Chapter 11. Network policy
11.1. About network policy
As a cluster administrator, you can define network policies that restrict traffic to pods in your cluster.
11.1.1. About network policy
In a cluster using a Kubernetes Container Network Interface (CNI) plug-in that supports Kubernetes network policy, network isolation is controlled entirely by NetworkPolicy
objects. In OpenShift Container Platform 4.7, OpenShift SDN supports using network policy in its default network isolation mode.
When using the OpenShift SDN cluster network provider, the following limitations apply regarding network policies:
-
Egress network policy as specified by the
egress
field is not supported. -
IPBlock is supported by network policy, but without support for
except
clauses. If you create a policy with an IPBlock section that includes anexcept
clause, the SDN pods log warnings and the entire IPBlock section of that policy is ignored.
Network policy does not apply to the host network namespace. Pods with host networking enabled are unaffected by network policy rules.
By default, all pods in a project are accessible from other pods and network endpoints. To isolate one or more pods in a project, you can create NetworkPolicy
objects in that project to indicate the allowed incoming connections. Project administrators can create and delete NetworkPolicy
objects within their own project.
If a pod is matched by selectors in one or more NetworkPolicy
objects, then the pod will accept only connections that are allowed by at least one of those NetworkPolicy
objects. A pod that is not selected by any NetworkPolicy
objects is fully accessible.
The following example NetworkPolicy
objects demonstrate supporting different scenarios:
Deny all traffic:
To make a project deny by default, add a
NetworkPolicy
object that matches all pods but accepts no traffic:kind: NetworkPolicy apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1 metadata: name: deny-by-default spec: podSelector: {} ingress: []
Only allow connections from the OpenShift Container Platform Ingress Controller:
To make a project allow only connections from the OpenShift Container Platform Ingress Controller, add the following
NetworkPolicy
object.apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1 kind: NetworkPolicy metadata: name: allow-from-openshift-ingress spec: ingress: - from: - namespaceSelector: matchLabels: network.openshift.io/policy-group: ingress podSelector: {} policyTypes: - Ingress
Only accept connections from pods within a project:
To make pods accept connections from other pods in the same project, but reject all other connections from pods in other projects, add the following
NetworkPolicy
object:kind: NetworkPolicy apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1 metadata: name: allow-same-namespace spec: podSelector: {} ingress: - from: - podSelector: {}
Only allow HTTP and HTTPS traffic based on pod labels:
To enable only HTTP and HTTPS access to the pods with a specific label (
role=frontend
in following example), add aNetworkPolicy
object similar to the following:kind: NetworkPolicy apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1 metadata: name: allow-http-and-https spec: podSelector: matchLabels: role: frontend ingress: - ports: - protocol: TCP port: 80 - protocol: TCP port: 443
Accept connections by using both namespace and pod selectors:
To match network traffic by combining namespace and pod selectors, you can use a
NetworkPolicy
object similar to the following:kind: NetworkPolicy apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1 metadata: name: allow-pod-and-namespace-both spec: podSelector: matchLabels: name: test-pods ingress: - from: - namespaceSelector: matchLabels: project: project_name podSelector: matchLabels: name: test-pods
NetworkPolicy
objects are additive, which means you can combine multiple NetworkPolicy
objects together to satisfy complex network requirements.
For example, for the NetworkPolicy
objects defined in previous samples, you can define both allow-same-namespace
and allow-http-and-https
policies within the same project. Thus allowing the pods with the label role=frontend
, to accept any connection allowed by each policy. That is, connections on any port from pods in the same namespace, and connections on ports 80
and 443
from pods in any namespace.
11.1.2. Optimizations for network policy
Use a network policy to isolate pods that are differentiated from one another by labels within a namespace.
The guidelines for efficient use of network policy rules applies to only the OpenShift SDN cluster network provider.
It is inefficient to apply NetworkPolicy
objects to large numbers of individual pods in a single namespace. Pod labels do not exist at the IP address level, so a network policy generates a separate Open vSwitch (OVS) flow rule for every possible link between every pod selected with a podSelector
.
For example, if the spec podSelector
and the ingress podSelector
within a NetworkPolicy
object each match 200 pods, then 40,000 (200*200) OVS flow rules are generated. This might slow down a node.
When designing your network policy, refer to the following guidelines:
Reduce the number of OVS flow rules by using namespaces to contain groups of pods that need to be isolated.
NetworkPolicy
objects that select a whole namespace, by using thenamespaceSelector
or an emptypodSelector
, generate only a single OVS flow rule that matches the VXLAN virtual network ID (VNID) of the namespace.- Keep the pods that do not need to be isolated in their original namespace, and move the pods that require isolation into one or more different namespaces.
- Create additional targeted cross-namespace network policies to allow the specific traffic that you do want to allow from the isolated pods.
