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V-242428Kubernetes etcd must have a certificate for communication.

CAT II - Medium
CNTR-K8-001500

>Control Description

Kubernetes stores configuration and state information in a distributed key-value store called etcd. Anyone who can write to etcd can effectively control a Kubernetes cluster. Even just reading the contents of etcd could easily provide helpful hints to a would-be attacker. Using authenticity protection, the communication can be protected against man-in-the-middle attacks/session hijacking and the insertion of false information into sessions. The communication session is protected by utilizing transport encryption protocols, such as TLS. TLS provides the Kubernetes API Server and etcd with a means to be able to authenticate sessions and encrypt traffic. To enable encrypted communication for etcd, the parameter cert-file must be set. This parameter gives the location of the SSL certification file used to secure etcd communication.

>Check Content

Change to the /etc/kubernetes/manifests directory on the Kubernetes Control Plane.

$grep -i cert-file *

If the setting "cert-file" is not configured in the Kubernetes etcd manifest file, this is a finding.

>Remediation

Edit the Kubernetes etcd manifest file in the /etc/kubernetes/manifests directory on the Kubernetes Control Plane. Set the value of "--cert-file" to the Approved Organizational Certificate.

>CCI References

Control Correlation Identifiers (CCIs) map STIG findings to NIST 800-53 controls.

>Cross-Framework Mappings

NIST SP 800-53 r5

via DISA CCI List

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