str_replace("'", "\'", $_POST[$variable]);
Yes this is vulnerable.
Trivially, the backslash is not escaped, so you can break out of a string literal using a backslash to mask a quote: hello\' OR 1 --
-> 'hello\\' OR 1 --'
.
Nulls are also not escaped and may cause problems.
Also if East Asian charsets are in use, a multibyte sequence may be used to mask the quote. (Note this is NOT the case for UTF-8, as UTF-8 does not allow '
as a trailing byte.)
Also this escaping format is only suitable for MySQL. If any other database is used, or the ANSI-compliant string literal option is used in MySQL, then it will be ineffective, as the standard escape is to double the quote, not backslash.
The code is useless. At best it shows someone is aware that SQL injection exists, but it exhibits no real understanding of the actual problem.
\'
then your escaping won't work will it? This becomes"\'"
(escaped quote) followed by'
(unescaped quote)mysql_real_escape_string
, in fact,mysql_*
has (finally) begun the deprecation process. The standard way is using prepared statements. Look intoPDO
andmysqli_*