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What are the technical reasons for why one shouldn't use mysql_* functions? (e.g. mysql_query(), mysql_connect() or mysql_real_escape_string())?

Why should I use something else even if they work on my site?

If they don't work on my site, why do I get errors like

Warning: mysql_connect(): No such file or directory

2
  • 3
    Error to be like: Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Call to undefined function mysql_connect() ... Dec 2, 2017 at 8:04
  • 48
    Deprecated alone is reason enough to avoid them
    – Sasa1234
    Dec 17, 2017 at 5:43

14 Answers 14

2234

The MySQL extension:

  • Is not under active development
  • Is officially deprecated as of PHP 5.5 (released June 2013).
  • Has been removed entirely as of PHP 7.0 (released December 2015)
    • This means that as of 31 Dec 2018 it does not exist in any supported version of PHP. If you are using a version of PHP which supports it, you are using a version which doesn't get security problems fixed.
  • Lacks an OO interface
  • Doesn't support:
    • Non-blocking, asynchronous queries
    • Prepared statements or parameterized queries
    • Stored procedures
    • Multiple Statements
    • Transactions
    • The "new" password authentication method (on by default in MySQL 5.6; required in 5.7)
    • Any of the new functionality in MySQL 5.1 or later

Since it is deprecated, using it makes your code less future proof.

Lack of support for prepared statements is particularly important as they provide a clearer, less error-prone method of escaping and quoting external data than manually escaping it with a separate function call.

See the comparison of SQL extensions.

5
  • 311
    Deprecated alone is reason enough to avoid them. They will not be there one day, and you will not be happy if you rely on them. The rest is just a list of things that using the old extensions has kept people from learning.
    – user50049
    Oct 12, 2012 at 13:26
  • 124
    Deprecation isn't the magic bullet everyone seems to think it is. PHP itself will not be there one day, yet we rely on the tools we have at our disposal today. When we have to change tools, we will. Dec 24, 2012 at 14:29
  • 149
    @LightnessRacesinOrbit — Deprecation isn't a magic bullet, it is a flag that says "We recognise this sucks so we aren't going to support it for much longer". While having better future proofing of code is a good reason to move away from the deprecated features, it isn't the only one (or even the main one). Change tools because there are better tools, not because you are forced to. (And changing tools before you are forced to means that you aren't learning the new ones just because your code has stopped working and needs fixing yesterday … which is the worst time to learn new tools).
    – Quentin
    Dec 24, 2012 at 17:43
  • The prepared statements thing is the big one for me. Much of PHPs early reputation as being a cursed language security wise stems from the early days where the combination magic variables and SQL via interpolation combined to make for some very stupid code. Prepared statements go a LONG way to preventing this. Never interpolate SQL. Just.... dont do it.
    – Shayne
    Mar 4, 2022 at 3:03
  • Doesn't support: Non-blocking, asynchronous queries - that's also a reason to not use PDO, it doesn't suppose async queries (unlike mysqli)
    – hanshenrik
    Mar 12, 2022 at 12:19
1364
+100
Answer recommended by PHP Collective

PHP offers three different APIs to connect to MySQL. These are the mysql(removed as of PHP 7), mysqli, and PDO extensions.

The mysql_* functions used to be very popular, but their use is not encouraged anymore. The documentation team is discussing the database security situation, and educating users to move away from the commonly used ext/mysql extension is part of this (check php.internals: deprecating ext/mysql).

And the later PHP developer team has taken the decision to generate E_DEPRECATED errors when users connect to MySQL, whether through mysql_connect(), mysql_pconnect() or the implicit connection functionality built into ext/mysql.

ext/mysql was officially deprecated as of PHP 5.5 and has been removed as of PHP 7.

See the Red Box?

When you go on any mysql_* function manual page, you see a red box, explaining it should not be used anymore.

Why


Moving away from ext/mysql is not only about security, but also about having access to all the features of the MySQL database.

ext/mysql was built for MySQL 3.23 and only got very few additions since then while mostly keeping compatibility with this old version which makes the code a bit harder to maintain. Missing features that is not supported by ext/mysql include: (from PHP manual).

Reason to not use mysql_* function:

  • Not under active development
  • Removed as of PHP 7
  • Lacks an OO interface
  • Doesn't support non-blocking, asynchronous queries
  • Doesn't support prepared statements or parameterized queries
  • Doesn't support stored procedures
  • Doesn't support multiple statements
  • Doesn't support transactions
  • Doesn't support all of the functionality in MySQL 5.1

Above point quoted from Quentin's answer

Lack of support for prepared statements is particularly important as they provide a clearer, less error prone method of escaping and quoting external data than manually escaping it with a separate function call.

See the comparison of SQL extensions.


Suppressing deprecation warnings

While code is being converted to MySQLi/PDO, E_DEPRECATED errors can be suppressed by setting error_reporting in php.ini to exclude E_DEPRECATED:

error_reporting = E_ALL ^ E_DEPRECATED

Note that this will also hide other deprecation warnings, which, however, may be for things other than MySQL. (from PHP manual)

The article PDO vs. MySQLi: Which Should You Use? by Dejan Marjanovic will help you to choose.

And a better way is PDO, and I am now writing a simple PDO tutorial.


A simple and short PDO tutorial


Q. First question in my mind was: what is `PDO`?

A. “PDO – PHP Data Objects – is a database access layer providing a uniform method of access to multiple databases.”

alt text


Connecting to MySQL

With mysql_* function or we can say it the old way (deprecated in PHP 5.5 and above)

$link = mysql_connect('localhost', 'user', 'pass');
mysql_select_db('testdb', $link);
mysql_set_charset('UTF-8', $link);

With PDO: All you need to do is create a new PDO object. The constructor accepts parameters for specifying the database source PDO's constructor mostly takes four parameters which are DSN (data source name) and optionally username, password.

Here I think you are familiar with all except DSN; this is new in PDO. A DSN is basically a string of options that tell PDO which driver to use, and connection details. For further reference, check PDO MySQL DSN.

$db = new PDO('mysql:host=localhost;dbname=testdb;charset=utf8', 'username', 'password');

Note: you can also use charset=UTF-8, but sometimes it causes an error, so it's better to use utf8.

If there is any connection error, it will throw a PDOException object that can be caught to handle Exception further.

Good read: Connections and Connection management ¶

You can also pass in several driver options as an array to the fourth parameter. I recommend passing the parameter which puts PDO into exception mode. Because some PDO drivers don't support native prepared statements, so PDO performs emulation of the prepare. It also lets you manually enable this emulation. To use the native server-side prepared statements, you should explicitly set it false.

The other is to turn off prepare emulation which is enabled in the MySQL driver by default, but prepare emulation should be turned off to use PDO safely.

I will later explain why prepare emulation should be turned off. To find reason please check this post.

It is only usable if you are using an old version of MySQL which I do not recommended.

Below is an example of how you can do it:

$db = new PDO('mysql:host=localhost;dbname=testdb;charset=UTF-8', 
              'username', 
              'password',
              array(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES => false,
              PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE => PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION));

Can we set attributes after PDO construction?

