8.4:
This update addresses CVEs in underlying dependencies.
7.2.4.1. New features and enhancements
- 
								You can now specify a default security profile in the imageattribute of aProfileBindingobject by setting a wildcard. For more information, see Binding workloads to profiles with ProfileBindings (SELinux) and Binding workloads to profiles with ProfileBindings (Seccomp).
7.2.5. Security Profiles Operator 0.8.2
The following advisory is available for the Security Profiles Operator 0.8.2:
7.2.5.1. Bug fixes
- 
								Previously, SELinuxProfileobjects did not inherit custom attributes from the same namespace. With this update, the issue has now been resolved andSELinuxProfileobject attributes are inherited from the same namespace as expected. (OCPBUGS-17164)
- 
								Previously, RawSELinuxProfiles would hang during the creation process and would not reach an Installedstate. With this update, the issue has been resolved and RawSELinuxProfiles are created successfully. (OCPBUGS-19744)
- 
								Previously, patching the enableLogEnrichertotruewould cause theseccompProfilelog-enricher-tracepods to be stuck in aPendingstate. With this update,log-enricher-tracepods reach anInstalledstate as expected. (OCPBUGS-22182)
- Previously, the Security Profiles Operator generated high cardinality metrics, causing Prometheus pods using high amounts of memory. With this update, the following metrics will no longer apply in the Security Profiles Operator namespace: - 
										rest_client_request_duration_seconds
- 
										rest_client_request_size_bytes
- rest_client_response_size_bytes
 
- 
										
7.2.6. Security Profiles Operator 0.8.0
The following advisory is available for the Security Profiles Operator 0.8.0:
7.2.6.1. Bug fixes
- Previously, while trying to install Security Profiles Operator in a disconnected cluster, the secure hashes provided were incorrect due to a SHA relabeling issue. With this update, the SHAs provided work consistently with disconnected environments. (OCPBUGS-14404)
7.2.7. Security Profiles Operator 0.7.1
The following advisory is available for the Security Profiles Operator 0.7.1:
7.2.7.1. New features and enhancements
- Security Profiles Operator (SPO) now automatically selects the appropriate - selinuxdimage for RHEL 8- and 9-based RHCOS systems.Important- Users that mirror images for disconnected environments must mirror both - selinuxdimages provided by the Security Profiles Operator.
- You can now enable memory optimization inside of an - spoddaemon. For more information, see Enabling memory optimization in the spod daemon.Note- SPO memory optimization is not enabled by default. 
- The daemon resource requirements are now configurable. For more information, see Customizing daemon resource requirements.
- 
								The priority class name is now configurable in the spodconfiguration. For more information, see Setting a custom priority class name for the spod daemon pod.
7.2.7.2. Deprecated and removed features
- 
								The default nginx-1.19.1seccomp profile is now removed from the Security Profiles Operator deployment.
7.2.7.3. Bug fixes
- Previously, a Security Profiles Operator (SPO) SELinux policy did not inherit low-level policy definitions from the container template. If you selected another template, such as net_container, the policy would not work because it required low-level policy definitions that only existed in the container template. This issue occurred when the SPO SELinux policy attempted to translate SELinux policies from the SPO custom format to the Common Intermediate Language (CIL) format. With this update, the container template appends to any SELinux policies that require translation from SPO to CIL. Additionally, the SPO SELinux policy can inherit low-level policy definitions from any supported policy template. (OCPBUGS-12879)
7.2.7.4. Known issue
- 
								When uninstalling the Security Profiles Operator, the MutatingWebhookConfigurationobject is not deleted and must be manually removed. As a workaround, delete theMutatingWebhookConfigurationobject after uninstalling the Security Profiles Operator. These steps are defined in Uninstalling the Security Profiles Operator. (OCPBUGS-4687)
7.2.8. Security Profiles Operator 0.5.2
The following advisory is available for the Security Profiles Operator 0.5.2:
This update addresses a CVE in an underlying dependency.
7.2.8.1. Known issue
- 
								When uninstalling the Security Profiles Operator, the MutatingWebhookConfigurationobject is not deleted and must be manually removed. As a workaround, delete theMutatingWebhookConfigurationobject after uninstalling the Security Profiles Operator. These steps are defined in Uninstalling the Security Profiles Operator. (OCPBUGS-4687)
7.2.9. Security Profiles Operator 0.5.0
The following advisory is available for the Security Profiles Operator 0.5.0:
7.2.9.1. Known issue
- 
								When uninstalling the Security Profiles Operator, the MutatingWebhookConfigurationobject is not deleted and must be manually removed. As a workaround, delete theMutatingWebhookConfigurationobject after uninstalling the Security Profiles Operator. These steps are defined in Uninstalling the Security Profiles Operator. (OCPBUGS-4687)
7.3. Security Profiles Operator support
7.3.1. Security Profiles Operator lifecycle
The Security Profiles Operator is a "Rolling Stream" Operator, meaning updates are available asynchronously of OpenShift Container Platform releases. For more information, see OpenShift Operator Life Cycles on the Red Hat Customer Portal.
7.3.2. Getting support
If you experience difficulty with a procedure described in this documentation, or with OpenShift Container Platform in general, visit the Red Hat Customer Portal.
From the Customer Portal, you can:
- Search or browse through the Red Hat Knowledgebase of articles and solutions relating to Red Hat products.
- Submit a support case to Red Hat Support.
- Access other product documentation.
To identify issues with your cluster, you can use Insights in OpenShift Cluster Manager. Insights provides details about issues and, if available, information on how to solve a problem.
If you have a suggestion for improving this documentation or have found an error, submit a Jira issue for the most relevant documentation component. Please provide specific details, such as the section name and OpenShift Container Platform version.
7.4. Understanding the Security Profiles Operator
OpenShift Container Platform administrators can use the Security Profiles Operator to define increased security measures in clusters.
The Security Profiles Operator supports only Red Hat Enterprise Linux CoreOS (RHCOS) worker nodes. Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) nodes are not supported.
7.4.1. About Security Profiles
Security profiles can increase security at the container level in your cluster.
					Seccomp security profiles list the syscalls a process can make. Permissions are broader than SELinux, enabling users to restrict operations system-wide, such as write.
				
