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Incoming container traffic must be bound to a specific host interface.


Overview

Finding ID Version Rule ID IA Controls Severity
V-260924 CNTR-MK-000570 SV-260924r966129_rule Medium
Description
Privileged ports are those ports below 1024 and that require system privileges for their use. If containers are able to use these ports, the container must be run as a privileged user. MKE must stop containers that try to map to these ports directly. Allowing nonprivileged ports to be mapped to the container-privileged port is the allowable method when a certain port is needed. An example is mapping port 8080 externally to port 80 in the container. By default, if the user does not specifically declare the container port to host port mapping, MKE automatically and correctly maps the container port to one available in 49153-65535 block on the host. But, MKE allows a container port to be mapped to a privileged port on the host if the user explicitly declared it. This is because containers are executed with NET_BIND_SERVICE Linux kernel capability that does not restrict the privileged port mapping. The privileged ports receive and transmit various sensitive and privileged data. Allowing containers to use them can bring serious implications.
STIG Date
Mirantis Kubernetes Engine Security Technical Implementation Guide 2024-06-17

Details

Check Text ( C-64653r966127_chk )
This check must be executed on all nodes in an MKE cluster.

Verify that no running containers are mapping host port numbers below 1024.

Via CLI:
Linux: Execute the following command as a trusted user on the host operating system:

docker ps --quiet --all | xargs docker inspect --format '{{ .Id }}: Ports={{ .NetworkSettings.Ports }}'

Review the list and ensure that container ports are not mapped to host port numbers below 1024. If they are, then this is a finding.

Ensure that there is no such container to host privileged port mapping declarations in the Mirantis config file. View the config file. If container to host privileged port mapping declarations exist, this is a finding.
Fix Text (F-64561r966128_fix)
To edit container ports, log in to the MKE web UI and navigate to Shared Resources >> Containers.

- Locate the container with the incorrect port mapping.
- Click on the container name and stop the container by clicking on the three dots in the upper right hand corner.
- Scroll down to Ports to check if ports have been manually assigned.
- Edit the port to a nonprivileged port.