Applying Policies

Apply policies across clusters and delivery pipelines

In Clusters

On installation, Kyverno runs as a dynamic admission controller in a Kubernetes cluster. Kyverno receives validating and mutating admission webhook HTTP callbacks from the Kubernetes API server and applies matching policies to return results that enforce admission policies or reject requests.

Policies with validation rules can be used to block insecure or non-compliant configurations by setting the validationFailureAction to Enforce. Or, validation rules can be applied using periodic scans with results available as policy reports.

Rules in a policy are applied in the order of definition. During admission control, mutation rules are applied before validation rules. This allows validation of changes made during mutation. Note that all mutation rules are applied first across all policies before any validation rules are applied.

There is no ordering within or across policies and all matching policy rules will always be applied. For validate rules, this ordering is irrelevant, however for mutate and generate rules, if there is a cascading dependency, rules should be ordered according to those dependencies. Since validation rules are written as pass or fail conditions, rules cannot override other rules and can only extend the fail condition set. Hence, namespaced policies cannot override or modify behaviors described in a cluster-wide policy. Because policies are logical collections of related rules and do not imply functionality relative to other policies, a single policy having two validation rules, for example, produces the same ultimate effect as two policies each having one rule. Designing policies is therefore primarily an organizational concern and not a functional one.

Exceptions to policies may be defined in the rules themselves or with a separate PolicyException resource.

Cleanup policies, another separate resource type, can be used to remove existing resources based upon a definition and schedule.

In Pipelines

You can use the Kyverno CLI to apply policies to YAML resource manifest files as part of a software delivery pipeline. This command line tool allows integrating Kyverno into GitOps style workflows and checks for policy compliance of resource manifests before they are committed to version control and applied to clusters.

Refer to the Kyverno apply command section for details on the CLI. And refer to the Continuous Integration section for an example of how to incorporate the CLI to apply and test policies in your pipeline.


Last modified March 13, 2024 at 11:58 AM PST: Check links on PR; fix links (#1185) (27458f8)