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Add two examples about how to analysis audits of kube-apiserver
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CaoShuFeng committed Jul 17, 2017
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152 changes: 149 additions & 3 deletions docs/tasks/debug-application-cluster/audit.md
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Expand Up @@ -188,16 +188,30 @@ API can be found [here][audit-api] with more details about the exact fields capt
The behavior of the `--audit-log-path` flag changes when enabling the `AdvancedAuditing`
feature flag. This includes the cleanups discussed above, such as changes to the `method`
values and the introduction of a "stage" for each event. As before, the `id` field of
the log line indicates which events were generated from the same request. Events are
formatted as follows:
the log indicates which events were generated from the same request. With default legacy
format, events are formatted as follows:

```
2017-06-15T21:50:50.259470834Z AUDIT: id="591e9fde-6a98-46f6-b7bc-ec8ef575696d" stage="RequestReceived" ip="10.2.1.3" method="update" user="system:serviceaccount:kube-system:default" groups="\"system:serviceaccounts\",\"system:serviceaccounts:kube-system\",\"system:authenticated\"" as="<self>" asgroups="<lookup>" namespace="kube-system" uri="/api/v1/namespaces/kube-system/endpoints/kube-controller-manager" response="<deferred>"
2017-06-15T21:50:50.259470834Z AUDIT: id="591e9fde-6a98-46f6-b7bc-ec8ef575696d" stage="ResponseComplete" ip="10.2.1.3" method="update" user="system:serviceaccount:kube-system:default" groups="\"system:serviceaccounts\",\"system:serviceaccounts:kube-system\",\"system:authenticated\"" as="<self>" asgroups="<lookup>" namespace="kube-system" uri="/api/v1/namespaces/kube-system/endpoints/kube-controller-manager" response="200"
```

Logged events omit the request and response bodies. The `Request` and
`RequestResponse` levels are equivalent to `Metadata` for this backend.
`RequestResponse` levels are equivalent to `Metadata` for legacy format.

Since Kubernetes 1.8, structed json fromat is supported for log backend.
Use the following option to switch log to json format:

```
--audit-log-format=json
```

With json format, events are formatted as follows:

```
{"kind":"Event","apiVersion":"audit.k8s.io/v1alpha1","metadata":{"creationTimestamp":null},"level":"Metadata","timestamp":"2017-07-12T11:02:43Z","auditID":"2e79f0c9-a941-45ae-a9ce-663a1b19ff14","stage":"RequestReceived","requestURI":"/api/v1/namespaces/default/pods","verb":"list","user":{"username":"kubecfg","groups":["system:masters","system:authenticated"]},"sourceIPs":["172.16.116.128"],"objectRef":{"resource":"pods","namespace":"default","apiVersion":"/v1"}}
{"kind":"Event","apiVersion":"audit.k8s.io/v1alpha1","metadata":{"creationTimestamp":null},"level":"Metadata","timestamp":"2017-07-12T11:02:43Z","auditID":"2e79f0c9-a941-45ae-a9ce-663a1b19ff14","stage":"ResponseComplete","requestURI":"/api/v1/namespaces/default/pods","verb":"list","user":{"username":"kubecfg","groups":["system:masters","system:authenticated"]},"sourceIPs":["172.16.116.128"],"objectRef":{"resource":"pods","namespace":"default","apiVersion":"/v1"},"responseStatus":{"metadata":{},"code":200}}
```

