Table of Contents
Self.Hosted 22.06 (EoL)
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- Getting started
- System Requirements
- Prisma Cloud container images
- Onebox
- Kubernetes
- OpenShift v4
- Console on Fargate
- Amazon ECS
- Alibaba Cloud Container Service for Kubernetes (ACK)
- Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS)
- Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS)
- Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE)
- Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE) Autopilot
- IBM Kubernetes Service (IKS)
- Windows
- Defender types
- Cluster Context
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- Install a single Container Defender
- Automatically Install Container Defender in a Cluster
- App-Embedded Defender
- App-Embedded Defender for Fargate
- Default setting for App-Embedded Defender file system protection
- VMware Tanzu Application Service (TAS) Defender
- Serverless Defender
- Serverless Defender as a Lambda layer
- Auto-defend serverless functions
- Install a single Host Defender
- Auto-defend hosts
- Deploy Prisma Cloud Defender from the GCP Marketplace
- Decommission Defenders
- Redeploy Defenders
- Uninstall Defenders
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- Rule ordering and pattern matching
- Backup and restore
- Custom feeds
- Configuring Prisma Cloud proxy settings
- Prisma Cloud Compute certificates
- Configure Agentless Scanning
- Agentless Scanning Modes
- Configure scanning
- User certificate validity period
- Enable HTTP access to Console
- Set different paths for Defender and Console (with DaemonSets)
- Authenticate to Console with certificates
- Configure custom certs from a predefined directory
- Customize terminal output
- Collections
- Tags
- Logon settings
- Reconfigure Prisma Cloud
- Subject Alternative Names
- WildFire Settings
- Log Scrubbing
- Clustered-DB
- Permissions by feature
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- Logging into Prisma Cloud
- Integrating with an IdP
- Integrate with Active Directory
- Integrate with OpenLDAP
- Integrate Prisma Cloud with Open ID Connect
- Integrate with Okta via SAML 2.0 federation
- Integrate Google G Suite via SAML 2.0 federation
- Integrate with Azure Active Directory via SAML 2.0 federation
- Integrate with PingFederate via SAML 2.0 federation
- Integrate with Windows Server 2016 & 2012r2 Active Directory Federation Services (ADFS) via SAML 2.0 federation
- Integrate Prisma Cloud with GitHub
- Integrate Prisma Cloud with OpenShift
- Non-default UPN suffixes
- Compute user roles
- Assign roles
- Credentials store
- Cloud accounts
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- Prisma Cloud vulnerability feed
- Vulnerability Explorer
- Vulnerability management rules
- Search CVEs
- Scan reports
- Scanning procedure
- Customize image scanning
- Configure Registry Scans
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- Scan Images in Sonatype Nexus Registry
- Scan images in Alibaba Cloud Container Registry
- Scan images in Amazon EC2 Container Registry (ECR)
- Scan images in Azure Container Registry (ACR)
- Scan images in Docker Registry v2 (including Docker Hub)
- Scan images in Google Artifact Registry
- Scan images in Google Container Registry (GCR)
- Scan images in Harbor Registry
- Scan images in IBM Cloud Container Registry
- Scan images in Artifactory Docker Registry
- Scan images in OpenShift integrated Docker registry
- Trigger registry scans with Webhooks
- Base images
- Configure VM image scanning
- Configure code repository scanning
- Agentless scanning
- Malware scanning
- Vulnerability risk tree
- Vulnerabilities Detection
- CVSS scoring
- Windows container image scanning
- Serverless function scanning
- VMware Tanzu blobstore scanning
- Scan App-Embedded workloads
- Troubleshoot vulnerability detection
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- Compliance Explorer
- Enforce compliance checks
- CIS Benchmarks
- Prisma Cloud Labs compliance checks
- Serverless functions compliance checks
- Windows compliance checks
- DISA STIG compliance checks
- Custom compliance checks
- Trusted images
- Host scanning
- VM image scanning
- App-Embedded scanning
- Detect secrets
- Cloud discovery
- OSS license management
- API
End-of-Life (EoL)
Tags
Tags are predefined labels that can help you manage the vulnerabilities in your environment.
They are centrally defined and can be set to vulnerabilities and as policy exceptions.
Tags are used as:
- Vulnerability labels. They provide a convenient way to categorize the vulnerabilities in your environment.
- Policy exceptions. They can be a part of your rules in order to have a specific effect on tagged vulnerabilities.
Tags are useful when you have large container deployments with multiple teams working in the same environment. For example, you might have different teams handling different types of vulnerabilities. Then you can set tags in order to define responsibilities over vulnerabilities. Other uses would be to set the status of fixing the vulnerability, or to mark vulnerabilities to ignore when they are a known problem that can’t be fixed in the near future.
Tag definition
You can define as many tags as you like.
- To define a new tag, navigate toManage > Collections and Tags > Tags.Prisma Cloud ships with a predefined set of tags: Ignored, In progress, For review, DevOps notes. The predefined tags are editable and you can use them according to your needs.
- ClickAdd Tag.
- In theCreate new tagdialog, enter a name and description.
- Pick a color for easy visibility and differentiation.
- ClickSave.
Tag assignment
You can assign tags to vulnerabilities, and specify their scope based on CVE ID, packages and resources. Alternatively, you can manually tag vulnerabilities from scan reports.
Note that a tag assignment is uniquely identified by tag, CVE ID, package scope and resource type, therefore, you can not create multiple tag assignments for the same tag, CVE ID, package scope and resource type. To extend the scope of a tag applied to a CVE, edit its existing tag assignment to apply to more packages or resources.
For example, assign the tag Ignored to CVE-2020-1971, package openssl, and all ubuntu images as follows:

You can also adjust the scope of a tag assigned either from the tags management page or from scan reports. Click the
Edit
button to start editing the tag assignment. For example, extend the scope of the tag Ignored for CVE-2020-1971 to all packages affected by this CVE by changing the Package scope
:
As another example, after the In progress tag was assgined to CVE-2019-14697 for specific alpine images from the scan reports, you can extend its scope so it will apply to all alpine images and their descendant images:



To easily navigate in multiple tag assignments, use the table filters on the
Tag assignment
table. Filter by CVE ID, tag, package scope, and resource type to quickly find all places a tag applies to.

- To assign tag to vulnerability, navigate toManage > Collections and Tags > Tags.
- ClickAssign Tag.
- InTag, select the tag to assign.
- InCVE, select the CVE ID to assign the tag for.
- InPackage scope, select the package to which the tag should apply. You can selectAll packagesto apply the tag to all the packages affected by the CVE.
- InResource type, select the type of resources to assign the tag for. You can selectAll resourcesto apply the tag to all the resources across your environment.VMware Tanzu droplets and running applications are being referenced asImages.
- Once resource type is selected, specify the resources to which the tag should apply underImages,Hosts,Functions, orCode repositories. Wildcards are supported.
- (Optional) For images, turn on theTag descendant imagestoggle to let Prisma Cloud automatically tag this CVE in all images where the base image is one of the images specified in theImagesfield.For Prisma Cloud to be able to tag descendant images, first identify the base images in your environment underDefend > Vulnerabilities > Images > Base images.
- (Optional) InComment, specify a comment for this tag assignment.
- ClickSave.