Bug 2490898 (CVE-2026-48772) - CVE-2026-48772 proxysql: ProxySQL: Routing and Access Control List bypass via spoofed PROXY protocol header
Summary: CVE-2026-48772 proxysql: ProxySQL: Routing and Access Control List bypass via...
Keywords:
Status: NEW
Alias: CVE-2026-48772
Product: Security Response
Classification: Other
Component: vulnerability
Version: unspecified
Hardware: All
OS: Linux
urgent
urgent
Target Milestone: ---
Assignee: Product Security DevOps Team
QA Contact:
URL:
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Depends On: 2491330 2491331
Blocks:
TreeView+ depends on / blocked
 
Reported: 2026-06-19 20:01 UTC by OSIDB Bzimport
Modified: 2026-06-22 12:55 UTC (History)
0 users

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Description OSIDB Bzimport 2026-06-19 20:01:21 UTC
ProxySQL is a proxy for MySQL and its forks, as well as PostgreSQL. In versions 2.0.0 through 3.0.8, the ProxySQL MySQL frontend accepts the `PROXY UNKNOWN <addr> <addr> <port> <port>\r\n` PP1 frame as a well-formed PROXY protocol header. The HAProxy PROXY protocol v1 specification says that when the protocol token is `UNKNOWN`, the receiver MUST ignore any address fields that follow it, because the proxy has declared it cannot determine the client identity. ProxySQL parses those address fields anyway via `sscanf` and writes the spoofed source address into the session's `addr.addr` field. From there it flows directly into the query-rule matcher, where the `client_addr` predicate decides routing and ACL. When `mysql-proxy_protocol_networks = '*'` (the default), any TCP peer can send a PP1 frame and choose any source IP claim. With that, any `mysql_query_rules` row pinned to a `client_addr` value is forgeable: the attacker writes the address they want to match into the PP1 line, and ProxySQL routes their query as if it came from that address. In practice this is a routing and ACL bypass. Real deployments use `client_addr` for read-write splitting (internal apps go to the primary, public traffic to read replicas), per-app schema pinning, and query-filter rules (DDL allowed only from admin CIDR, public queries blocked from dangerous patterns). An attacker that can reach the frontend port can forge their way into any of those routes. Version 3.0.9 patches this issue.


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