#### Webhook backend

Expand Down Expand Up @@ -284,6 +298,138 @@ Events are POSTed as a JSON serialized `EventList`. An example payload:
}
```

### Log Collector Examples

#### Use fluentd to collect and distribute audit events from log file

[Fluentd][fluentd] is an open source data collector for unified logging layer.
In this example, we will use fluentd to split audit events by different namespaces.
Note that this example requries json format output support in Kubernetes 1.8.

1. install [fluentd, fluent-plugin-forest and fluent-plugin-rewrite-tag-filter][fluentd_install_doc] in the kube-apiserver node
1. create a config file for fluentd

$ cat <<EOF > /etc/fluentd/config
# fluentd conf runs in the same host with kube-apiserver
<source>
@type tail
# audit log path of kube-apiserver
path /var/log/audit
pos_file /var/log/audit.pos
format json
time_key time
time_format %Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%N%z
tag audit
</source>
<filter audit>
#https://github.com/fluent/fluent-plugin-rewrite-tag-filter/issues/13
type record_transformer
enable_ruby
<record>
namespace ${record["objectRef"].nil? ? "<none>":(record["objectRef"]["namespace"].nil? ? "<none>":record["objectRef"]["namespace"])}
</record>
</filter>
<match audit>
# route audit according to namespace element in context
@type rewrite_tag_filter
rewriterule1 namespace ^(.+) ${tag}.$1
</match>
<filter audit.**>
@type record_transformer
remove_keys namespace
</filter>
<match audit.**>
@type forest
subtype file
remove_prefix audit
<template>
time_slice_format %Y%m%d%H
compress gz
path /var/log/audit-${tag}.*.log
format json
include_time_key true
</template>
</match>
1. start fluentd

$ fluentd -c /etc/fluentd/config -vv
1. start kube-apiserver with the following options:

--audit-policy-file=/etc/kubernetes/audit-policy.yaml --audit-log-path=/var/log/kube-audit --audit-log-format=json
1. check audits for different namespaces in /var/log/audit-*.log

#### Use logstash to collect and distribute audit events from webhook backend

[Logstash][logstash] is an open source, server-side data processing tool. In this example,
we will use logstash to collect audit events from webhook backend, and save events of
different users into different files.

1. install [logstash][logstash_install_doc]
1. create config file for logstash

$ cat <<EOF > /etc/logstash/config
input{
http{
#TODO, does logstash support https input?
port=>8888
}
}
filter{
split{
# Webhook audit backend sends several events together with EventList
# split each event here.
field=>[items]
# We only need event subelement, remove others.
remove_field=>[headers, metadata, apiVersion, "@timestamp", kind, "@version", host]
}
mutate{
rename => {items=>event}
}
}
output{
file{
# Audit events from different users will be saved into different files.
path=>"/var/log/kube-audit-%{[event][user][username]}/audit"
}
}
1. start logstash

$ bin/logstash -f /etc/logstash/config --path.settings /etc/logstash/
1. create a [kubeconfig file](/docs/tasks/access-application-cluster/authenticate-across-clusters-kubeconfig/) for kube-apiserver webhook audit backend

$ cat <<EOF > /etc/kubernetes/audit-webhook-kubeconfig
apiVersion: v1
clusters:
- cluster:
server: http://<ip_of_logstash>:8888
name: logstash
contexts:
- context:
cluster: logstash
user: ""
name: default-context
current-context: default-context
kind: Config
preferences: {}
users: []
EOF
1. start kube-apiserver with the following options:

--audit-policy-file=/etc/kubernetes/audit-policy.yaml --audit-webhook-config-file=/etc/kubernetes/audit-webhook-kubeconfig
1. check audits in logstash node's directories /var/log/kube-audit-*/audit

Note that in addition to file output plugin, logstash has a variety of outputs that
let users route data where they want. For example, users can emit audit events to elasticsearch
plugin which supports full-text search and analytics.

[audit-api]: https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/blob/v1.7.0-rc.1/staging/src/k8s.io/apiserver/pkg/apis/audit/v1alpha1/types.go
[kube-apiserver]: /docs/admin/kube-apiserver
[gce-audit-profile]: https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/blob/v1.7.0/cluster/gce/gci/configure-helper.sh#L490
[fluentd]: http://www.fluentd.org/
[fluentd_install_doc]: http://docs.fluentd.org/v0.12/articles/quickstart#step1-installing-fluentd
[logstash]: https://www.elastic.co/products/logstash
[logstash_install_doc]: https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/logstash/current/installing-logstash.html

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