Aside from the silly question that can be answered just by reading the manual page, there is much more important problem stated:
would the safe
function properly handle the sql injection?
No.
As long as safe()
function basically does nothing but applying the mysql_real_escape_string over the passed argument, it shouldn't be named this way.
Because applying the mysql_real_escape_string has nothing to do with injections or safety at all.
At the very least this function has to add quotes around passed value in addition to escaping. It will make some queries erroneous but at least safe.
Is there a way to write a convenient function like the above one liner while making sure all the variables that are wrapped in a safe like function are properly escaped.
Sure.
Use placeholders.
$rs = getrs($dbh,"select firstname,lastname from users where userid=?",$uid);
A custom handler will substitute the placeholder ?
with safely prepared value.
Here is a function I wrote long time ago with the same intention as your "oneliner" but more sensible one, with both safety and ease of use in mind.
It surely not ideal - no %
chars have to be placed in the query directly as it's using printf syntax. And it does not have a placeholder for the identifiers (as well as many other handy placeholders). And of course an OOP implementation would be much more flexible, having neat distinct methods instead ugly "mode" variable.
But if you want a function
function dbget() {
/*
usage: dbget($mode, $query, $param1, $param2,...);
$mode - "dimension" of result:
0 - resource
1 - scalar
2 - row
3 - array of rows
*/
$args = func_get_args();
if (count($args) < 2) {
trigger_error("dbget: too few arguments");
return false;
}
$mode = array_shift($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, $args);
if (!$query) return false;
$res = mysql_query($query);
if (!$res) {
trigger_error("dbget: ".mysql_error()." in ".$query);
return false;
}
if ($mode === 0) return $res;
if ($mode === 1) {
if ($row = mysql_fetch_row($res)) return $row[0];
else return NULL;
}
$a = array();
if ($mode === 2) {
if ($row = mysql_fetch_assoc($res)) return $row;
}
if ($mode === 3) {
while($row = mysql_fetch_assoc($res)) $a[]=$row;
}
return $a;
}
?>
You may add your $dbh to it's call but I see no point in that.
is there a function in PHP, that you pass the $dbh and it tells you whether it's a mysql or mssql handle
There is absolutely no point in having such function.
When one have to use a database handler, they apparently have to know which database driver it belongs to.
Oh. And I hope you're no going to use mysql_real_escape_string with ms sql.