$ oc policy scc-review -z system:serviceaccount:projectname:default -f my_resource.yaml
This topic contains authorization tasks for application developers and their capabilities, as dictated by the cluster administrator.
Using the scc-review
and scc-subject-review
options, you can see if an
individual user, or a user under a specific service account, can create or
update a pod.
Using the scc-review
option, you can check if a service account can create or
update a pod. The command outputs the security context constraints that admit
the resource.
For example, to check if a user with the
system:serviceaccount:projectname:default
service account can a create a pod:
$ oc policy scc-review -z system:serviceaccount:projectname:default -f my_resource.yaml
You can also use the scc-subject-review
option to check whether a specific
user can create or update a pod:
$ oc policy scc-subject-review -u <username> -f my_resource.yaml
To check if a user belonging to a specific group can create a pod in a specific file:
$ oc policy scc-subject-review -u <username> -g <groupname> -f my_resource.yaml
From within your OpenShift Dedicated project, you can determine what verbs you can perform against all namespace-scoped resources (including third-party resources).
The can-i
command option tests scopes in terms of the user and role.
$ oc policy can-i --list --loglevel=8
The output helps you to determine what API request to make to gather the information.
To receive information back in a user-readable format, run:
$ oc policy can-i --list
The output provides a full list.
To determine if you can perform specific verbs, run:
$ oc policy can-i <verb> <resource>
User scopes can provide more information about a given scope. For example:
$ oc policy can-i <verb> <resource> --scopes=user:info