Impact
The Bare Metal Operator (BMO) implements a Kubernetes API for managing bare metal hosts in Metal3. The BareMetalHost
(BMH) CRD allows the userData
, metaData
, and networkData
for the provisioned host to be specified as links to Kubernetes Secrets. There are fields for both the Name
and Namespace
of the Secret, meaning that the baremetal-operator will read a Secret
from any namespace. A user with access to create or edit a BareMetalHost
can thus exfiltrate a Secret
from another namespace by using it as e.g. the userData
for provisioning some host (note that this need not be a real host, it could be a VM somewhere).
Limiting factors
BMO will only read a key with the name value
(or userData
, metaData
, or networkData
), so that limits the exposure somewhat. value
is probably a pretty common key though. Secrets used by other BareMetalHost
s in different namespaces are always vulnerable.
It is probably relatively unusual for anyone other than cluster administrators to have RBAC access to create/edit a BareMetalHost
. This vulnerability is only meaningful, if the cluster has users other than administrators and users' privileges are limited to their respective namespaces.
Patches
The patch prevents BMO from accepting links to Secrets from other namespaces as BMH input. Any BMH configuration is only read from the same namespace only.
The problem is patched in BMO releases v0.8.0, v0.6.2 and v0.5.2 and users should upgrade to those versions. Prior upgrading and if needed, duplicate the BMC Secrets to the namespace where the corresponding BMH is. After upgrade, remove the old Secrets.
Workarounds
Operator can configure BMO RBAC to be namespace scoped for Secrets, instead of cluster scoped, to prevent BMO from accessing Secrets from other namespaces.
References
Impact
The Bare Metal Operator (BMO) implements a Kubernetes API for managing bare metal hosts in Metal3. The
BareMetalHost
(BMH) CRD allows theuserData
,metaData
, andnetworkData
for the provisioned host to be specified as links to Kubernetes Secrets. There are fields for both theName
andNamespace
of the Secret, meaning that the baremetal-operator will read aSecret
from any namespace. A user with access to create or edit aBareMetalHost
can thus exfiltrate aSecret
from another namespace by using it as e.g. theuserData
for provisioning some host (note that this need not be a real host, it could be a VM somewhere).Limiting factors
BMO will only read a key with the name
value
(oruserData
,metaData
, ornetworkData
), so that limits the exposure somewhat.value
is probably a pretty common key though. Secrets used by otherBareMetalHost
s in different namespaces are always vulnerable.It is probably relatively unusual for anyone other than cluster administrators to have RBAC access to create/edit a
BareMetalHost
. This vulnerability is only meaningful, if the cluster has users other than administrators and users' privileges are limited to their respective namespaces.Patches
The patch prevents BMO from accepting links to Secrets from other namespaces as BMH input. Any BMH configuration is only read from the same namespace only.
The problem is patched in BMO releases v0.8.0, v0.6.2 and v0.5.2 and users should upgrade to those versions. Prior upgrading and if needed, duplicate the BMC Secrets to the namespace where the corresponding BMH is. After upgrade, remove the old Secrets.
Workarounds
Operator can configure BMO RBAC to be namespace scoped for Secrets, instead of cluster scoped, to prevent BMO from accessing Secrets from other namespaces.
References