Configure Network Policies and Egress Firewalls for a ROSA Cluster
This content is authored by Red Hat experts, but has not yet been tested on every supported configuration.
It’s common to want to restrict network access between namespaces, as well as restricting where traffic can go outside of the cluster. OpenShift achieves this with the Network Policy and Egress Firewall resources.
It’s common to use these methods to restrict network traffic alongside Egress IP and other OpenShift and OVN-Kubernetes resources.
Prerequisites
- ROSA Cluster 4.14
- openshift-cli (oc)
- rosa-cli (rosa)
- jq
Project Template
The first thing to do is create a Project Template that containes Network Policys and Egress Firewalls with default deny rules
- Create and Apply a Project template with default deny rules - NOTE This template will ensure that any new projects have a default deny rule for egress, and a network policy that only allows traffic to come from an Ingress Controller - cat << "EOF" | oc apply -f - apiVersion: template.openshift.io/v1 kind: Template metadata: name: project-request namespace: openshift-config parameters: - name: PROJECT_NAME - name: PROJECT_DISPLAYNAME - name: PROJECT_DESCRIPTION - name: PROJECT_ADMIN_USER - name: PROJECT_REQUESTING_USER objects: - apiVersion: project.openshift.io/v1 kind: Project metadata: annotations: openshift.io/description: ${PROJECT_DESCRIPTION} openshift.io/display-name: ${PROJECT_DISPLAYNAME} openshift.io/requester: ${PROJECT_REQUESTING_USER} creationTimestamp: null name: ${PROJECT_NAME} spec: {} status: {} - apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1 kind: RoleBinding metadata: creationTimestamp: null name: admin namespace: ${PROJECT_NAME} roleRef: apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io kind: ClusterRole name: admin subjects: - apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io kind: User name: ${PROJECT_ADMIN_USER} - apiVersion: k8s.ovn.org/v1 kind: EgressFirewall metadata: name: default namespace: ${PROJECT_NAME} spec: egress: - to: cidrSelector: 0.0.0.0/0 type: Deny - apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1 kind: NetworkPolicy metadata: name: deny-by-default namespace: ${PROJECT_NAME} spec: podSelector: {} policyTypes: - Ingress ingress: - from: - namespaceSelector: matchLabels: network.openshift.io/policy-group: ingress - from: - podSelector: {} EOF
- Patch the project configuration to use the newly created Project Template - kubectl patch project.config.openshift.io/cluster --type=merge -p " apiVersion: config.openshift.io/v1 kind: Project metadata: name: cluster spec: projectRequestTemplate: name: project-request "
- Create a new Project to verify the policies - oc new-project restricted
- Check for EgressFirewall - oc get egressfirewall -n restricted- you should see - NAME EGRESSFIREWALL STATUS default EgressFirewall Rules applied
- Check for NetworkPolicy - oc get networkpolicy -n restricted- you should see - NAME POD-SELECTOR AGE deny-by-default <none> 15m
Test the Network Policy
- Create a debug pod in the default namespace to use later - oc run \ debug \ --namespace=default \ --image=registry.access.redhat.com/ubi9/ubi -- \ sleep 360000
- Create a debug pod in the restricted namespace to use later - oc run \ debug \ --namespace=restricted \ --image=registry.access.redhat.com/ubi9/ubi -- \ sleep 360000
- Deploy a web service and expose it - oc -n restricted new-app --name=hello --image=docker.io/openshift/hello-openshift oc expose service/hello ROUTE=$(oc get route hello -o jsoNetwork Policyath='{.spec.host}') echo $ROUTE
- See if you can access the application via its Route (you should be able to) - curl -s http://$ROUTE- You should see - Hello OpenShift!
- See if you can access the application via its Route from the default namespace. (again you should be able to) - oc -n default debug debug -- curl -s http://$ROUTE- You should see - Starting pod/debug-debug-xrrmt ... Hello OpenShift!
- Now try to access the application via its local service from within the same pod (this should succeed due to the Network Policy) - oc -n restricted debug debug -- curl -sv http://hello.restricted:8080- output - Starting pod/debug-debug-p69x7 ... * Trying 172.30.137.196:8080... ... ... Hello OpenShift! Removing debug pod ...
- Now try to access the application via its local service (this should fail due to the Network Policy) - NOTE: To avoid waiting for a long timeout feel free to hit CTRL-C. - oc -n default debug debug -- curl -sv http://hello.restricted:8080- output - Starting pod/debug-debug-p69x7 ... * Trying 172.30.137.196:8080... <CTRL-C>
Test the Egress Firewall
- Verify you can access an external website from the default namespace debug pod (this should work) - oc -n default debug debug -- curl -sSL https://icanhazip.com- output - Starting pod/debug-debug-sznlt ... * Trying 104.16.185.241:443... * Connected to icanhazip.com (104.16.185.241) port 443 (#0) ... ... 3.136.221.97
- Verify that you cannot access an external website from the restricted namespace (this should fail) - oc -n restricted debug debug -- curl -sSL https://icanhazip.com- output - oc -n restricted debug debug -- curl -sSL https://icanhazip.com Starting pod/debug-debug-rbd79 ... <CTRL-C>