SELinux security profiles provide a label-based system that restricts the access and usage of processes, applications, or files in a system. All files in an environment have labels that define permissions. SELinux profiles can define access within a given structure, such as directories.
7.5. Enabling the Security Profiles Operator
Before you can use the Security Profiles Operator, you must ensure the Operator is deployed in the cluster.
All cluster nodes must have the same release version in order for this Operator to function properly. As an example, for nodes running RHCOS, all nodes must have the same RHCOS version.
The Security Profiles Operator supports only Red Hat Enterprise Linux CoreOS (RHCOS) worker nodes. Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) nodes are not supported.
					The Security Profiles Operator only supports x86_64 architecture.
				
7.5.1. Installing the Security Profiles Operator
Prerequisites
- 
							You must have adminprivileges.
Procedure
- 
							In the OpenShift Container Platform web console, navigate to Operators OperatorHub. 
- Search for the Security Profiles Operator, then click Install.
- 
							Keep the default selection of Installation mode and namespace to ensure that the Operator will be installed to the openshift-security-profilesnamespace.
- Click Install.
Verification
To confirm that the installation is successful:
- 
							Navigate to the Operators Installed Operators page. 
- 
							Check that the Security Profiles Operator is installed in the openshift-security-profilesnamespace and its status isSucceeded.
If the Operator is not installed successfully:
- 
							Navigate to the Operators Installed Operators page and inspect the Statuscolumn for any errors or failures.
- 
							Navigate to the Workloads Pods page and check the logs in any pods in the openshift-security-profilesproject that are reporting issues.
7.5.2. Installing the Security Profiles Operator using the CLI
Prerequisites
- 
							You must have adminprivileges.
Procedure
- Define a - Namespaceobject:- Example - namespace-object.yaml- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Create the - Namespaceobject:- oc create -f namespace-object.yaml - $ oc create -f namespace-object.yaml- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Define an - OperatorGroupobject:- Example - operator-group-object.yaml- apiVersion: operators.coreos.com/v1 kind: OperatorGroup metadata: name: security-profiles-operator namespace: openshift-security-profiles - apiVersion: operators.coreos.com/v1 kind: OperatorGroup metadata: name: security-profiles-operator namespace: openshift-security-profiles- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Create the - OperatorGroupobject:- oc create -f operator-group-object.yaml - $ oc create -f operator-group-object.yaml- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Define a - Subscriptionobject:- Example - subscription-object.yaml- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Create the - Subscriptionobject:- oc create -f subscription-object.yaml - $ oc create -f subscription-object.yaml- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
						If you are setting the global scheduler feature and enable defaultNodeSelector, you must create the namespace manually and update the annotations of the openshift-security-profiles namespace, or the namespace where the Security Profiles Operator was installed, with openshift.io/node-selector: “”. This removes the default node selector and prevents deployment failures.
					
Verification
- Verify the installation succeeded by inspecting the following CSV file: - oc get csv -n openshift-security-profiles - $ oc get csv -n openshift-security-profiles- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Verify that the Security Profiles Operator is operational by running the following command: - oc get deploy -n openshift-security-profiles - $ oc get deploy -n openshift-security-profiles- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
7.5.3. Configuring logging verbosity
					The Security Profiles Operator supports the default logging verbosity of 0 and an enhanced verbosity of 1.
				
Procedure
- To enable enhanced logging verbosity, patch the - spodconfiguration and adjust the value by running the following command:- oc -n openshift-security-profiles patch spod \ spod --type=merge -p '{"spec":{"verbosity":1}}'- $ oc -n openshift-security-profiles patch spod \ spod --type=merge -p '{"spec":{"verbosity":1}}'- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - securityprofilesoperatordaemon.security-profiles-operator.x-k8s.io/spod patched - securityprofilesoperatordaemon.security-profiles-operator.x-k8s.io/spod patched- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
7.6. Managing seccomp profiles
Create and manage seccomp profiles and bind them to workloads.
The Security Profiles Operator supports only Red Hat Enterprise Linux CoreOS (RHCOS) worker nodes. Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) nodes are not supported.
7.6.1. Creating seccomp profiles
					Use the SeccompProfile object to create profiles.
				
					SeccompProfile objects can restrict syscalls within a container, limiting the access of your application.
				
Procedure
- Create a project by running the following command: - oc new-project my-namespace - $ oc new-project my-namespace- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Create the - SeccompProfileobject:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
					The seccomp profile will be saved in /var/lib/kubelet/seccomp/operator/<namespace>/<name>.json.
				
					An init container creates the root directory of the Security Profiles Operator to run the Operator without root group or user ID privileges. A symbolic link is created from the rootless profile storage /var/lib/openshift-security-profiles to the default seccomp root path inside of the kubelet root /var/lib/kubelet/seccomp/operator.
				