Yes, we can also set some attributes after PDO construction with the setAttribute method:

$db = new PDO('mysql:host=localhost;dbname=testdb;charset=UTF-8', 
              'username', 
              'password');
$db->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE, PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION);
$db->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, false);

Error Handling


Error handling is much easier in PDO than mysql_*.

A common practice when using mysql_* is:

//Connected to MySQL
$result = mysql_query("SELECT * FROM table", $link) or die(mysql_error($link));

OR die() is not a good way to handle the error since we can not handle the thing in die. It will just end the script abruptly and then echo the error to the screen which you usually do NOT want to show to your end users, and let bloody hackers discover your schema. Alternately, the return values of mysql_* functions can often be used in conjunction with mysql_error() to handle errors.

PDO offers a better solution: exceptions. Anything we do with PDO should be wrapped in a try-catch block. We can force PDO into one of three error modes by setting the error mode attribute. Three error handling modes are below.

  • PDO::ERRMODE_SILENT. It's just setting error codes and acts pretty much the same as mysql_* where you must check each result and then look at $db->errorInfo(); to get the error details.
  • PDO::ERRMODE_WARNING Raise E_WARNING. (Run-time warnings (non-fatal errors). Execution of the script is not halted.)
  • PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION: Throw exceptions. It represents an error raised by PDO. You should not throw a PDOException from your own code. See Exceptions for more information about exceptions in PHP. It acts very much like or die(mysql_error());, when it isn't caught. But unlike or die(), the PDOException can be caught and handled gracefully if you choose to do so.

Good read:

Like:

$stmt->setAttribute( PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE, PDO::ERRMODE_SILENT );
$stmt->setAttribute( PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE, PDO::ERRMODE_WARNING );
$stmt->setAttribute( PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE, PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION );

And you can wrap it in try-catch, like below:

try {
    //Connect as appropriate as above
    $db->query('hi'); //Invalid query!
} 
catch (PDOException $ex) {
    echo "An Error occured!"; //User friendly message/message you want to show to user
    some_logging_function($ex->getMessage());
}

You do not have to handle with try-catch right now. You can catch it at any time appropriate, but I strongly recommend you to use try-catch. Also it may make more sense to catch it at outside the function that calls the PDO stuff:

function data_fun($db) {
    $stmt = $db->query("SELECT * FROM table");
    return $stmt->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
}

//Then later
try {
    data_fun($db);
}
catch(PDOException $ex) {
    //Here you can handle error and show message/perform action you want.
}

Also, you can handle by or die() or we can say like mysql_*, but it will be really varied. You can hide the dangerous error messages in production by turning display_errors off and just reading your error log.

Now, after reading all the things above, you are probably thinking: what the heck is that when I just want to start leaning simple SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statements? Don't worry, here we go:


Selecting Data

PDO select image

So what you are doing in mysql_* is:

<?php
$result = mysql_query('SELECT * from table') or die(mysql_error());

$num_rows = mysql_num_rows($result);

while($row = mysql_fetch_assoc($result)) {
    echo $row['field1'];
}

Now in PDO, you can do this like:

<?php
$stmt = $db->query('SELECT * FROM table');

while($row = $stmt->fetch(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC)) {
    echo $row['field1'];
}

Or

<?php
$stmt = $db->query('SELECT * FROM table');
$results = $stmt->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);

//Use $results

Note: If you are using the method like below (query()), this method returns a PDOStatement object. So if you want to fetch the result, use it like above.

<?php
foreach($db->query('SELECT * FROM table') as $row) {
    echo $row['field1'];
}

In PDO Data, it is obtained via the ->fetch(), a method of your statement handle. Before calling fetch, the best approach would be telling PDO how you’d like the data to be fetched. In the below section I am explaining this.

Fetch Modes

Note the use of PDO::FETCH_ASSOC in the fetch() and fetchAll() code above. This tells PDO to return the rows as an associative array with the field names as keys. There are many other fetch modes too which I will explain one by one.

First of all, I explain how to select fetch mode:

 $stmt->fetch(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC)

In the above, I have been using fetch(). You can also use:

Now I come to fetch mode:

  • PDO::FETCH_ASSOC: returns an array indexed by column name as returned in your result set
  • PDO::FETCH_BOTH (default): returns an array indexed by both column name and 0-indexed column number as returned in your result set

There are even more choices! Read about them all in PDOStatement Fetch documentation..

Getting the row count:

Instead of using mysql_num_rows to get the number of returned rows, you can get a PDOStatement and do rowCount(), like:

<?php
$stmt = $db->query('SELECT * FROM table');
$row_count = $stmt->rowCount();
echo $row_count.' rows selected';

Getting the Last Inserted ID

<?php
$result = $db->exec("INSERT INTO table(firstname, lastname) VAULES('John', 'Doe')");
$insertId = $db->lastInsertId();

Insert and Update or Delete statements

Insert and update PDO image

What we are doing in mysql_* function is:

<?php
$results = mysql_query("UPDATE table SET field='value'") or die(mysql_error());
echo mysql_affected_rows($result);

And in pdo, this same thing can be done by:

<?php
$affected_rows = $db->exec("UPDATE table SET field='value'");
echo $affected_rows;

In the above query PDO::exec execute an SQL statement and returns the number of affected rows.

Insert and delete will be covered later.

The above method is only useful when you are not using variable in query. But when you need to use a variable in a query, do not ever ever try like the above and there for prepared statement or parameterized statement is.


Prepared Statements

Q. What is a prepared statement and why do I need them?
A. A prepared statement is a pre-compiled SQL statement that can be executed multiple times by sending only the data to the server.

The typical workflow of using a prepared statement is as follows (quoted from Wikipedia three 3 point):

  1. Prepare: The statement template is created by the application and sent to the database management system (DBMS). Certain values are left unspecified, called parameters, placeholders or bind variables (labelled ? below):
`INSERT INTO PRODUCT (name, price) VALUES (?, ?)`
  1. The DBMS parses, compiles, and performs query optimization on the statement template, and stores the result without executing it.
  2. Execute: At a later time, the application supplies (or binds) values for the parameters, and the DBMS executes the statement (possibly returning a result). The application may execute the statement as many times as it wants with different values. In this example, it might supply 'Bread' for the first parameter and 1.00 for the second parameter.

You can use a prepared statement by including placeholders in your SQL. There are basically three ones without placeholders (don't try this with variable its above one), one with unnamed placeholders, and one with named placeholders.