11.1.3. Next steps
11.1.4. Additional resources
11.2. Creating a network policy
As a user with the admin
role, you can create a network policy for a namespace.
11.2.1. Creating a network policy
To define granular rules describing ingress or egress network traffic allowed for namespaces in your cluster, you can create a network policy.
If you log in with a user with the cluster-admin
role, then you can create a network policy in any namespace in the cluster.
Prerequisites
-
Your cluster uses a cluster network provider that supports
NetworkPolicy
objects, such as the OVN-Kubernetes network provider or the OpenShift SDN network provider withmode: NetworkPolicy
set. This mode is the default for OpenShift SDN. -
You installed the OpenShift CLI (
oc
). -
You are logged in to the cluster with a user with
admin
privileges. - You are working in the namespace that the network policy applies to.
Procedure
Create a policy rule:
Create a
<policy_name>.yaml
file:$ touch <policy_name>.yaml
where:
<policy_name>
- Specifies the network policy file name.
Define a network policy in the file that you just created, such as in the following examples:
Deny ingress from all pods in all namespaces
kind: NetworkPolicy apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1 metadata: name: deny-by-default spec: podSelector: ingress: []
Allow ingress from all pods in the same namespace
kind: NetworkPolicy apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1 metadata: name: allow-same-namespace spec: podSelector: ingress: - from: - podSelector: {}
To create the network policy object, enter the following command:
$ oc apply -f <policy_name>.yaml -n <namespace>
where:
<policy_name>
- Specifies the network policy file name.
<namespace>
- Optional: Specifies the namespace if the object is defined in a different namespace than the current namespace.
Example output
networkpolicy "default-deny" created
11.2.2. Example NetworkPolicy object
The following annotates an example NetworkPolicy object:
kind: NetworkPolicy apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1 metadata: name: allow-27107 1 spec: podSelector: 2 matchLabels: app: mongodb ingress: - from: - podSelector: 3 matchLabels: app: app ports: 4 - protocol: TCP port: 27017
- 1
- The name of the NetworkPolicy object.
- 2
- A selector that describes the pods to which the policy applies. The policy object can only select pods in the project that defines the NetworkPolicy object.
- 3
- A selector that matches the pods from which the policy object allows ingress traffic. The selector matches pods in the same namespace as the NetworkPolicy.
- 4
- A list of one or more destination ports on which to accept traffic.
11.3. Viewing a network policy
As a user with the admin
role, you can view a network policy for a namespace.
11.3.1. Viewing network policies
You can examine the network policies in a namespace.
If you log in with a user with the cluster-admin
role, then you can view any network policy in the cluster.
Prerequisites
-
You installed the OpenShift CLI (
oc
). -
You are logged in to the cluster with a user with
admin
privileges. - You are working in the namespace where the network policy exists.
Procedure
List network policies in a namespace:
To view
NetworkPolicy
objects defined in a namespace, enter the following command:$ oc get networkpolicy
Optional: To examine a specific network policy, enter the following command:
$ oc describe networkpolicy <policy_name> -n <namespace>
where:
<policy_name>
- Specifies the name of the network policy to inspect.
<namespace>
- Optional: Specifies the namespace if the object is defined in a different namespace than the current namespace.
For example:
$ oc describe networkpolicy allow-same-namespace
Output for
oc describe
commandName: allow-same-namespace Namespace: ns1 Created on: 2021-05-24 22:28:56 -0400 EDT Labels: <none> Annotations: <none> Spec: PodSelector: <none> (Allowing the specific traffic to all pods in this namespace) Allowing ingress traffic: To Port: <any> (traffic allowed to all ports) From: PodSelector: <none> Not affecting egress traffic Policy Types: Ingress
11.3.2. Example NetworkPolicy object
The following annotates an example NetworkPolicy object:
kind: NetworkPolicy apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1 metadata: name: allow-27107 1 spec: podSelector: 2 matchLabels: app: mongodb ingress: - from: - podSelector: 3 matchLabels: app: app ports: 4 - protocol: TCP port: 27017
- 1
- The name of the NetworkPolicy object.
- 2
- A selector that describes the pods to which the policy applies. The policy object can only select pods in the project that defines the NetworkPolicy object.
- 3
- A selector that matches the pods from which the policy object allows ingress traffic. The selector matches pods in the same namespace as the NetworkPolicy.
- 4
- A list of one or more destination ports on which to accept traffic.
11.4. Editing a network policy
As a user with the admin
role, you can edit an existing network policy for a namespace.
11.4.1. Editing a network policy
You can edit a network policy in a namespace.
If you log in with a user with the cluster-admin
role, then you can edit a network policy in any namespace in the cluster.
