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Recent Red Hat Openshift Secondary Scheduler Security Advisories

Advisory Title Published
RHSA-2023:5933 (RHSA-2023:5933) Important: OpenShift Secondary Scheduler Operator 1.1.3 security update October 26, 2023

By the Year

In 2026 there have been 1 vulnerability in Red Hat Openshift Secondary Scheduler with an average score of 9.1 out of ten.

Year Vulnerabilities Average Score
2026 1 9.10

It may take a day or so for new Openshift Secondary Scheduler vulnerabilities to show up in the stats or in the list of recent security vulnerabilities. Additionally vulnerabilities may be tagged under a different product or component name.

Recent Red Hat Openshift Secondary Scheduler Security Vulnerabilities

gRPC-Go Auth Bypass (1.79.2) via noncanonical :path
CVE-2026-33186 9.1 - Critical - March 20, 2026

gRPC-Go is the Go language implementation of gRPC. Versions prior to 1.79.3 have an authorization bypass resulting from improper input validation of the HTTP/2 `:path` pseudo-header. The gRPC-Go server was too lenient in its routing logic, accepting requests where the `:path` omitted the mandatory leading slash (e.g., `Service/Method` instead of `/Service/Method`). While the server successfully routed these requests to the correct handler, authorization interceptors (including the official `grpc/authz` package) evaluated the raw, non-canonical path string. Consequently, "deny" rules defined using canonical paths (starting with `/`) failed to match the incoming request, allowing it to bypass the policy if a fallback "allow" rule was present. This affects gRPC-Go servers that use path-based authorization interceptors, such as the official RBAC implementation in `google.golang.org/grpc/authz` or custom interceptors relying on `info.FullMethod` or `grpc.Method(ctx)`; AND that have a security policy contains specific "deny" rules for canonical paths but allows other requests by default (a fallback "allow" rule). The vulnerability is exploitable by an attacker who can send raw HTTP/2 frames with malformed `:path` headers directly to the gRPC server. The fix in version 1.79.3 ensures that any request with a `:path` that does not start with a leading slash is immediately rejected with a `codes.Unimplemented` error, preventing it from reaching authorization interceptors or handlers with a non-canonical path string. While upgrading is the most secure and recommended path, users can mitigate the vulnerability using one of the following methods: Use a validating interceptor (recommended mitigation); infrastructure-level normalization; and/or policy hardening.

AuthZ

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