Q. So now, what are named placeholders and how do I use them?
A. Named placeholders. Use descriptive names preceded by a colon, instead of question marks. We don't care about position/order of value in name place holder:

 $stmt->bindParam(':bla', $bla);

bindParam(parameter,variable,data_type,length,driver_options)

You can also bind using an execute array as well:

<?php
$stmt = $db->prepare("SELECT * FROM table WHERE id=:id AND name=:name");
$stmt->execute(array(':name' => $name, ':id' => $id));
$rows = $stmt->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);

Another nice feature for OOP friends is that named placeholders have the ability to insert objects directly into your database, assuming the properties match the named fields. For example:

class person {
    public $name;
    public $add;
    function __construct($a,$b) {
        $this->name = $a;
        $this->add = $b;
    }

}
$demo = new person('john','29 bla district');
$stmt = $db->prepare("INSERT INTO table (name, add) value (:name, :add)");
$stmt->execute((array)$demo);

Q. So now, what are unnamed placeholders and how do I use them?
A. Let's have an example:

<?php
$stmt = $db->prepare("INSERT INTO folks (name, add) values (?, ?)");
$stmt->bindValue(1, $name, PDO::PARAM_STR);
$stmt->bindValue(2, $add, PDO::PARAM_STR);
$stmt->execute();

and

$stmt = $db->prepare("INSERT INTO folks (name, add) values (?, ?)");
$stmt->execute(array('john', '29 bla district'));

In the above, you can see those ? instead of a name like in a name place holder. Now in the first example, we assign variables to the various placeholders ($stmt->bindValue(1, $name, PDO::PARAM_STR);). Then, we assign values to those placeholders and execute the statement. In the second example, the first array element goes to the first ? and the second to the second ?.

NOTE: In unnamed placeholders we must take care of the proper order of the elements in the array that we are passing to the PDOStatement::execute() method.


SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE prepared queries

  1. SELECT:

    $stmt = $db->prepare("SELECT * FROM table WHERE id=:id AND name=:name"); $stmt->execute(array(':name' => $name, ':id' => $id)); $rows = $stmt->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);

  2. INSERT:

    $stmt = $db->prepare("INSERT INTO table(field1,field2) VALUES(:field1,:field2)"); $stmt->execute(array(':field1' => $field1, ':field2' => $field2)); $affected_rows = $stmt->rowCount();

  3. DELETE:

    $stmt = $db->prepare("DELETE FROM table WHERE id=:id"); $stmt->bindValue(':id', $id, PDO::PARAM_STR); $stmt->execute(); $affected_rows = $stmt->rowCount();

  4. UPDATE:

    $stmt = $db->prepare("UPDATE table SET name=? WHERE id=?"); $stmt->execute(array($name, $id)); $affected_rows = $stmt->rowCount();


NOTE:

However PDO and/or MySQLi are not completely safe. Check the answer Are PDO prepared statements sufficient to prevent SQL injection? by ircmaxell. Also, I am quoting some part from his answer:

$pdo->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, false);
$pdo->query('SET NAMES GBK');
$stmt = $pdo->prepare("SELECT * FROM test WHERE name = ? LIMIT 1");
$stmt->execute(array(chr(0xbf) . chr(0x27) . " OR 1=1 /*"));
0
317

First, let's begin with the standard comment we give everyone:

Please, don't use mysql_* functions in new code. They are no longer maintained and are officially deprecated. See the red box? Learn about prepared statements instead, and use PDO or MySQLi - this article will help you decide which. If you choose PDO, here is a good tutorial.

Let's go through this, sentence by sentence, and explain:

  • They are no longer maintained, and are officially deprecated

    This means that the PHP community is gradually dropping support for these very old functions. They are likely to not exist in a future (recent) version of PHP! Continued use of these functions may break your code in the (not so) far future.

    NEW! - ext/mysql is now officially deprecated as of PHP 5.5!

    Newer! ext/mysql has been removed in PHP 7.

  • Instead, you should learn of prepared statements

    mysql_* extension does not support prepared statements, which is (among other things) a very effective countermeasure against SQL Injection. It fixed a very serious vulnerability in MySQL dependent applications which allows attackers to gain access to your script and perform any possible query on your database.

    For more information, see How can I prevent SQL injection in PHP?

  • See the Red Box?

    When you go to any mysql function manual page, you see a red box, explaining it should not be used anymore.

  • Use either PDO or MySQLi

    There are better, more robust and well-built alternatives, PDO - PHP Database Object, which offers a complete OOP approach to database interaction, and MySQLi, which is a MySQL specific improvement.

7
  • 4
    @Mario -- the PHP devs do have a process, and they've just voted in favour of formally deprecating ext/mysql as of 5.5. It's no longer a hypothetical issue.
    – SDC
    Dec 10, 2012 at 15:00
  • 2
    Adding a couple extra lines with a proven technique such as PDO or MySQLi still affords the ease of use PHP has always offered. I hope for the sake of the developer he/she knows that seeing these god-awful mysql_* functions in any tutorial actually detracts from the lesson, and should tell the OP that this kind of code is soooo 10 years ago- and should question the relevance of the tutorial,too! Dec 31, 2012 at 17:28
  • 1
    What the answer should propably mention: prepared statement take away any meaningful use of the IN (...) construct. Dec 14, 2013 at 19:36
  • One other comment that has been referenced elsewhere on this site is not to simply convert all of the mysql_ statements to mysqli_. There are differences between the two.
    – user1239087
    Jan 19, 2017 at 3:44
  • @Madara's Ghost I wonder why not they rewrite mysql_* with modern, more secure code Sep 8, 2021 at 11:52
229

Ease of use

The analytic and synthetic reasons were already mentioned. For newcomers there's a more significant incentive to stop using the dated mysql_ functions.

Contemporary database APIs are just easier to use.

It's mostly the bound parameters which can simplify code. And with excellent tutorials (as seen above) the transition to PDO isn't overly arduous.

Rewriting a larger code base at once however takes time. Raison d'être for this intermediate alternative:

Equivalent pdo_* functions in place of mysql_*

Using <pdo_mysql.php> you can switch from the old mysql_ functions with minimal effort. It adds pdo_ function wrappers which replace their mysql_ counterparts.

  1. Simply include_once("pdo_mysql.php"); in each invocation script that has to interact with the database.

  2. Remove the mysql_ function prefix everywhere and replace it with pdo_.

    • mysql_connect() becomes pdo_connect()
    • mysql_query() becomes pdo_query()
    • mysql_num_rows() becomes pdo_num_rows()
    • mysql_insert_id() becomes pdo_insert_id()
    • mysql_fetch_array() becomes pdo_fetch_array()
    • mysql_fetch_assoc() becomes pdo_fetch_assoc()
    • mysql_real_escape_string() becomes pdo_real_escape_string()
    • and so on...

  3. Your code will work alike and still mostly look the same:

    include_once("pdo_mysql.php"); 
    
    pdo_connect("localhost", "usrABC", "pw1234567");
    pdo_select_db("test");
    
    $result = pdo_query("SELECT title, html FROM pages");  
    
    while ($row = pdo_fetch_assoc($result)) {
        print "$row[title] - $row[html]";
    }
    

Et voilà.
Your code is using PDO.
Now it's time to actually utilize it.

Bound parameters can be easy to use

You just need a less unwieldy API.

pdo_query() adds very facile support for bound parameters. Converting old code is straightforward:

Move your variables out of the SQL string.

  • Add them as comma delimited function parameters to pdo_query().
  • Place question marks ? as placeholders where the variables were before.
  • Get rid of ' single quotes that previously enclosed string values/variables.

The advantage becomes more obvious for lengthier code.