7.6.2. Applying seccomp profiles to a pod
Create a pod to apply one of the created profiles.
Procedure
- Create a pod object that defines a - securityContext:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- View the profile path of the - seccompProfile.localhostProfileattribute by running the following command:- oc get seccompprofile profile1 --output wide - $ oc get seccompprofile profile1 --output wide- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - NAME STATUS AGE SECCOMPPROFILE.LOCALHOSTPROFILE profile1 Installed 14s operator/profile1.json - NAME STATUS AGE SECCOMPPROFILE.LOCALHOSTPROFILE profile1 Installed 14s operator/profile1.json- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- View the path to the localhost profile by running the following command: - oc get sp profile1 --output=jsonpath='{.status.localhostProfile}'- $ oc get sp profile1 --output=jsonpath='{.status.localhostProfile}'- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - operator/profile1.json - operator/profile1.json- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Apply the - localhostProfileoutput to the patch file:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Apply the profile to any other workload, such as a - Deploymentobject, by running the following command:- oc -n my-namespace patch deployment myapp --patch-file patch.yaml --type=merge - $ oc -n my-namespace patch deployment myapp --patch-file patch.yaml --type=merge- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - deployment.apps/myapp patched - deployment.apps/myapp patched- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
Verification
- Confirm the profile was applied correctly by running the following command: - oc -n my-namespace get deployment myapp --output=jsonpath='{.spec.template.spec.securityContext}' | jq .- $ oc -n my-namespace get deployment myapp --output=jsonpath='{.spec.template.spec.securityContext}' | jq .- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
7.6.2.1. Binding workloads to profiles with ProfileBindings
						You can use the ProfileBinding resource to bind a security profile to the SecurityContext of a container.
					
Procedure
- To bind a pod that uses a - quay.io/security-profiles-operator/test-nginx-unprivileged:1.21image to the example- SeccompProfileprofile, create a- ProfileBindingobject in the same namespace with the pod and the- SeccompProfileobjects:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Important- Using the - image: "*"wildcard attribute binds all new pods with a default security profile in a given namespace.
- Label the namespace with - enable-binding=trueby running the following command:- oc label ns my-namespace spo.x-k8s.io/enable-binding=true - $ oc label ns my-namespace spo.x-k8s.io/enable-binding=true- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Define a pod named - test-pod.yaml:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Create the pod: - oc create -f test-pod.yaml - $ oc create -f test-pod.yaml- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Note- If the pod already exists, you must re-create the pod for the binding to work properly. 
Verification
- Confirm the pod inherits the - ProfileBindingby running the following command:- oc get pod test-pod -o jsonpath='{.spec.containers[*].securityContext.seccompProfile}'- $ oc get pod test-pod -o jsonpath='{.spec.containers[*].securityContext.seccompProfile}'- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - {"localhostProfile":"operator/profile.json","type":"Localhost"}- {"localhostProfile":"operator/profile.json","type":"Localhost"}- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
7.6.3. Recording profiles from workloads
					The Security Profiles Operator can record system calls with ProfileRecording objects, making it easier to create baseline profiles for applications.
				
When using the log enricher for recording seccomp profiles, verify the log enricher feature is enabled. See Additional resources for more information.
						A container with privileged: true security context restraints prevents log-based recording. Privileged containers are not subject to seccomp policies, and log-based recording makes use of a special seccomp profile to record events.
					
Procedure
- Create a project by running the following command: - oc new-project my-namespace - $ oc new-project my-namespace- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Label the namespace with - enable-recording=trueby running the following command:- oc label ns my-namespace spo.x-k8s.io/enable-recording=true - $ oc label ns my-namespace spo.x-k8s.io/enable-recording=true- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Create a - ProfileRecordingobject containing a- recorder: logsvariable:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Create a workload to record: - Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Confirm the pod is in a - Runningstate by entering the following command:- oc -n my-namespace get pods - $ oc -n my-namespace get pods- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE my-pod 2/2 Running 0 18s - NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE my-pod 2/2 Running 0 18s- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Confirm the enricher indicates that it receives audit logs for those containers: - oc -n openshift-security-profiles logs --since=1m --selector name=spod -c log-enricher - $ oc -n openshift-security-profiles logs --since=1m --selector name=spod -c log-enricher- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - I0523 14:19:08.747313 430694 enricher.go:445] log-enricher "msg"="audit" "container"="redis" "executable"="/usr/local/bin/redis-server" "namespace"="my-namespace" "node"="xiyuan-23-5g2q9-worker-eastus2-6rpgf" "pid"=656802 "pod"="my-pod" "syscallID"=0 "syscallName"="read" "timestamp"="1684851548.745:207179" "type"="seccomp" - I0523 14:19:08.747313 430694 enricher.go:445] log-enricher "msg"="audit" "container"="redis" "executable"="/usr/local/bin/redis-server" "namespace"="my-namespace" "node"="xiyuan-23-5g2q9-worker-eastus2-6rpgf" "pid"=656802 "pod"="my-pod" "syscallID"=0 "syscallName"="read" "timestamp"="1684851548.745:207179" "type"="seccomp"- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
Verification
- Remove the pod: - oc -n my-namespace delete pod my-pod - $ oc -n my-namespace delete pod my-pod- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Confirm the Security Profiles Operator reconciles the two seccomp profiles: - oc get seccompprofiles -lspo.x-k8s.io/recording-id=test-recording - $ oc get seccompprofiles -lspo.x-k8s.io/recording-id=test-recording- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output for seccompprofile - NAME STATUS AGE test-recording-nginx Installed 2m48s test-recording-redis Installed 2m48s - NAME STATUS AGE test-recording-nginx Installed 2m48s test-recording-redis Installed 2m48s- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
7.6.3.1. Merging per-container profile instances
						By default, each container instance records into a separate profile. The Security Profiles Operator can merge the per-container profiles into a single profile. Merging profiles is useful when deploying applications using ReplicaSet or Deployment objects.
					
