Confused Deputies Strike Back

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A few weeks back Kubernetes had its first really severe security issue, CVE-2018-1002105. For some background on this, and how it was discovered, I recommend Darren Shepherd’s blog post, he discovered it via some side effects and initially it did not appear to be a security issue just an error handling issue. Of course we know well that many error handling issues can be escalated, but why was this one so bad?

To summarize the problem, there is an API server proxy component, that clients can use to talk to other API endpoints. As the postmortem document says

  • Kubernetes API server proxy components still use http/1.1 upgrade-based connection tunneling, which does not distinguish between request data sent by the apiserver while establishing the backend connection, and data sent by the requesting user

  • High and low-privilege API requests to aggregated API servers are proxied via the same component with the same high-permission transport credentials

Well, this security issue is actually well known enough to have its own name, it is the confused deputy problem, originally written about by Norm Hardy in 1988 although referring to an original example from the 1970s. The essence of the problem is that there are three parties involved, a user, a proxy or deputy type component and an object or service that needs to be accessed, or a similar set of endpoints. 

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