Often string variables aren't just interpolated into SQL, but concatenated with escaping calls in between.

pdo_query("SELECT id, links, html, title, user, date FROM articles
   WHERE title='" . pdo_real_escape_string($title) . "' OR id='".
   pdo_real_escape_string($title) . "' AND user <> '" .
   pdo_real_escape_string($root) . "' ORDER BY date")

With ? placeholders applied you don't have to bother with that:

pdo_query("SELECT id, links, html, title, user, date FROM articles
   WHERE title=? OR id=? AND user<>? ORDER BY date", $title, $id, $root)

Remember that pdo_* still allows either or.
Just don't escape a variable and bind it in the same query.

  • The placeholder feature is provided by the real PDO behind it.
  • Thus also allowed :named placeholder lists later.

More importantly you can pass $_REQUEST[] variables safely behind any query. When submitted <form> fields match the database structure exactly it's even shorter:

pdo_query("INSERT INTO pages VALUES (?,?,?,?,?)", $_POST);

So much simplicity. But let's get back to some more rewriting advises and technical reasons on why you may want to get rid of mysql_ and escaping.

Fix or remove any oldschool sanitize() function

Once you have converted all mysql_ calls to pdo_query with bound params, remove all redundant pdo_real_escape_string calls.

In particular you should fix any sanitize or clean or filterThis or clean_data functions as advertised by dated tutorials in one form or the other:

function sanitize($str) {
   return trim(strip_tags(htmlentities(pdo_real_escape_string($str))));
}

Most glaring bug here is the lack of documentation. More significantly the order of filtering was in exactly the wrong order.

  • Correct order would have been: deprecatedly stripslashes as the innermost call, then trim, afterwards strip_tags, htmlentities for output context, and only lastly the _escape_string as its application should directly preceed the SQL intersparsing.

  • But as first step just get rid of the _real_escape_string call.

  • You may have to keep the rest of your sanitize() function for now if your database and application flow expect HTML-context-safe strings. Add a comment that it applies only HTML escaping henceforth.

  • String/value handling is delegated to PDO and its parameterized statements.

  • If there was any mention of stripslashes() in your sanitize function, it may indicate a higher level oversight.

    • That was commonly there to undo damage (double escaping) from the deprecated magic_quotes. Which however is best fixed centrally, not string by string.

    • Use one of the userland reversal approaches. Then remove the stripslashes() in the sanitize function.

    Historic note on magic_quotes. That feature is rightly deprecated. It's often incorrectly portrayed as failed security feature however. But magic_quotes are as much a failed security feature as tennis balls have failed as nutrition source. That simply wasn't their purpose.

    The original implementation in PHP2/FI introduced it explicitly with just "quotes will be automatically escaped making it easier to pass form data directly to msql queries". Notably it was accidentially safe to use with mSQL, as that supported ASCII only.
    Then PHP3/Zend reintroduced magic_quotes for MySQL and misdocumented it. But originally it was just a convenience feature, not intend for security.

How prepared statements differ

When you scramble string variables into the SQL queries, it doesn't just get more intricate for you to follow. It's also extraneous effort for MySQL to segregate code and data again.

SQL injections simply are when data bleeds into code context. A database server can't later spot where PHP originally glued variables inbetween query clauses.

With bound parameters you separate SQL code and SQL-context values in your PHP code. But it doesn't get shuffled up again behind the scenes (except with PDO::EMULATE_PREPARES). Your database receives the unvaried SQL commands and 1:1 variable values.

While this answer stresses that you should care about the readability advantages of dropping mysql_. There's occasionally also a performance advantage (repeated INSERTs with just differing values) due to this visible and technical data/code separation.

Beware that parameter binding still isn't a magic one-stop solution against all SQL injections. It handles the most common use for data/values. But can't whitelist column name / table identifiers, help with dynamic clause construction, or just plain array value lists.

Hybrid PDO use

These pdo_* wrapper functions make a coding-friendly stop-gap API. (It's pretty much what MYSQLI could have been if it wasn't for the idiosyncratic function signature shift). They also expose the real PDO at most times.
Rewriting doesn't have to stop at using the new pdo_ function names. You could one by one transition each pdo_query() into a plain $pdo->prepare()->execute() call.

It's best to start at simplifying again however. For example the common result fetching:

$result = pdo_query("SELECT * FROM tbl");
while ($row = pdo_fetch_assoc($result)) {

Can be replaced with just an foreach iteration:

foreach ($result as $row) {

Or better yet a direct and complete array retrieval:

$result->fetchAll();

You'll get more helpful warnings in most cases than PDO or mysql_ usually provide after failed queries.

Other options

So this hopefully visualized some practical reasons and a worthwile pathway to drop mysql_.

Just switching to doesn't quite cut it. pdo_query() is also just a frontend onto it.

Unless you also introduce parameter binding or can utilize something else from the nicer API, it's a pointless switch. I hope it's portrayed simple enough to not further the discouragement to newcomers. (Education usually works better than prohibition.)

While it qualifies for the simplest-thing-that-could-possibly-work category, it's also still very experimental code. I just wrote it over the weekend. There's a plethora of alternatives however. Just google for PHP database abstraction and browse a little. There always have been and will be lots of excellent libraries for such tasks.

If you want to simplify your database interaction further, mappers like Paris/Idiorm are worth a try. Just like nobody uses the bland DOM in JavaScript anymore, you don't have to babysit a raw database interface nowadays.

3
  • 9
    Be careful with the pdo_query("INSERT INTO pages VALUES (?,?,?,?,?)", $_POST); function - ie: pdo_query("INSERT INTO users VALUES (?, ?, ?), $_POST); $_POST = array( 'username' => 'lawl', 'password' => '123', 'is_admin' => 'true');
    – rickyduck
    Jan 22, 2014 at 16:35
  • @Tom Sure, albeit it's not maintained much (0.9.2 was the last), you can create a fossil account, add to the wiki or file a bug report (without registration IIRC).
    – mario
    Mar 8, 2017 at 14:34
  • pdo_real_escape_string() <- Is this even a real function, I cannot find any documentation for it? Please post a source for this.
    – Ryan Stone
    Feb 23, 2020 at 11:11
160

The mysql_ functions:

  1. are out of date - they're not maintained any more
  2. don't allow you to move easily to another database backend
  3. don't support prepared statements, hence
  4. encourage programmers to use concatenation to build queries, leading to SQL injection vulnerabilities
5
  • 22
    #2 is equally true of mysqli_
    – eggyal
    Oct 12, 2012 at 13:35
  • 18
    to be fair, given the variations in SQL dialect, even PDO doesn't give you #2 with any degree of certainty. You'd need a proper ORM wrapper for that.
    – SDC
    Oct 23, 2012 at 14:55
  • the mysql_* function are a shell into mysqlnd functions for newer PHP versions. So even if the old client library is not maintained any more, mysqlnd is maintained :)
    – hakre
    May 31, 2013 at 14:25
  • The problem is not many web-hosting providers can support such object-oriented style of design due to outdated php version Sep 17, 2013 at 8:25
  • @RajuGujarati so find a web host that can. If your web host doesn't, chances are very high that they're vulnerable to attacks on their servers.
    – Alnitak
    Sep 17, 2013 at 9:15
115

Speaking of technical reasons, there are only a few, extremely specific and rarely used. Most likely you will never ever use them in your life.
Maybe I am too ignorant, but I never had an opportunity to use them things like

  • non-blocking, asynchronous queries
  • stored procedures returning multiple resultsets
  • Encryption (SSL)
  • Compression

If you need them - these are no doubt technical reasons to move away from mysql extension toward something more stylish and modern-looking.

