If you are using a released version of Kubernetes, you should refer to the docs that go with that version.
The latest 1.0.x release of this document can be found [here](http://releases.k8s.io/release-1.0/docs/admin/admission-controllers.md).Documentation for other releases can be found at releases.k8s.io.
Table of Contents
- Admission Controllers
An admission control plug-in is a piece of code that intercepts requests to the Kubernetes API server prior to persistence of the object, but after the request is authenticated and authorized. The plug-in code is in the API server process and must be compiled into the binary in order to be used at this time.
Each admission control plug-in is run in sequence before a request is accepted into the cluster. If any of the plug-ins in the sequence reject the request, the entire request is rejected immediately and an error is returned to the end-user.
Admission control plug-ins may mutate the incoming object in some cases to apply system configured defaults. In addition, admission control plug-ins may mutate related resources as part of request processing to do things like increment quota usage.
Many advanced features in Kubernetes require an admission control plug-in to be enabled in order to properly support the feature. As a result, a Kubernetes API server that is not properly configured with the right set of admission control plug-ins is an incomplete server and will not support all the features you expect.
The Kubernetes API server supports a flag, admission-control
that takes a comma-delimited,
ordered list of admission control choices to invoke prior to modifying objects in the cluster.
Use this plugin by itself to pass-through all requests.
Rejects all requests. Used for testing.
This plug-in will intercept all requests to exec a command in a pod if that pod has a privileged container.
If your cluster supports privileged containers, and you want to restrict the ability of end-users to exec commands in those containers, we strongly encourage enabling this plug-in.
This plug-in implements automation for serviceAccounts.
We strongly recommend using this plug-in if you intend to make use of Kubernetes ServiceAccount
objects.
This plug-in will deny any pod with a SecurityContext that defines options that were not available on the Container
.
This plug-in will observe the incoming request and ensure that it does not violate any of the constraints
enumerated in the ResourceQuota
object in a Namespace
. If you are using ResourceQuota
objects in your Kubernetes deployment, you MUST use this plug-in to enforce quota constraints.
See the resourceQuota design doc and the example of Resource Quota for more details.
It is strongly encouraged that this plug-in is configured last in the sequence of admission control plug-ins. This is so that quota is not prematurely incremented only for the request to be rejected later in admission control.
This plug-in will observe the incoming request and ensure that it does not violate any of the constraints
enumerated in the LimitRange
object in a Namespace
. If you are using LimitRange
objects in
your Kubernetes deployment, you MUST use this plug-in to enforce those constraints. LimitRanger can also
be used to apply default resource requests to Pods that don't specify any; currently, the default LimitRanger
applies a 0.1 CPU requirement to all Pods in the default
namespace.
See the limitRange design doc and the example of Limit Range for more details.
This plug-in will observe all incoming requests that attempt to create a resource in a Kubernetes Namespace
and reject the request if the Namespace
was not previously created. We strongly recommend running
this plug-in to ensure integrity of your data.
This plug-in will observe all incoming requests that attempt to create a resource in a Kubernetes Namespace
and create a new Namespace
if one did not already exist previously.
We strongly recommend NamespaceExists
over NamespaceAutoProvision
.
This plug-in enforces that a Namespace
that is undergoing termination cannot have new objects created in it.
A Namespace
deletion kicks off a sequence of operations that remove all objects (pods, services, etc.) in that
namespace. In order to enforce integrity of that process, we strongly recommend running this plug-in.
Once NamespaceAutoProvision
is deprecated, we anticipate NamespaceLifecycle
and NamespaceExists
will
be merged into a single plug-in that enforces the life-cycle of a Namespace
in Kubernetes.
Yes.
For Kubernetes 1.0, we strongly recommend running the following set of admission control plug-ins (order matters):
--admission-control=NamespaceLifecycle,NamespaceExists,LimitRanger,SecurityContextDeny,ServiceAccount,ResourceQuota