Procedure
- Edit a - ProfileRecordingobject to include a- mergeStrategy: containersvariable:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Label the namespace by running the following command: - oc label ns my-namespace security.openshift.io/scc.podSecurityLabelSync=false pod-security.kubernetes.io/enforce=privileged pod-security.kubernetes.io/audit=privileged pod-security.kubernetes.io/warn=privileged --overwrite=true - $ oc label ns my-namespace security.openshift.io/scc.podSecurityLabelSync=false pod-security.kubernetes.io/enforce=privileged pod-security.kubernetes.io/audit=privileged pod-security.kubernetes.io/warn=privileged --overwrite=true- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Create the workload with the following YAML: - Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- To record the individual profiles, delete the deployment by running the following command: - oc delete deployment nginx-deploy -n my-namespace - $ oc delete deployment nginx-deploy -n my-namespace- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- To merge the profiles, delete the profile recording by running the following command: - oc delete profilerecording test-recording -n my-namespace - $ oc delete profilerecording test-recording -n my-namespace- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- To start the merge operation and generate the results profile, run the following command: - oc get seccompprofiles -lspo.x-k8s.io/recording-id=test-recording -n my-namespace - $ oc get seccompprofiles -lspo.x-k8s.io/recording-id=test-recording -n my-namespace- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output for seccompprofiles - NAME STATUS AGE test-recording-nginx-record Installed 55s - NAME STATUS AGE test-recording-nginx-record Installed 55s- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- To view the permissions used by any of the containers, run the following command: - oc get seccompprofiles test-recording-nginx-record -o yaml - $ oc get seccompprofiles test-recording-nginx-record -o yaml- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
7.7. Managing SELinux profiles
Create and manage SELinux profiles and bind them to workloads.
The Security Profiles Operator supports only Red Hat Enterprise Linux CoreOS (RHCOS) worker nodes. Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) nodes are not supported.
7.7.1. Creating SELinux profiles
					Use the SelinuxProfile object to create profiles.
				
					The SelinuxProfile object has several features that allow for better security hardening and readability:
				
- 
							Restricts the profiles to inherit from to the current namespace or a system-wide profile. Because there are typically many profiles installed on the system, but only a subset should be used by cluster workloads, the inheritable system profiles are listed in the spodinstance inspec.selinuxOptions.allowedSystemProfiles.
- Performs basic validation of the permissions, classes and labels.
- 
							Adds a new keyword @selfthat describes the process using the policy. This allows reusing a policy between workloads and namespaces easily, as the usage of the policy is based on the name and namespace.
- Adds features for better security hardening and readability compared to writing a profile directly in the SELinux CIL language.
Procedure
- Create a project by running the following command: - oc new-project nginx-deploy - $ oc new-project nginx-deploy- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Create a policy that can be used with a non-privileged workload by creating the following - SelinuxProfileobject:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Wait for - selinuxdto install the policy by running the following command:- oc wait --for=condition=ready selinuxprofile nginx-secure - $ oc wait --for=condition=ready selinuxprofile nginx-secure- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - selinuxprofile.security-profiles-operator.x-k8s.io/nginx-secure condition met - selinuxprofile.security-profiles-operator.x-k8s.io/nginx-secure condition met- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - The policies are placed into an - emptyDirin the container owned by the Security Profiles Operator. The policies are saved in Common Intermediate Language (CIL) format in- /etc/selinux.d/<name>_<namespace>.cil.
- Access the pod by running the following command: - oc -n openshift-security-profiles rsh -c selinuxd ds/spod - $ oc -n openshift-security-profiles rsh -c selinuxd ds/spod- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
Verification
- View the file contents with - catby running the following command:- cat /etc/selinux.d/nginx-secure_.cil - $ cat /etc/selinux.d/nginx-secure_.cil- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Verify that a policy has been installed by running the following command: - semodule -l | grep nginx-secure - $ semodule -l | grep nginx-secure- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - nginx-secure_ - nginx-secure_- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
7.7.2. Applying SELinux profiles to a pod
Create a pod to apply one of the created profiles.
For SELinux profiles, the namespace must be labelled to allow privileged workloads.
Procedure
- Apply the - scc.podSecurityLabelSync=falselabel to the- nginx-deploynamespace by running the following command:- oc label ns nginx-deploy security.openshift.io/scc.podSecurityLabelSync=false - $ oc label ns nginx-deploy security.openshift.io/scc.podSecurityLabelSync=false- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Apply the - privilegedlabel to the- nginx-deploynamespace by running the following command:- oc label ns nginx-deploy --overwrite=true pod-security.kubernetes.io/enforce=privileged - $ oc label ns nginx-deploy --overwrite=true pod-security.kubernetes.io/enforce=privileged- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Obtain the SELinux profile usage string by running the following command: - oc get selinuxprofile.security-profiles-operator.x-k8s.io/nginx-secure -ojsonpath='{.status.usage}'- $ oc get selinuxprofile.security-profiles-operator.x-k8s.io/nginx-secure -ojsonpath='{.status.usage}'- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - nginx-secure_.process - nginx-secure_.process- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Apply the output string in the workload manifest in the - .spec.containers[].securityContext.seLinuxOptionsattribute:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Important- The SELinux - typemust exist before creating the workload.
7.7.2.1. Applying SELinux log policies
						To log policy violations or AVC denials, set the SElinuxProfile profile to permissive.
					
This procedure defines logging policies. It does not set enforcement policies.
Procedure
- Add - permissive: trueto an- SElinuxProfile:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
7.7.2.2. Binding workloads to profiles with ProfileBindings
						You can use the ProfileBinding resource to bind a security profile to the SecurityContext of a container.
					