Nevertheless, there are also some non-technical issues, which can make your experience a bit harder

  • further use of these functions with modern PHP versions will raise deprecated-level notices. They simply can be turned off.
  • in a distant future, they can be possibly removed from the default PHP build. Not a big deal too, as mydsql ext will be moved into PECL and every hoster will be happy to compile PHP with it, as they don't want to lose clients whose sites were working for decades.
  • strong resistance from Stackoverflow community. Еverytime you mention these honest functions, you being told that they are under strict taboo.
  • being an average PHP user, most likely your idea of using these functions is error-prone and wrong. Just because of all these numerous tutorials and manuals which teach you the wrong way. Not the functions themselves - I have to emphasize it - but the way they are used.

This latter issue is a problem.
But, in my opinion, the proposed solution is no better either.
It seems to me too idealistic a dream that all those PHP users will learn how to handle SQL queries properly at once. Most likely they would just change mysql_* to mysqli_* mechanically, leaving the approach the same. Especially because mysqli makes prepared statements usage incredible painful and troublesome.
Not to mention that native prepared statements aren't enough to protect from SQL injections, and neither mysqli nor PDO offers a solution.

So, instead of fighting this honest extension, I'd prefer to fight wrong practices and educate people in the right ways.

Also, there are some false or non-significant reasons, like

  • Doesn't support Stored Procedures (we were using mysql_query("CALL my_proc"); for ages)
  • Doesn't support Transactions (same as above)
  • Doesn't support Multiple Statements (who need them?)
  • Not under active development (so what? does it affect you in any practical way?)
  • Lacks an OO interface (to create one is a matter of several hours)
  • Doesn't support Prepared Statements or Parametrized Queries

The last one is an interesting point. Although mysql ext do not support native prepared statements, they aren't required for the safety. We can easily fake prepared statements using manually handled placeholders (just like PDO does):

function paraQuery()
{
    $args  = func_get_args();
    $query = array_shift($args);
    $query = str_replace("%s","'%s'",$query); 

    foreach ($args as $key => $val)
    {
        $args[$key] = mysql_real_escape_string($val);
    }

    $query  = vsprintf($query, $args);
    $result = mysql_query($query);
    if (!$result)
    {
        throw new Exception(mysql_error()." [$query]");
    }
    return $result;
}

$query  = "SELECT * FROM table where a=%s AND b LIKE %s LIMIT %d";
$result = paraQuery($query, $a, "%$b%", $limit);

voila, everything is parameterized and safe.

But okay, if you don't like the red box in the manual, a problem of choice arises: mysqli or PDO?

Well, the answer would be as follows:

  • If you understand the necessity of using a database abstraction layer and looking for an API to create one, mysqli is a very good choice, as it indeed supports many mysql-specific features.
  • If, like vast majority of PHP folks, you are using raw API calls right in the application code (which is essentially wrong practice) - PDO is the only choice, as this extension pretends to be not just API but rather a semi-DAL, still incomplete but offers many important features, with two of them makes PDO critically distinguished from mysqli:

    • unlike mysqli, PDO can bind placeholders by value, which makes dynamically built queries feasible without several screens of quite messy code.
    • unlike mysqli, PDO can always return query result in a simple usual array, while mysqli can do it only on mysqlnd installations.

So, if you are an average PHP user and want to save yourself a ton of headaches when using native prepared statements, PDO - again - is the only choice.
However, PDO is not a silver bullet too and has its hardships.
So, I wrote solutions for all the common pitfalls and complex cases in the PDO tag wiki

Nevertheless, everyone talking about extensions always missing the 2 important facts about Mysqli and PDO:

  1. Prepared statement isn't a silver bullet. There are dynamical identifiers which cannot be bound using prepared statements. There are dynamical queries with an unknown number of parameters which makes query building a difficult task.

  2. Neither mysqli_* nor PDO functions should have appeared in the application code.
    There ought to be an abstraction layer between them and application code, which will do all the dirty job of binding, looping, error handling, etc. inside, making application code DRY and clean. Especially for the complex cases like dynamical query building.

So, just switching to PDO or mysqli is not enough. One has to use an ORM, or a query builder, or whatever database abstraction class instead of calling raw API functions in their code.
And contrary - if you have an abstraction layer between your application code and mysql API - it doesn't actually matter which engine is used. You can use mysql ext until it goes deprecated and then easily rewrite your abstraction class to another engine, having all the application code intact.

Here are some examples based on my safemysql class to show how such an abstraction class ought to be:

$city_ids = array(1,2,3);
$cities   = $db->getCol("SELECT name FROM cities WHERE is IN(?a)", $city_ids);

Compare this one single line with amount of code you will need with PDO.
Then compare with crazy amount of code you will need with raw Mysqli prepared statements. Note that error handling, profiling, query logging already built in and running.

$insert = array('name' => 'John', 'surname' => "O'Hara");
$db->query("INSERT INTO users SET ?u", $insert);

Compare it with usual PDO inserts, when every single field name being repeated six to ten times - in all these numerous named placeholders, bindings, and query definitions.

Another example:

$data = $db->getAll("SELECT * FROM goods ORDER BY ?n", $_GET['order']);

You can hardly find an example for PDO to handle such practical case.
And it will be too wordy and most likely unsafe.

So, once more - it is not just raw driver should be your concern but abstraction class, useful not only for silly examples from beginner's manual but to solve whatever real-life problems.

7
  • 21
    mysql_* makes vulnerabilities very easy to come by. Since PHP is used by a whole lot of novice users, mysql_* is actively harmful in practice, even if in theory it can be used without a hitch. Jan 1, 2013 at 17:48
  • 4
    everything is parameterized and safe - it may be parameterized, but your function doesn't use real prepared statements.
    – uınbɐɥs
    Jan 3, 2013 at 6:07
  • 6
    How is Not under active development only for that made-up '0.01%'? If you build something with this stand-still function, update your mysql-version in a year and wind up with a non-working system, I'm sure there are an awful lot of people suddenly in that '0.01%'. I'd say that deprecated and not under active development are closely related. You can say that there is "no [worthy] reason" for it, but the fact is that when offered a choice between the options, no active development is almost just as bad as deprecated I'd say?
    – Nanne
    Feb 1, 2013 at 10:21
  • 1
    @MadaraUchiha: Can you explain how vulnerabilities are very easy to come by? Especially in the cases where those same vulnerabilities don't affect PDO or MySQLi... Because I'm not aware of a single one that you speak of.
    – ircmaxell
    Feb 4, 2013 at 12:42
  • 4
    @ShaquinTrifonoff: sure, it doesn't use prepared statements. But neither does PDO, which most people recommend over MySQLi. So I'm not sure that has a significant impact here. The above code (with a little more parsing) is what PDO does when you prepare a statement by default...
    – ircmaxell
    Feb 4, 2013 at 12:44
105

There are many reasons, but perhaps the most important one is that those functions encourage insecure programming practices because they do not support prepared statements. Prepared statements help prevent SQL injection attacks.

