0

Now I am using the following function to secure my strings :

  function secure($data)
  {
    $data = trim($data);
    $data = htmlspecialchars($data);
    $data = str_replace("'", '"', $data);
    $search = array(chr(0xC2).chr(0xA0),chr(0xC2).chr(0x90),
                              chr(0xC2).chr(0x9D),chr(0xC2).chr(0x81),
                              chr(0xC2).chr(0x8D),chr(0xC2).chr(0x8F),
                              chr(0xC2).chr(0xAD),chr(0xAD));
    $data = str_replace($search, "", $data);
    return $data;
  }

Will this function be enought to secure strings?

Which methods will you use to secure your strings to insert into MySQL and to prevent bugs such as XSS in HTML page?

5 Answers 5

3

All you need is PDO! Prepared statements and stored procedures.

If you want to remove javascript from your code

  • take a look at htmlpurifier.

  • use regular expression: $html = preg_replace('#<script(.*?)>(.*?)</script>#is', '', $html);

  • or use DOMDocument

    $doc = new DOMDocument();
    $doc->loadHTML($html); // load the HTML string we want to strip
    
    $script_tags = $doc->getElementsByTagName('script'); // get all the script tags
    
    $length = $script_tags->length;
    
    for ($i = 0; $i < $length; $i++) {
      $script_tags->item(0)->parentNode->removeChild($script_tags->item(0)); // for each tag, remove it from the DOM
    
    }
    
    $no_script_html_string = $doc->saveHTML(); // get the HTML string back
    
1
  • will it also secure strings to add them into html page without < > or javascript code?
    – John
    Jul 27, 2012 at 14:09
2

You're playing with two different technologies that both require separate sanitization methods.

MySQL requires protection from SQL-Injection, most commonly breaking out of quotes and putting non-numeric types in numeric fields. String-variables in this case can be secured by a number of things. Using Prepared Statements can definitely help; methods such as mysql_real_escape_string(), or mysqli_real_escape_string() can sanitize individual string variables where a combination of is_numeric() and intval() can help with integers. It all depends on your input, if you want to sanitize on the per-variable level; a Prepared Statement will give you more leniency by doing it on the statement/variable level.

XSS, on the other hand, is another beast entirely. Methods such as htmlentities() and htmlspecialchars() can help when outputting data, but it also highly depends on the context in which the data is being outputted. If you're outputting data such as <span><?=$variable;?></span>, either of these functions will help. However, something like <a href="<?=$variable;?>"> will not.

For more details regarding XSS prevention, start with OWASP's XSS (Cross Site Scripting) Prevention Cheat Sheet

1

By saying 'Secure my strings' I am assuming you mean for output?

For DB output (which includes varaibles used in SELECT queries), use *_escape_string functions or even better use prepared statements with PDO objects.

For html output you should use htmlentities rather than htmlspecialchars

Additionally if running shell commands from input use escapeshellarg and escapeshellcmd

2
  • Unfortunately htmlentities returns weird symbols instead of Russian Characters
    – John
    Jul 27, 2012 at 14:24
  • You need to specify the encoding Jul 27, 2012 at 14:26
1

The best way to secure against SQL Injection is to use parameterized queries. And against XSS you can use a really good library (PHP) called HTML Purifier http://htmlpurifier.org/ hope it helps

-3

The only method you have to know is : addslashes :)

3
  • That's not true. addslashes() is known to be not secure at all ;-).
    – thedom
    Jul 27, 2012 at 14:07
  • e.g. shiflett.org/blog/2006/jan/…
    – thedom
    Jul 27, 2012 at 14:09
  • Your post was made on 2006 and if you continue to create tables in default-character-set=GBK i hope you love much prehistory than UTF.
    – PoulsQ
    Jul 27, 2012 at 14:13

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