Procedure
- To bind a pod that uses a - quay.io/security-profiles-operator/test-nginx-unprivileged:1.21image to the example- SelinuxProfileprofile, create a- ProfileBindingobject in the same namespace with the pod and the- SelinuxProfileobjects:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Important- Using the - image: "*"wildcard attribute binds all new pods with a default security profile in a given namespace.
- Label the namespace with - enable-binding=trueby running the following command:- oc label ns my-namespace spo.x-k8s.io/enable-binding=true - $ oc label ns my-namespace spo.x-k8s.io/enable-binding=true- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Define a pod named - test-pod.yaml:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Create the pod: - oc create -f test-pod.yaml - $ oc create -f test-pod.yaml- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Note- If the pod already exists, you must re-create the pod for the binding to work properly. 
Verification
- Confirm the pod inherits the - ProfileBindingby running the following command:- oc get pod test-pod -o jsonpath='{.spec.containers[*].securityContext.seLinuxOptions.type}'- $ oc get pod test-pod -o jsonpath='{.spec.containers[*].securityContext.seLinuxOptions.type}'- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - profile_.process - profile_.process- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
7.7.2.3. Replicating controllers and SecurityContextConstraints
						When you deploy SELinux policies for replicating controllers, such as deployments or daemon sets, note that the Pod objects spawned by the controllers are not running with the identity of the user who creates the workload. Unless a ServiceAccount is selected, the pods might revert to using a restricted SecurityContextConstraints (SCC) which does not allow use of custom security policies.
					
Procedure
- Create a project by running the following command: - oc new-project nginx-secure - $ oc new-project nginx-secure- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Create the following - RoleBindingobject to allow SELinux policies to be used in the- nginx-securenamespace:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Create the - Roleobject:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Create the - ServiceAccountobject:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Create the - Deploymentobject:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - 1
- The.seLinuxOptions.typemust exist before the Deployment is created.
 Note- The SELinux type is not specified in the workload and is handled by the SCC. When the pods are created by the deployment and the - ReplicaSet, the pods will run with the appropriate profile.
Ensure that your SCC is usable by only the correct service account. Refer to Additional resources for more information.
7.7.3. Recording profiles from workloads
					The Security Profiles Operator can record system calls with ProfileRecording objects, making it easier to create baseline profiles for applications.
				
When using the log enricher for recording SELinux profiles, verify the log enricher feature is enabled. See Additional resources for more information.
						A container with privileged: true security context restraints prevents log-based recording. Privileged containers are not subject to SELinux policies, and log-based recording makes use of a special SELinux profile to record events.
					
Procedure
- Create a project by running the following command: - oc new-project my-namespace - $ oc new-project my-namespace- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Label the namespace with - enable-recording=trueby running the following command:- oc label ns my-namespace spo.x-k8s.io/enable-recording=true - $ oc label ns my-namespace spo.x-k8s.io/enable-recording=true- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Create a - ProfileRecordingobject containing a- recorder: logsvariable:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Create a workload to record: - Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Confirm the pod is in a - Runningstate by entering the following command:- oc -n my-namespace get pods - $ oc -n my-namespace get pods- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE my-pod 2/2 Running 0 18s - NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE my-pod 2/2 Running 0 18s- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Confirm the enricher indicates that it receives audit logs for those containers: - oc -n openshift-security-profiles logs --since=1m --selector name=spod -c log-enricher - $ oc -n openshift-security-profiles logs --since=1m --selector name=spod -c log-enricher- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - I0517 13:55:36.383187 348295 enricher.go:376] log-enricher "msg"="audit" "container"="redis" "namespace"="my-namespace" "node"="ip-10-0-189-53.us-east-2.compute.internal" "perm"="name_bind" "pod"="my-pod" "profile"="test-recording_redis_6kmrb_1684331729" "scontext"="system_u:system_r:selinuxrecording.process:s0:c4,c27" "tclass"="tcp_socket" "tcontext"="system_u:object_r:redis_port_t:s0" "timestamp"="1684331735.105:273965" "type"="selinux" - I0517 13:55:36.383187 348295 enricher.go:376] log-enricher "msg"="audit" "container"="redis" "namespace"="my-namespace" "node"="ip-10-0-189-53.us-east-2.compute.internal" "perm"="name_bind" "pod"="my-pod" "profile"="test-recording_redis_6kmrb_1684331729" "scontext"="system_u:system_r:selinuxrecording.process:s0:c4,c27" "tclass"="tcp_socket" "tcontext"="system_u:object_r:redis_port_t:s0" "timestamp"="1684331735.105:273965" "type"="selinux"- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
Verification
- Remove the pod: - oc -n my-namespace delete pod my-pod - $ oc -n my-namespace delete pod my-pod- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Confirm the Security Profiles Operator reconciles the two SELinux profiles: - oc get selinuxprofiles -lspo.x-k8s.io/recording-id=test-recording - $ oc get selinuxprofiles -lspo.x-k8s.io/recording-id=test-recording- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output for selinuxprofile - NAME USAGE STATE test-recording-nginx test-recording-nginx_.process Installed test-recording-redis test-recording-redis_.process Installed - NAME USAGE STATE test-recording-nginx test-recording-nginx_.process Installed test-recording-redis test-recording-redis_.process Installed- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
7.7.3.1. Merging per-container profile instances
						By default, each container instance records into a separate profile. The Security Profiles Operator can merge the per-container profiles into a single profile. Merging profiles is useful when deploying applications using ReplicaSet or Deployment objects.
					