Prerequisites
-
Your cluster uses a cluster network provider that supports
NetworkPolicy
objects, such as the OVN-Kubernetes network provider or the OpenShift SDN network provider withmode: NetworkPolicy
set. This mode is the default for OpenShift SDN. -
You installed the OpenShift CLI (
oc
). -
You are logged in to the cluster with a user with
admin
privileges. - You are working in the namespace where the network policy exists.
Procedure
Optional: To list the network policy objects in a namespace, enter the following command:
$ oc get networkpolicy -n <namespace>
where:
<namespace>
- Optional: Specifies the namespace if the object is defined in a different namespace than the current namespace.
Edit the
NetworkPolicy
object.If you saved the network policy definition in a file, edit the file and make any necessary changes, and then enter the following command.
$ oc apply -n <namespace> -f <policy_file>.yaml
where:
<namespace>
- Optional: Specifies the namespace if the object is defined in a different namespace than the current namespace.
<policy_file>
- Specifies the name of the file containing the network policy.
If you need to update the
NetworkPolicy
object directly, enter the following command:$ oc edit networkpolicy <policy_name> -n <namespace>
where:
<policy_name>
- Specifies the name of the network policy.
<namespace>
- Optional: Specifies the namespace if the object is defined in a different namespace than the current namespace.
Confirm that the
NetworkPolicy
object is updated.$ oc describe networkpolicy <policy_name> -n <namespace>
where:
<policy_name>
- Specifies the name of the network policy.
<namespace>
- Optional: Specifies the namespace if the object is defined in a different namespace than the current namespace.
11.4.2. Example NetworkPolicy object
The following annotates an example NetworkPolicy object:
kind: NetworkPolicy apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1 metadata: name: allow-27107 1 spec: podSelector: 2 matchLabels: app: mongodb ingress: - from: - podSelector: 3 matchLabels: app: app ports: 4 - protocol: TCP port: 27017
- 1
- The name of the NetworkPolicy object.
- 2
- A selector that describes the pods to which the policy applies. The policy object can only select pods in the project that defines the NetworkPolicy object.
- 3
- A selector that matches the pods from which the policy object allows ingress traffic. The selector matches pods in the same namespace as the NetworkPolicy.
- 4
- A list of one or more destination ports on which to accept traffic.
11.4.3. Additional resources
11.5. Deleting a network policy
As a user with the admin
role, you can delete a network policy from a namespace.
11.5.1. Deleting a network policy
You can delete a network policy in a namespace.
If you log in with a user with the cluster-admin
role, then you can delete any network policy in the cluster.
Prerequisites
-
Your cluster uses a cluster network provider that supports
NetworkPolicy
objects, such as the OVN-Kubernetes network provider or the OpenShift SDN network provider withmode: NetworkPolicy
set. This mode is the default for OpenShift SDN. -
You installed the OpenShift CLI (
oc
). -
You are logged in to the cluster with a user with
admin
privileges. - You are working in the namespace where the network policy exists.
Procedure
To delete a
NetworkPolicy
object, enter the following command:$ oc delete networkpolicy <policy_name> -n <namespace>
where:
<policy_name>
- Specifies the name of the network policy.
<namespace>
- Optional: Specifies the namespace if the object is defined in a different namespace than the current namespace.
Example output
networkpolicy.networking.k8s.io/allow-same-namespace deleted
11.6. Defining a default network policy for projects
As a cluster administrator, you can modify the new project template to automatically include network policies when you create a new project. If you do not yet have a customized template for new projects, you must first create one.
11.6.1. Modifying the template for new projects
As a cluster administrator, you can modify the default project template so that new projects are created using your custom requirements.
To create your own custom project template:
Procedure
-
Log in as a user with
cluster-admin
privileges. Generate the default project template:
$ oc adm create-bootstrap-project-template -o yaml > template.yaml
-
Use a text editor to modify the generated
template.yaml
file by adding objects or modifying existing objects. The project template must be created in the
openshift-config
namespace. Load your modified template:$ oc create -f template.yaml -n openshift-config
Edit the project configuration resource using the web console or CLI.
Using the web console:
-
Navigate to the Administration
Cluster Settings page. - Click Global Configuration to view all configuration resources.
- Find the entry for Project and click Edit YAML.
-
Navigate to the Administration
Using the CLI:
Edit the
project.config.openshift.io/cluster
resource:$ oc edit project.config.openshift.io/cluster
Update the
spec
section to include theprojectRequestTemplate
andname
parameters, and set the name of your uploaded project template. The default name isproject-request
.Project configuration resource with custom project template
apiVersion: config.openshift.io/v1 kind: Project metadata: ... spec: projectRequestTemplate: name: <template_name>
- After you save your changes, create a new project to verify that your changes were successfully applied.
11.6.2. Adding network policies to the new project template
As a cluster administrator, you can add network policies to the default template for new projects. OpenShift Container Platform will automatically create all the NetworkPolicy
objects specified in the template in the project.