When using mysql_* functions, you have to remember to run user-supplied parameters through mysql_real_escape_string(). If you forget in just one place or if you happen to escape only part of the input, your database may be subject to attack.

Using prepared statements in PDO or mysqli will make it so that these sorts of programming errors are more difficult to make.

3
  • 3
    Unfortunately the poor support in MySQLi_* for passing a variable number of parameters (such as when you want to pass a list of values to check against in an IN clause) encourages non use of parameters, encouraging the use of exactly the same concatenated queries that leave MySQL_* calls vulnerable.
    – Kickstart
    Jun 27, 2013 at 9:31
  • 5
    But, once again, insecurity is not an inherent problem of mysql_* functions, but a problem of incorrect usage.
    – Agamemnus
    Feb 2, 2014 at 5:29
  • 2
    @Agamemnus The problem is that mysql_* makes it easy to implement that "incorrect usage", especially for inexperienced programmers. Libraries that implement prepared statements make it harder to make that type of error.
    – Trott
    Feb 2, 2014 at 16:33
79

Because (amongst other reasons) it's much harder to ensure the input data is sanitized. If you use parametrized queries, as one does with PDO or mysqli you can entirely avoid the risk.

As an example, someone could use "enhzflep); drop table users" as a username. The old functions will allow executing multiple statements per query, so something like that nasty bugger can delete a whole table.

If one were to use PDO of mysqli, the user-name would end-up being "enhzflep); drop table users".

See bobby-tables.com.

2
  • 11
    The old functions will allow executing of multiple statements per query - no, they won't. That kind of injection is not possible with ext/mysql - the only way this kind of injection is possible with PHP and MySQL is when using MySQLi and the mysqli_multi_query() function. The kind injection that is possible with ext/mysql and unescaped strings is things like ' OR '1' = '1 to extract data from the database that was not meant to be accessible. In certain situations it is possible to inject sub queries, however it is still not possible to modify the database in this way.
    – DaveRandom
    Dec 30, 2012 at 20:58
  • Yeah, and it's a pain in the ass to make multiple queries. Mysqli* are the same too, at least untl PHP 5.2 (it wasn't automatic, you did need to use mysqli_multi_query [php.net/manual/en/mysqli.multi-query.php][source].
    – Marco
    Oct 17, 2023 at 22:55
76

This answer is written to show just how trivial it is to bypass poorly written PHP user-validation code, how (and using what) these attacks work and how to replace the old MySQL functions with a secure prepared statement - and basically, why Stack Overflow users (probably with a lot of reputation points) are barking at new users asking questions to improve their code.

First off, please feel free to create this test MySQL database (I have called mine prep):

mysql> create table users(
    -> id int(2) primary key auto_increment,
    -> userid tinytext,
    -> pass tinytext);
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.05 sec)

mysql> insert into users values(null, 'Fluffeh', 'mypass');
Query OK, 1 row affected (0.04 sec)

mysql> create user 'prepared'@'localhost' identified by 'example';
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.01 sec)

mysql> grant all privileges on prep.* to 'prepared'@'localhost' with grant option;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)

With that done, we can move to our PHP code.

Let’s assume the following script is the verification process for an admin on a website (it is simplified, but it is working if you copy and use it for testing):

<?php

    if(!empty($_POST['user']))
    {
        $user=$_POST['user'];
    }
    else
    {
        $user='bob';
    }
    if(!empty($_POST['pass']))
    {
        $pass=$_POST['pass'];
    }
    else
    {
        $pass='bob';
    }

    $database='prep';
    $link=mysql_connect('localhost', 'prepared', 'example');
    mysql_select_db($database) or die( "Unable to select database");

    $sql="select id, userid, pass from users where userid='$user' and pass='$pass'";
    //echo $sql."<br><br>";
    $result=mysql_query($sql);
    $isAdmin=false;
    while ($row = mysql_fetch_assoc($result)) {
        echo "My id is ".$row['id']." and my username is ".$row['userid']." and lastly, my password is ".$row['pass']."<br>";
        $isAdmin=true;
        // We have correctly matched the Username and Password
        // Let's give this person full access
    }
    if($isAdmin)
    {
        echo "The check passed. We have a verified admin!<br>";
    }
    else
    {
        echo "You could not be verified. Please try again...<br>";
    }
    mysql_close($link);

?>
<form name="exploited" method='post'>
    User: <input type='text' name='user'><br>
    Pass: <input type='text' name='pass'><br>
    <input type='submit'>
</form>

It seems legitimate enough at first glance.

The user has to enter a login and password, right?

Brilliant. Now enter the following:

user: bob
pass: somePass

and submit it.

The output is as follows:

You could not be verified. Please try again...

Super! It is working as expected. Now let’s try the actual username and password:

user: Fluffeh
pass: mypass

Amazing! High fives all round; the code is correctly verified an admin. It's perfect!

Well, not really. Let’s say the user is a clever little person. Let’s say the person is me.

Enter in the following:

user: bob
pass: n' or 1=1 or 'm=m

And the output is:

The check passed. We have a verified admin!

Congratulations! You just allowed me to enter your super-protected admins only section with me entering a false username and a false password. Seriously, if you don't believe me, create the database with the code I provided, and run this PHP code - which at glance really does seem to verify the username and password rather nicely.

So, in answer, that is why you are being yelled at.

So, let’s have a look at what went wrong, and why I just got into your super-admin-only-bat-cave. I took a guess and assumed that you weren't being careful with your inputs and simply passed them to the database directly. I constructed the input in a way that would change the query that you were actually running. So, what was it supposed to be, and what did it end up being?

select id, userid, pass from users where userid='$user' and pass='$pass'

That's the query, but when we replace the variables with the actual inputs that we used, we get the following:

select id, userid, pass from users where userid='bob' and pass='n' or 1=1 or 'm=m'

See how I constructed my "password" so that it would first close the single quote around the password, then introduce a completely new comparison? Then just for safety, I added another "string" so that the single quote would get closed as expected in the code we originally had.

However, this isn't about folks yelling at you now; this is about showing you how to make your code more secure.

Okay, so what went wrong, and how can we fix it?

This is a classic SQL injection attack. One of the simplest for that matter. On the scale of attack vectors, this is a toddler attacking a tank - and winning.

So, how do we protect your sacred admin section and make it nice and secure? The first thing to do will be to stop using those really old and deprecated mysql_* functions. I know; you followed a tutorial you found online and it works, but it's old, it's outdated and in the space of a few minutes, I have just broken past it without so much as breaking a sweat.