Procedure
- Edit a - ProfileRecordingobject to include a- mergeStrategy: containersvariable:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Label the namespace by running the following command: - oc label ns my-namespace security.openshift.io/scc.podSecurityLabelSync=false pod-security.kubernetes.io/enforce=privileged pod-security.kubernetes.io/audit=privileged pod-security.kubernetes.io/warn=privileged --overwrite=true - $ oc label ns my-namespace security.openshift.io/scc.podSecurityLabelSync=false pod-security.kubernetes.io/enforce=privileged pod-security.kubernetes.io/audit=privileged pod-security.kubernetes.io/warn=privileged --overwrite=true- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Create the workload with the following YAML: - Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- To record the individual profiles, delete the deployment by running the following command: - oc delete deployment nginx-deploy -n my-namespace - $ oc delete deployment nginx-deploy -n my-namespace- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- To merge the profiles, delete the profile recording by running the following command: - oc delete profilerecording test-recording -n my-namespace - $ oc delete profilerecording test-recording -n my-namespace- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- To start the merge operation and generate the results profile, run the following command: - oc get selinuxprofiles -lspo.x-k8s.io/recording-id=test-recording -n my-namespace - $ oc get selinuxprofiles -lspo.x-k8s.io/recording-id=test-recording -n my-namespace- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output for selinuxprofiles - NAME USAGE STATE test-recording-nginx-record test-recording-nginx-record_.process Installed - NAME USAGE STATE test-recording-nginx-record test-recording-nginx-record_.process Installed- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- To view the permissions used by any of the containers, run the following command: - oc get selinuxprofiles test-recording-nginx-record -o yaml - $ oc get selinuxprofiles test-recording-nginx-record -o yaml- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
7.7.3.2. About seLinuxContext: RunAsAny
						Recording of SELinux policies is implemented with a webhook that injects a special SELinux type to the pods being recorded. The SELinux type makes the pod run in permissive mode, logging all the AVC denials into audit.log. By default, a workload is not allowed to run with a custom SELinux policy, but uses an auto-generated type.
					
						To record a workload, the workload must use a service account that has permissions to use an SCC that allows the webhook to inject the permissive SELinux type. The privileged SCC contains seLinuxContext: RunAsAny.
					
						In addition, the namespace must be labeled with pod-security.kubernetes.io/enforce: privileged if your cluster enables the Pod Security Admission because only the privileged Pod Security Standard allows using a custom SELinux policy.
					
7.8. Advanced Security Profiles Operator tasks
Use advanced tasks to enable metrics, configure webhooks, or restrict syscalls.
7.8.1. Restrict the allowed syscalls in seccomp profiles
					The Security Profiles Operator does not restrict syscalls in seccomp profiles by default. You can define the list of allowed syscalls in the spod configuration.
				
Procedure
- To define the list of - allowedSyscalls, adjust the- specparameter by running the following command:- oc -n openshift-security-profiles patch spod spod --type merge \ -p '{"spec":{"allowedSyscalls": ["exit", "exit_group", "futex", "nanosleep"]}}'- $ oc -n openshift-security-profiles patch spod spod --type merge \ -p '{"spec":{"allowedSyscalls": ["exit", "exit_group", "futex", "nanosleep"]}}'- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
						The Operator will install only the seccomp profiles, which have a subset of syscalls defined into the allowed list. All profiles not complying with this ruleset are rejected.
					
						When the list of allowed syscalls is modified in the spod configuration, the Operator will identify the already installed profiles which are non-compliant and remove them automatically.
					
7.8.2. Base syscalls for a container runtime
					You can use the baseProfileName attribute to establish the minimum required syscalls for a given runtime to start a container.
				
Procedure
- Edit the - SeccompProfilekind object and add- baseProfileName: runc-v1.0.0to the- specfield:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
7.8.3. Enabling memory optimization in the spod daemon
					The controller running inside of spod daemon process watches all pods available in the cluster when profile recording is enabled. This can lead to very high memory usage in large clusters, resulting in the spod daemon running out of memory or crashing.
				
					To prevent crashes, the spod daemon can be configured to only load the pods labeled for profile recording into the cache memory.
				
SPO memory optimization is not enabled by default.
Procedure
- Enable memory optimization by running the following command: - oc -n openshift-security-profiles patch spod spod --type=merge -p '{"spec":{"enableMemoryOptimization":true}}'- $ oc -n openshift-security-profiles patch spod spod --type=merge -p '{"spec":{"enableMemoryOptimization":true}}'- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- To record a security profile for a pod, the pod must be labeled with - spo.x-k8s.io/enable-recording: "true":- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
7.8.4. Customizing daemon resource requirements
					The default resource requirements of the daemon container can be adjusted by using the field daemonResourceRequirements from the spod configuration.
				
Procedure
- To specify the memory and cpu requests and limits of the daemon container, run the following command: - oc -n openshift-security-profiles patch spod spod --type merge -p \ '{"spec":{"daemonResourceRequirements": { \ "requests": {"memory": "256Mi", "cpu": "250m"}, \ "limits": {"memory": "512Mi", "cpu": "500m"}}}}'- $ oc -n openshift-security-profiles patch spod spod --type merge -p \ '{"spec":{"daemonResourceRequirements": { \ "requests": {"memory": "256Mi", "cpu": "250m"}, \ "limits": {"memory": "512Mi", "cpu": "500m"}}}}'- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
7.8.5. Setting a custom priority class name for the spod daemon pod
					The default priority class name of the spod daemon pod is set to system-node-critical. A custom priority class name can be configured in the spod configuration by setting a value in the priorityClassName field.
				
