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I've done some searching around but I have a specific question on SQL Injection and hope I can get some input as I believe I may be getting the wrong end of the stick to do with field data sanitising etc :-

I have a java program calling a stored procedure on an iSeries. The stored procedure has CL / RPG code behind the scenes. The stored procedure is called by way of parameters with the data coming from a web page. For example the call would look like the following:-

call library.prog('field1Value', 'field2Value')

Do I need to worry about any characters entered via the website into 'field1Value' etc or, because it is a stored procedure call, does the danger of sql injection not exist? Does it depend on whether the RPG program behind the scenes uses 'field1Value' in its own SQL statement as part of that processing?

The field lengths passed into the proecdure are fixed length so we cannot, for example, convert 'dodgy' characters into their html equivalent.

Appreciate any (I'm anticipating this might be a stupid question!) feedback (not necessarily iSeries specific) on this.

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  • Just to clarify - We are using JDBC CallableStatement
    – oidsman
    Jul 13, 2009 at 14:18

3 Answers 3

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unless you are using those parameters to construct dynamic sql in the proc itself you should be fine

also you cannot clean it by checking the parameters

see here: SQL teaser..try protecting this

below is sql server syntax

I can call a proc like this

prDropDeadFred ' declare @d varchar(100) select @d = reverse(''elbaTdaB,elbatecin elbat pord'') exec (@d)'

or like this

prDropDeadFred ' declare @d varchar(100) select @d = convert(varchar(100),0x64726F70207461626C65204E6963655461626C652C4261645461626C65) exec (@d)'

or 5000 other ways that you won't know about

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  • If I find that the proc is constructing some dynamic SQL using one or more field values, I assume that the proc should take care of 'cleaning' the data to ensure no SQL injection is possible? Is there any guidance on how this should work?
    – oidsman
    Jul 13, 2009 at 14:25
  • you can't clean that, see link in answer
    – SQLMenace
    Jul 13, 2009 at 14:33
  • @SQLMenace the question was about ibm-midrange, which means DB2 for i, not SQL Server. Your link for "try protecting this" is not relevant, and I see no reason why the procedure on the iSeries could not clean its input parameters.
    – WarrenT
    Mar 7, 2012 at 0:05
  • Those parameters are type checked, as long as you are not doing a prepare and execute or executeimmediate in your stored procedure, you are safe. Even prepare and execute can be safe if you use parameter markers. I think the point is that you would have to write a complete parser to be able to sanitize a user written statement, and that parser would have to have more intelligence than the built in SQL parser since it would not only have to understand the language, but also ALL the ways it could be used maliciously. That would be a very heavy procedure. Dec 15, 2016 at 13:40
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You might NOT be safe, if the called program uses the input parameters to construct dynamic SQL, passes the information to another program that does, or stores it in a database table field which is later used for dynamic SQL in some other program.

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If you're using the JDBC CallableStatement, then you're safe. CallableStatement is just a subtype of PreparedStatement, and SQL injection attacks should not be possible. The only way I can think of for this not to be true would be if your stored procedure was executing dynamic SQL.

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