Now, you have the better options of using mysqli_ or PDO. I am personally a big fan of PDO, so I will be using PDO in the rest of this answer. There are pros and cons, but personally I find that the pros far outweigh the cons. It's portable across multiple database engines—whether you are using MySQL or Oracle or just about bloody anything. Just by changing the connection string, it has all the fancy features we want to use and it is nice and clean. I like clean.

Now, let’s have a look at that code again, this time written using a PDO object:

<?php

    if(!empty($_POST['user']))
    {
        $user=$_POST['user'];
    }
    else
    {
        $user='bob';
    }
    if(!empty($_POST['pass']))
    {
        $pass=$_POST['pass'];
    }
    else
    {
        $pass='bob';
    }
    $isAdmin=false;

    $database='prep';
    $pdo=new PDO ('mysql:host=localhost;dbname=prep', 'prepared', 'example');
    $sql="select id, userid, pass from users where userid=:user and pass=:password";
    $myPDO = $pdo->prepare($sql, array(PDO::ATTR_CURSOR => PDO::CURSOR_FWDONLY));
    if($myPDO->execute(array(':user' => $user, ':password' => $pass)))
    {
        while($row=$myPDO->fetch(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC))
        {
            echo "My id is ".$row['id']." and my username is ".$row['userid']." and lastly, my password is ".$row['pass']."<br>";
            $isAdmin=true;
            // We have correctly matched the Username and Password
            // Lets give this person full access
        }
    }

    if($isAdmin)
    {
        echo "The check passed. We have a verified admin!<br>";
    }
    else
    {
        echo "You could not be verified. Please try again...<br>";
    }

?>
<form name="exploited" method='post'>
    User: <input type='text' name='user'><br>
    Pass: <input type='text' name='pass'><br>
    <input type='submit'>
</form>

The major differences are that there are no more mysql_* functions. It's all done via a PDO object, secondly, and it is using a prepared statement. Now, what's a prepared statement you ask? It's a way to tell the database ahead of running a query, and what the query is that we are going to run. In this case, we tell the database: "Hi, I am going to run a select statement wanting id, userid and pass from the table users where the userid is a variable and the pass is also a variable.".

Then, in the execute statement, we pass the database an array with all the variables that it now expects.

The results are fantastic. Let’s try those username and password combinations from before again:

user: bob
pass: somePass

User wasn't verified. Awesome.

How about:

user: Fluffeh
pass: mypass

Oh, I just got a little excited; it worked: The check passed. We have a verified admin!

Now, let’s try the data that a clever chap would enter to try to get past our little verification system:

user: bob
pass: n' or 1=1 or 'm=m

This time, we get the following:

You could not be verified. Please try again...

This is why you are being yelled at when posting questions. It's because people can see that your code can be bypassed without even trying. Please, do use this question and answer to improve your code, to make it more secure and to use functions that are current.

Lastly, this isn't to say that this is perfect code. There are many more things that you could do to improve it. Use hashed passwords for example, and ensure that when you store sensitive information in the database, you don't store it in plain text, have multiple levels of verification—but really, if you just change your old injection prone code to this, you will be well along the way to writing good code—and the fact that you have gotten this far and are still reading gives me a sense of hope that you will not only implement this type of code when writing your websites and applications, but that you might go out and research those other things I just mentioned—and more. Write the best code you can, not the most basic code that barely functions.

1
  • 4
    Thank you for your answer! Have my +1! It's worth noting that mysql_* in on itself isn't insecure, but it does promote insecure code via bad tutorials and the lack of a proper statement prepare API. Sep 18, 2013 at 12:31
39

The MySQL extension is the oldest of the three and was the original way that developers used to communicate with MySQL. This extension is now being deprecated in favor of the other two alternatives because of improvements made in newer releases of both PHP and MySQL.

  • MySQLi is the 'improved' extension for working with MySQL databases. It takes advantage of features that are available in newer versions of the MySQL server, exposes both a function-oriented and an object-oriented interface to the developer and a does few other nifty things.

  • PDO offers an API that consolidates most of the functionality that was previously spread across the major database access extensions, i.e. MySQL, PostgreSQL, SQLite, MSSQL, etc. The interface exposes high-level objects for the programmer to work with database connections, queries and result sets, and low-level drivers perform communication and resource handling with the database server. A lot of discussion and work is going into PDO and it’s considered the appropriate method of working with databases in modern, professional code.

1
  • Yeah, but I had too create a DB Driver to work with both oracle and mysql, I've discovered that PDO isn't officially supported by Oracle, so there's that :( Great explanation about PDO @Alexander.
    – Marco
    Oct 17, 2023 at 22:59
24

I find the above answers really lengthy, so to summarize:

The mysqli extension has a number of benefits, the key enhancements over the mysql extension being:

  • Object-oriented interface
  • Support for Prepared Statements
  • Support for Multiple Statements
  • Support for Transactions
  • Enhanced debugging capabilities
  • Embedded server support

Source: MySQLi overview


As explained in the above answers, the alternatives to mysql are mysqli and PDO (PHP Data Objects).

  • API supports server-side Prepared Statements: Supported by MYSQLi and PDO
  • API supports client-side Prepared Statements: Supported only by PDO
  • API supports Stored Procedures: Both MySQLi and PDO
  • API supports Multiple Statements and all MySQL 4.1+ functionality - Supported by MySQLi and mostly also by PDO

Both MySQLi and PDO were introduced in PHP 5.0, whereas MySQL was introduced prior to PHP 3.0. A point to note is that MySQL is included in PHP5.x though deprecated in later versions.

4
  • 2
    Your answer is too lengthy, while the real summary is "mysql ext is no more". That's all Sep 7, 2016 at 15:13
  • 1
    @YourCommonSense My answer is to why mysqli replaced mysql. The point is not to say Mysqli exists today so use it.. Everyone knows that!
    – Ani Menon
    Sep 7, 2016 at 15:16
  • 1
    Well, apart from the fact that nobody asked why mysqli replaced mysql, it doesn't answer this question either. It does answer why mysqli was introduced. But it doesn't explain why mysql and mysqli weren't allowed to live in parallel Sep 7, 2016 at 15:19
  • @YourCommonSense Also the OP's question is "Why should I use something else even if they work on my site?" and that's the reason I pointed out the changes and improvements. You may look at all other answers they are long so I thought I should summarize it.
    – Ani Menon
    Sep 7, 2016 at 15:23
10

It's possible to define almost all mysql_* functions using mysqli or PDO. Just include them on top of your old PHP application, and it will work on PHP7. My solution here.

