A vulnerability was found in libpq, the default PostgreSQL client library where libpq failed to properly reset its internal state between connections. If an affected version of libpq was used with “host” or “hostaddr” connection parameters from untrusted input, attackers could bypass client-side connection security features, obtain access to higher privileged connections or potentially cause other impact through SQL injection, by causing the PQescape() functions to malfunction. Postgresql versions before 10.5, 9.6.10, 9.5.14, 9.4.19, and 9.3.24 are affected.
It was discovered that PostgreSQL versions before 10.5, 9.6.10, 9.5.14, 9.4.19, and 9.3.24 failed to properly check authorization on certain statements involved with “INSERT … ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE”. An attacker with “CREATE TABLE” privileges could exploit this to read arbitrary bytes server memory. If the attacker also had certain “INSERT” and limited “UPDATE” privileges to a particular table, they could exploit this to update other columns in the same table.
Impact
There is no impact; F5 products are not affected by this vulnerability.