Procedure
- Configure the priority class name by running the following command: - oc -n openshift-security-profiles patch spod spod --type=merge -p '{"spec":{"priorityClassName":"my-priority-class"}}'- $ oc -n openshift-security-profiles patch spod spod --type=merge -p '{"spec":{"priorityClassName":"my-priority-class"}}'- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - securityprofilesoperatordaemon.openshift-security-profiles.x-k8s.io/spod patched - securityprofilesoperatordaemon.openshift-security-profiles.x-k8s.io/spod patched- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
7.8.6. Using metrics
					The openshift-security-profiles namespace provides metrics endpoints, which are secured by the kube-rbac-proxy container. All metrics are exposed by the metrics service within the openshift-security-profiles namespace.
				
					The Security Profiles Operator includes a cluster role and corresponding binding spo-metrics-client to retrieve the metrics from within the cluster. There are two metrics paths available:
				
- 
							metrics.openshift-security-profiles/metrics: for controller runtime metrics
- 
							metrics.openshift-security-profiles/metrics-spod: for the Operator daemon metrics
Procedure
- To view the status of the metrics service, run the following command: - oc get svc/metrics -n openshift-security-profiles - $ oc get svc/metrics -n openshift-security-profiles- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE metrics ClusterIP 10.0.0.228 <none> 443/TCP 43s - NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE metrics ClusterIP 10.0.0.228 <none> 443/TCP 43s- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- To retrieve the metrics, query the service endpoint using the default - ServiceAccounttoken in the- openshift-security-profilesnamespace by running the following command:- oc run --rm -i --restart=Never --image=registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora-minimal:latest \ -n openshift-security-profiles metrics-test -- bash -c \ 'curl -ks -H "Authorization: Bearer $(cat /var/run/secrets/kubernetes.io/serviceaccount/token)" https://metrics.openshift-security-profiles/metrics-spod'- $ oc run --rm -i --restart=Never --image=registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora-minimal:latest \ -n openshift-security-profiles metrics-test -- bash -c \ 'curl -ks -H "Authorization: Bearer $(cat /var/run/secrets/kubernetes.io/serviceaccount/token)" https://metrics.openshift-security-profiles/metrics-spod'- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - HELP security_profiles_operator_seccomp_profile_total Counter about seccomp profile operations. TYPE security_profiles_operator_seccomp_profile_total counter - # HELP security_profiles_operator_seccomp_profile_total Counter about seccomp profile operations. # TYPE security_profiles_operator_seccomp_profile_total counter security_profiles_operator_seccomp_profile_total{operation="delete"} 1 security_profiles_operator_seccomp_profile_total{operation="update"} 2- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- To retrieve metrics from a different namespace, link the - ServiceAccountto the- spo-metrics-client- ClusterRoleBindingby running the following command:- oc get clusterrolebinding spo-metrics-client -o wide - $ oc get clusterrolebinding spo-metrics-client -o wide- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - NAME ROLE AGE USERS GROUPS SERVICEACCOUNTS spo-metrics-client ClusterRole/spo-metrics-client 35m openshift-security-profiles/default - NAME ROLE AGE USERS GROUPS SERVICEACCOUNTS spo-metrics-client ClusterRole/spo-metrics-client 35m openshift-security-profiles/default- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
7.8.6.1. controller-runtime metrics
						The controller-runtime metrics and the DaemonSet endpoint metrics-spod provide a set of default metrics. Additional metrics are provided by the daemon, which are always prefixed with security_profiles_operator_.
					
| Metric key | Possible labels | Type | Purpose | 
|---|---|---|---|
| 
										 | 
										 | Counter | Amount of seccomp profile operations. | 
| 
										 | 
										 | Counter | Amount of seccomp profile audit operations. Requires the log enricher to be enabled. | 
| 
										 | 
										 | Counter | Amount of seccomp profile bpf operations. Requires the bpf recorder to be enabled. | 
| 
										 | 
										 | Counter | Amount of seccomp profile errors. | 
| 
										 | 
										 | Counter | Amount of SELinux profile operations. | 
| 
										 | 
										 | Counter | Amount of SELinux profile audit operations. Requires the log enricher to be enabled. | 
| 
										 | 
										 | Counter | Amount of SELinux profile errors. | 
7.8.7. Using the log enricher
					The Security Profiles Operator contains a log enrichment feature, which is disabled by default. The log enricher container runs with privileged permissions to read the audit logs from the local node. The log enricher runs within the host PID namespace, hostPID.
				
