Overview
A container running in the host's IPC namespace can use IPC to interact with processes outside the container.
There should be at least one admission control policy defined which does not permit containers to share the host IPC namespace.
If you need to run containers which require hostIPC, this should be defined in a separate policy and you should carefully check to ensure that only limited service accounts and users are given permission to use that policy.
Remediation guidance
Add policies to each namespace in the cluster which has user workloads to restrict the admission of hostIPC containers.
Service-wide remediation
Recommended when many resources are affected: fix the platform baseline first so new resources inherit the secure setting, then remediate the existing flagged resources in batches.
Kubernetes
Use admission policies, baseline cluster configuration, GitOps templates, and namespace or workload guardrails so new deployments follow the control by default.
Operational rollout
- Fix the baseline first at the account, subscription, project, cluster, or tenant scope that owns this control.
- Remediate the currently affected resources in batches, starting with internet-exposed and production assets.
- Re-scan and track approved exceptions with an owner and expiry date.
Query logic
These are the stored checks tied to this control.
Check there are restrictions on the creation of hostIPC pods
Connectors
Covered asset types
Expected check: eq []
{
pods(where: { hostIPC: true }) {
...AssetFragment
}
}
Kubernetes