Description
To facilitate scalability and resilience, many organizations now run applications in cloud native environments using containers and orchestration. But how do you know if the deployment is secure? This practical book examines key underlying technologies to help developers, operators, and security professionals assess security risks and determine appropriate solutions.
Author Liz Rice, Chief Open Source Officer at Isovalent, looks at how the building blocks commonly used in container-based systems are constructed in Linux. You'll understand what's happening when you deploy containers and learn how to assess potential security risks that could affect your deployments. If you run container applications with kubectl or docker and use Linux command-line tools such as ps and grep, you're ready to get started.
- Explore attack vectors that affect container deployments
- Dive into the Linux constructs that underpin containers
- Examine measures for hardening containers
- Understand how misconfigurations can compromise container isolation
- Learn best practices for building container images
- Identify container images that have known software vulnerabilities
- Leverage secure connections between containers
- Use security tooling to prevent attacks on your deployment
Author: Liz Rice
Publisher: O'Reilly Media
Published: 04/28/2020
Pages: 200
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.72lbs
Size: 9.17h x 7.01w x 0.42d
ISBN13: 9781492056706
ISBN10: 1492056707
BISAC Categories:
- Computers | System Administration | General
- Computers | Security | General
- Computers | Distributed Systems | Cloud Computing
About the Author
Liz Rice is Chief Open Source Officer at Isovalent, the eBPF and network security specialists behind the Cilium project. Previously, she was Vice President of Open Source Engineering with Aqua Security, where she looked after cloud native security projects including Trivy, Tracee, kube-hunter, and kube-bench. She is chair of CNCF's Technical Oversight Committee and was cochair of the KubeCon + CloudNativeCon 2018 events in Copenhagen, Shanghai, and Seattle.
She has a wealth of software development, team, and product management experience from working on network protocols and distributed systems, and in digital technology sectors such as VOD, music, and VoIP. When not writing code or talking about it, Liz loves riding bikes in places with better weather than her native London, and competing in virtual races on Zwift.