Scanning Oracle Cloud (OCI) with Aikido
Aikido fully supports protecting workloads on Oracle Cloud through specific integrations. A native integration may be added in the future, but you can already achieve full coverage by combining:
Container image scanning for Oracle Cloud registry or any other OCI-compatible registry
Kubernetes cluster scanning for Oracle Cloud Managed Kubernetes or self-managed clusters
Kubernetes cluster image scanning for Oracle Cloud Managed Kubernetes or self-managed clusters
Virtual machine scanning via the Local VM Scanner on Oracle Cloud instances
Features
Container image scanning
Oracle Cloud’s container registry and most third-party registries you use from Oracle Cloud are OCI-compatible, so they can be scanned using Aikido.
Create a read-only or pull-only user in Oracle Cloud registry: https://docs.oracle.com/en-us/iaas/Content/Registry/Tasks/registrypullingimagesusingthedockercli.htm
Follow the OCI guide below to configure container image scanning
Generic OCI-Compatible RegistryKubernetes cluster scanning
If you use Oracle Cloud Managed Kubernetes or run your own Kubernetes clusters on Oracle Cloud VMs, you can connect them as generic Kubernetes clusters.
Kubernetes Cluster ScanningKubernetes cluster image scanning
If you use Oracle Cloud Managed Kubernetes or run your own Kubernetes clusters on Oracle Cloud VMs, you can scan the images of running containers with Kubernetes image scanning.
Kubernetes In-Cluster Image ScanningVirtual Machine scanning
To scan Virtual Machines on Oracle Cloud, use the Local VM Scanner. It inspects packages, system dependencies and configuration directly on the instance.
Local VM ScanningYou can roll this out centrally using your usual automation tooling (e.g. Ansible, Terraform-provisioned scripts, or cloud-init) so that new Oracle Cloud instances are automatically enrolled.
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