Prerequisites
-
Your cluster uses a default CNI network provider that supports
NetworkPolicy
objects, such as the OpenShift SDN network provider withmode: NetworkPolicy
set. This mode is the default for OpenShift SDN. -
You installed the OpenShift CLI (
oc
). -
You must log in to the cluster with a user with
cluster-admin
privileges. - You must have created a custom default project template for new projects.
Procedure
Edit the default template for a new project by running the following command:
$ oc edit template <project_template> -n openshift-config
Replace
<project_template>
with the name of the default template that you configured for your cluster. The default template name isproject-request
.In the template, add each
NetworkPolicy
object as an element to theobjects
parameter. Theobjects
parameter accepts a collection of one or more objects.In the following example, the
objects
parameter collection includes severalNetworkPolicy
objects.ImportantFor the OVN-Kubernetes network provider plug-in, when the Ingress Controller is configured to use the
HostNetwork
endpoint publishing strategy, there is no supported way to apply network policy so that ingress traffic is allowed and all other traffic is denied.objects: - apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1 kind: NetworkPolicy metadata: name: allow-from-same-namespace spec: podSelector: {} ingress: - from: - podSelector: {} - apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1 kind: NetworkPolicy metadata: name: allow-from-openshift-ingress spec: ingress: - from: - namespaceSelector: matchLabels: network.openshift.io/policy-group: ingress podSelector: {} policyTypes: - Ingress ...
Optional: Create a new project to confirm that your network policy objects are created successfully by running the following commands:
Create a new project:
$ oc new-project <project> 1
- 1
- Replace
<project>
with the name for the project you are creating.
Confirm that the network policy objects in the new project template exist in the new project:
$ oc get networkpolicy NAME POD-SELECTOR AGE allow-from-openshift-ingress <none> 7s allow-from-same-namespace <none> 7s
11.7. Configuring multitenant isolation with network policy
As a cluster administrator, you can configure your network policies to provide multitenant network isolation.
If you are using the OpenShift SDN cluster network provider, configuring network policies as described in this section provides network isolation similar to multitenant mode but with network policy mode set.
11.7.1. Configuring multitenant isolation by using network policy
You can configure your project to isolate it from pods and services in other project namespaces.
Prerequisites
-
Your cluster uses a cluster network provider that supports
NetworkPolicy
objects, such as the OVN-Kubernetes network provider or the OpenShift SDN network provider withmode: NetworkPolicy
set. This mode is the default for OpenShift SDN. -
You installed the OpenShift CLI (
oc
). -
You are logged in to the cluster with a user with
admin
privileges.
Procedure
Create the following
NetworkPolicy
objects:A policy named
allow-from-openshift-ingress
.$ cat << EOF| oc create -f - apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1 kind: NetworkPolicy metadata: name: allow-from-openshift-ingress spec: ingress: - from: - namespaceSelector: matchLabels: policy-group.network.openshift.io/ingress: "" podSelector: {} policyTypes: - Ingress EOF
Notepolicy-group.network.openshift.io/ingress: ""
is the preferred namespace selector label for OpenShift SDN. You can use thenetwork.openshift.io/policy-group: ingress
namespace selector label, but this is a legacy label.A policy named
allow-from-openshift-monitoring
:$ cat << EOF| oc create -f - apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1 kind: NetworkPolicy metadata: name: allow-from-openshift-monitoring spec: ingress: - from: - namespaceSelector: matchLabels: network.openshift.io/policy-group: monitoring podSelector: {} policyTypes: - Ingress EOF
A policy named
allow-same-namespace
:$ cat << EOF| oc create -f - kind: NetworkPolicy apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1 metadata: name: allow-same-namespace spec: podSelector: ingress: - from: - podSelector: {} EOF
Optional: To confirm that the network policies exist in your current project, enter the following command:
$ oc describe networkpolicy
Example output
Name: allow-from-openshift-ingress Namespace: example1 Created on: 2020-06-09 00:28:17 -0400 EDT Labels: <none> Annotations: <none> Spec: PodSelector: <none> (Allowing the specific traffic to all pods in this namespace) Allowing ingress traffic: To Port: <any> (traffic allowed to all ports) From: NamespaceSelector: network.openshift.io/policy-group: ingress Not affecting egress traffic Policy Types: Ingress Name: allow-from-openshift-monitoring Namespace: example1 Created on: 2020-06-09 00:29:57 -0400 EDT Labels: <none> Annotations: <none> Spec: PodSelector: <none> (Allowing the specific traffic to all pods in this namespace) Allowing ingress traffic: To Port: <any> (traffic allowed to all ports) From: NamespaceSelector: network.openshift.io/policy-group: monitoring Not affecting egress traffic Policy Types: Ingress