Squid is a high-performance proxy caching server. It handles all requests in a single, non-blocking, I/O-driven process and keeps meta data and implements negative caching of failed requests.
Security Fix(es):
Squid is a caching proxy for the Web. In Squid versions prior to 7.2, a failure to redact HTTP authentication credentials in error handling allows information disclosure. The vulnerability allows a script to bypass browser security protections and learn the credentials a trusted client uses to authenticate. This potentially allows a remote client to identify security tokens or credentials used internally by a web application using Squid for backend load balancing. These attacks do not require Squid to be configured with HTTP authentication. The vulnerability is fixed in version 7.2. As a workaround, disable debug information in administrator mailto links generated by Squid by configuring squid.conf with emailerrdata off.(CVE-2025-62168)
{
"severity": "Critical"
}{
"x86_64": [
"squid-6.6-6.oe2403sp1.x86_64.rpm",
"squid-debuginfo-6.6-6.oe2403sp1.x86_64.rpm",
"squid-debugsource-6.6-6.oe2403sp1.x86_64.rpm"
],
"src": [
"squid-6.6-6.oe2403sp1.src.rpm"
],
"aarch64": [
"squid-6.6-6.oe2403sp1.aarch64.rpm",
"squid-debuginfo-6.6-6.oe2403sp1.aarch64.rpm",
"squid-debugsource-6.6-6.oe2403sp1.aarch64.rpm"
]
}