Kubernetes External Admission Webhook Example
The example shows how to build and deploy an external webhook that only admits
pods creation and update if the container images have the "grc.io" prefix.
Prerequisites
Please use a Kubernetes release at least as new as v1.8.0 or v1.9.0-alpha.1,
because the generated server cert/key only works with Kubernetes release that
contains this change.
Please checkout the pre-v1.8
tag for an example that works with older
clusters.
Please enable the admission webhook feature
(doc).
Build the code
make build
Deploy the code
make deploy-only
The Makefile assumes your cluster is created by the
hack/local-up-cluster.sh.
Please modify the Makefile accordingly if your cluster is created differently.
Explanation on the CAs/Certs/Keys
The apiserver initiates a tls connection with the webhook, so the apiserver is
the tls client, and the webhook is the tls server.
The webhook proves its identity by the serverCert
in the certs.go. The server
cert is signed by the CA in certs.go. To let the apiserver trust the caCert
,
the webhook registers itself with the apiserver via the
admissionregistration/v1beta1/externalAdmissionHook
API, with
clientConfig.caBundle=caCert
.
For maximum protection, this example webhook requires and verifies the client
(i.e., the apiserver in this case) cert. The cert presented by the apiserver is
signed by a client CA, whose cert is stored in the configmap
extension-apiserver-authentication
in the kube-system
namespace. See the
getAPIServerCert
function for more information. Usually you don't need to
worry about setting up this CA cert. It's taken care of when the cluster is
created. You can disable the client cert verification by setting the
tls.Config.ClientAuth
to tls.NoClientCert
in config.go
.