<?php

define('MYSQL_LINK', 'dbl');
$GLOBALS[MYSQL_LINK] = null;

function mysql_link($link=null) {
    return ($link === null) ? $GLOBALS[MYSQL_LINK] : $link;
}

function mysql_connect($host, $user, $pass) {
    $GLOBALS[MYSQL_LINK] = mysqli_connect($host, $user, $pass);
    return $GLOBALS[MYSQL_LINK];
}

function mysql_pconnect($host, $user, $pass) {
    return mysql_connect($host, $user, $pass);
}

function mysql_select_db($db, $link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    return mysqli_select_db($link, $db);
}

function mysql_close($link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    return mysqli_close($link);
}

function mysql_error($link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    return mysqli_error($link);
}

function mysql_errno($link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    return mysqli_errno($link);
}

function mysql_ping($link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    return mysqli_ping($link);
}

function mysql_stat($link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    return mysqli_stat($link);
}

function mysql_affected_rows($link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    return mysqli_affected_rows($link);
}

function mysql_client_encoding($link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    return mysqli_character_set_name($link);
}

function mysql_thread_id($link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    return mysqli_thread_id($link);
}

function mysql_escape_string($string) {
    return mysql_real_escape_string($string);
}

function mysql_real_escape_string($string, $link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    return mysqli_real_escape_string($link, $string);
}

function mysql_query($sql, $link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    return mysqli_query($link, $sql);
}

function mysql_unbuffered_query($sql, $link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    return mysqli_query($link, $sql, MYSQLI_USE_RESULT);
}

function mysql_set_charset($charset, $link=null){
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    return mysqli_set_charset($link, $charset);
}

function mysql_get_host_info($link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    return mysqli_get_host_info($link);
}

function mysql_get_proto_info($link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    return mysqli_get_proto_info($link);
}
function mysql_get_server_info($link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    return mysqli_get_server_info($link);
}

function mysql_info($link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    return mysqli_info($link);
}

function mysql_get_client_info() {
    $link = mysql_link();
    return mysqli_get_client_info($link);
}

function mysql_create_db($db, $link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    $db = str_replace('`', '', mysqli_real_escape_string($link, $db));
    return mysqli_query($link, "CREATE DATABASE `$db`");
}

function mysql_drop_db($db, $link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    $db = str_replace('`', '', mysqli_real_escape_string($link, $db));
    return mysqli_query($link, "DROP DATABASE `$db`");
}

function mysql_list_dbs($link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    return mysqli_query($link, "SHOW DATABASES");
}

function mysql_list_fields($db, $table, $link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    $db = str_replace('`', '', mysqli_real_escape_string($link, $db));
    $table = str_replace('`', '', mysqli_real_escape_string($link, $table));
    return mysqli_query($link, "SHOW COLUMNS FROM `$db`.`$table`");
}

function mysql_list_tables($db, $link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    $db = str_replace('`', '', mysqli_real_escape_string($link, $db));
    return mysqli_query($link, "SHOW TABLES FROM `$db`");
}

function mysql_db_query($db, $sql, $link=null) {
    $link = mysql_link($link);
    mysqli_select_db($link, $db);
    return mysqli_query($link, $sql);
}

function mysql_fetch_row($qlink) {
    return mysqli_fetch_row($qlink);
}

function mysql_fetch_assoc($qlink) {
    return mysqli_fetch_assoc($qlink);
}

function mysql_fetch_array($qlink, $result=MYSQLI_BOTH) {
    return mysqli_fetch_array($qlink, $result);
}

function mysql_fetch_lengths($qlink) {
    return mysqli_fetch_lengths($qlink);
}

function mysql_insert_id($qlink) {
    return mysqli_insert_id($qlink);
}

function mysql_num_rows($qlink) {
    return mysqli_num_rows($qlink);
}

function mysql_num_fields($qlink) {
    return mysqli_num_fields($qlink);
}

function mysql_data_seek($qlink, $row) {
    return mysqli_data_seek($qlink, $row);
}

function mysql_field_seek($qlink, $offset) {
    return mysqli_field_seek($qlink, $offset);
}

function mysql_fetch_object($qlink, $class="stdClass", array $params=null) {
    return ($params === null)
        ? mysqli_fetch_object($qlink, $class)
        : mysqli_fetch_object($qlink, $class, $params);
}

function mysql_db_name($qlink, $row, $field='Database') {
    mysqli_data_seek($qlink, $row);
    $db = mysqli_fetch_assoc($qlink);
    return $db[$field];
}

function mysql_fetch_field($qlink, $offset=null) {
    if ($offset !== null)
        mysqli_field_seek($qlink, $offset);
    return mysqli_fetch_field($qlink);
}

function mysql_result($qlink, $offset, $field=0) {
    if ($offset !== null)
        mysqli_field_seek($qlink, $offset);
    $row = mysqli_fetch_array($qlink);
    return (!is_array($row) || !isset($row[$field]))
        ? false
        : $row[$field];
}

function mysql_field_len($qlink, $offset) {
    $field = mysqli_fetch_field_direct($qlink, $offset);
    return is_object($field) ? $field->length : false;
}

function mysql_field_name($qlink, $offset) {
    $field = mysqli_fetch_field_direct($qlink, $offset);
    if (!is_object($field))
        return false;
    return empty($field->orgname) ? $field->name : $field->orgname;
}

function mysql_field_table($qlink, $offset) {
    $field = mysqli_fetch_field_direct($qlink, $offset);
    if (!is_object($field))
        return false;
    return empty($field->orgtable) ? $field->table : $field->orgtable;
}

function mysql_field_type($qlink, $offset) {
    $field = mysqli_fetch_field_direct($qlink, $offset);
    return is_object($field) ? $field->type : false;
}

function mysql_free_result($qlink) {
    try {
        mysqli_free_result($qlink);
    } catch (Exception $e) {
        return false;
    }
    return true;
}
0
0

Don't use mysql, because it is deprecated. Use Mysqli instead.

What Deprecated Means:

It means don't use some specific function/method/software feature/particular software practice. It just means that it should not be used, because there is (or there will be) a better alternative in that software that should be used instead.

Several common issues can arise when using deprecated functions:

1. Functions just flat out stop working: Applications or scripts might rely on functions that are simply no longer supported. Thus use their improved versions or alternative.

2. Warning messages display about deprecation: These messages don’t normally interfere with site functionality. However, in some cases, they might disrupt the process of the server sending headers.

For example: This can cause login issues (cookies/sessions don’t get set properly) or forwarding issues (301/302/303 redirects).

Keep in mind that:

-Deprecated software is still a part of the software.

-Deprecated code is just a status (label) of the code.

Key differences in MYSQL vs MYSQLI mysql*

  • Old database driver
  • MySQL can only be used procedurally
  • No protection from SQL injection attack
  • Was deprecated in PHP 5.5.0 and was removed in PHP 7

mysqli

  • New database driver
  • Currently under usage
  • Prepared statements protect from attacks
2
  • Inconsistent spelling (or may be different things in different contexts here): Mysqli and MYSQLI. And mysql, MySQL, and MySQL. Please respond by editing (changing) your answer, not here in comments. (But *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** without *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** "Edit:", "Update:", or similar - the answer should appear as if it was written today) Aug 3, 2023 at 14:50
  • (Sorry for the shouting, but even that may not be enough to prevent "Update" or "Edit" being used (based on past experience).) Aug 3, 2023 at 14:50
-1

There isn't any need to update if you are sure you don't want to upgrade the PHP version. But at the same time, you won't get security updates either which will make your website more vulnerable to hackers. That's the main reason.

1
  • There is already an accepted answer with 2k+ votes, please provide more details on how your answer addresses the question. You can provide some links and describe how it can help future readers.
    – Kuro Neko
    May 18, 2022 at 3:48

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