Supply Chain
Step 8 - Updating Kubernetes Manifests
With the finalization of the build process and the security checks during this phase, it is now time to update the Kubernetes manifests and provide the new tag for the created image. I have forked (and cleaned up) another repository that will store all yaml specifications that are required for OpenShift. You can find this repository at: Kubernetes Manifests
Step 9 - Linting Kubernetes Manifests
At this point we have checked our source code, verified that it has been signed and has no vulnerabilities, generated a SBOM and updated the Kubernetes manifests, that are responsible to deploy our application on OpenShift. As everything with OpenShift these Kubernetes objects are simple yaml files. In this step we will perform a linting on these files, to verify if they follow certain rules and best practices.
Step 10 - The Example Application
If you read all articles up to here (congratulations) you know that we always update the README file of "The Application". But what is this application exactly and how can we update it like in a real-life example? The Globex UI application is built with Angular and was prepared for this journey. It is a quite complex application and requires Kafka to be installed as well. However, since I am not a developer and this tool was already available, I forked and re-used it. The original can be found at Globex UI
Step 11 - ACS Deployment Check
After the Pipeline prepared the new image for DEV it should be checked against ACS for policy compliance. This ensures that the deployment manifest adheres to policy requirements. The command line tool roxctl will be leveraged to perform this task.
Step 12 - Verify TLog Signature
Since the image has been deployed on DEV now, we need to prepare everything for production. Before we start, we need to confirm that the whole signing process has been passed and that our signature has been applied correctly. With CoSign we signed our image and used Rekor to create a transparency log. We will use this log to confirm that the image was signed.
Step 13 - Bring it to Production
If you reached this article, congratulations! You read through tons of pages to build up a Pipeline. The last two steps in our Pipeline are: Creating a new branch and creating a pull request, with the changes of the image tag that must be approved and will be merged then (We will not update the main branch directly!). Finally, we will do a "real" update to the application to see the actual changes.
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