The log enricher must have permissions to read the host processes.
Procedure
- Patch the - spodconfiguration to enable the log enricher by running the following command:- oc -n openshift-security-profiles patch spod spod \ --type=merge -p '{"spec":{"enableLogEnricher":true}}'- $ oc -n openshift-security-profiles patch spod spod \ --type=merge -p '{"spec":{"enableLogEnricher":true}}'- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - securityprofilesoperatordaemon.security-profiles-operator.x-k8s.io/spod patched - securityprofilesoperatordaemon.security-profiles-operator.x-k8s.io/spod patched- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Note- The Security Profiles Operator will re-deploy the - spoddaemon set automatically.
- View the audit logs by running the following command: - oc -n openshift-security-profiles logs -f ds/spod log-enricher - $ oc -n openshift-security-profiles logs -f ds/spod log-enricher- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - I0623 12:51:04.257814 1854764 deleg.go:130] setup "msg"="starting component: log-enricher" "buildDate"="1980-01-01T00:00:00Z" "compiler"="gc" "gitCommit"="unknown" "gitTreeState"="clean" "goVersion"="go1.16.2" "platform"="linux/amd64" "version"="0.4.0-dev" I0623 12:51:04.257890 1854764 enricher.go:44] log-enricher "msg"="Starting log-enricher on node: 127.0.0.1" I0623 12:51:04.257898 1854764 enricher.go:46] log-enricher "msg"="Connecting to local GRPC server" I0623 12:51:04.258061 1854764 enricher.go:69] log-enricher "msg"="Reading from file /var/log/audit/audit.log" 2021/06/23 12:51:04 Seeked /var/log/audit/audit.log - &{Offset:0 Whence:2}- I0623 12:51:04.257814 1854764 deleg.go:130] setup "msg"="starting component: log-enricher" "buildDate"="1980-01-01T00:00:00Z" "compiler"="gc" "gitCommit"="unknown" "gitTreeState"="clean" "goVersion"="go1.16.2" "platform"="linux/amd64" "version"="0.4.0-dev" I0623 12:51:04.257890 1854764 enricher.go:44] log-enricher "msg"="Starting log-enricher on node: 127.0.0.1" I0623 12:51:04.257898 1854764 enricher.go:46] log-enricher "msg"="Connecting to local GRPC server" I0623 12:51:04.258061 1854764 enricher.go:69] log-enricher "msg"="Reading from file /var/log/audit/audit.log" 2021/06/23 12:51:04 Seeked /var/log/audit/audit.log - &{Offset:0 Whence:2}- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
7.8.7.1. Using the log enricher to trace an application
You can use the Security Profiles Operator log enricher to trace an application.
Procedure
- To trace an application, create a - SeccompProfilelogging profile:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Create a pod object to use the profile: - Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Examine the log enricher output by running the following command: - oc -n openshift-security-profiles logs -f ds/spod log-enricher - $ oc -n openshift-security-profiles logs -f ds/spod log-enricher- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example 7.1. Example output - Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
7.8.8. Configuring webhooks
					Profile binding and profile recording objects can use webhooks. Profile binding and recording object configurations are MutatingWebhookConfiguration CRs, managed by the Security Profiles Operator.
				
					To change the webhook configuration, the spod CR exposes a webhookOptions field that allows modification of the failurePolicy, namespaceSelector, and objectSelector variables. This allows you to set the webhooks to "soft-fail" or restrict them to a subset of a namespaces so that even if the webhooks failed, other namespaces or resources are not affected.
				
Procedure
- Set the - recording.spo.iowebhook configuration to record only pods labeled with- spo-record=trueby creating the following patch file:- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Patch the - spod/spodinstance by running the following command:- oc -n openshift-security-profiles patch spod \ spod -p $(cat /tmp/spod-wh.patch) --type=merge- $ oc -n openshift-security-profiles patch spod \ spod -p $(cat /tmp/spod-wh.patch) --type=merge- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- To view the resulting - MutatingWebhookConfigurationobject, run the following command:- oc get MutatingWebhookConfiguration \ spo-mutating-webhook-configuration -oyaml- $ oc get MutatingWebhookConfiguration \ spo-mutating-webhook-configuration -oyaml- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
7.9. Troubleshooting the Security Profiles Operator
Troubleshoot the Security Profiles Operator to diagnose a problem or provide information in a bug report.
7.9.1. Inspecting seccomp profiles
					Corrupted seccomp profiles can disrupt your workloads. Ensure that the user cannot abuse the system by not allowing other workloads to map any part of the path /var/lib/kubelet/seccomp/operator.
				
Procedure
- Confirm that the profile is reconciled by running the following command: - oc -n openshift-security-profiles logs openshift-security-profiles-<id> - $ oc -n openshift-security-profiles logs openshift-security-profiles-<id>- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example 7.2. Example output - Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
- Confirm that the - seccompprofiles are saved into the correct path by running the following command:- oc exec -t -n openshift-security-profiles openshift-security-profiles-<id> \ -- ls /var/lib/kubelet/seccomp/operator/my-namespace/my-workload- $ oc exec -t -n openshift-security-profiles openshift-security-profiles-<id> \ -- ls /var/lib/kubelet/seccomp/operator/my-namespace/my-workload- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - profile-block.json profile-complain.json - profile-block.json profile-complain.json- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
7.10. Uninstalling the Security Profiles Operator
You can remove the Security Profiles Operator from your cluster by using the OpenShift Container Platform web console.
7.10.1. Uninstall the Security Profiles Operator using the web console
					To remove the Security Profiles Operator, you must first delete the seccomp and SELinux profiles. After the profiles are removed, you can then remove the Operator and its namespace by deleting the openshift-security-profiles project.
				
Prerequisites
- 
							Access to an OpenShift Container Platform cluster that uses an account with cluster-adminpermissions.
- The Security Profiles Operator is installed.
Procedure
To remove the Security Profiles Operator by using the OpenShift Container Platform web console:
- 
							Navigate to the Operators Installed Operators page. 
- 
							Delete all seccompprofiles, SELinux profiles, and webhook configurations.
- 
							Switch to the Administration Operators Installed Operators page. 
- 
							Click the Options menu 
							 on the Security Profiles Operator entry and select Uninstall Operator. on the Security Profiles Operator entry and select Uninstall Operator.
- 
							Switch to the Home Projects page. 
- 
							Search for security profiles.
- Click the Options menu  next to the openshift-security-profiles project, and select Delete Project. next to the openshift-security-profiles project, and select Delete Project.- 
									Confirm the deletion by typing openshift-security-profilesin the dialog box, and click Delete.
 
- 
									Confirm the deletion by typing 
- Delete the - MutatingWebhookConfigurationobject by running the following command:- oc delete MutatingWebhookConfiguration spo-mutating-webhook-configuration - $ oc delete MutatingWebhookConfiguration spo-mutating-webhook-configuration- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow