There are a couple of concerns with injection in MongoDB:
$where
JS injection - Building JavaScript functions from user input can result in a query that can behave differently to what you expect. JavaScript functions in general are not a responsible method to program MongoDB queries and it is highly recommended to not use them unless absolutely needed.
- Operator injection - If you allow users to build (from the front) a
$or
or something they could easily manipulate this ability to change your queries. This of course does not apply if you just take data from a set of text fields and manually build a $or
from that data.
- JSON injection - Quite a few people recently have been trying to convert a full JSON document sent (saw this first in JAVA, ironically) from some client side source into a document for insertion into MongoDB. I shouldn't need to even go into why this is bad. A JSON value for a field is fine since, of course, MongoDB is BSON.
As @Burhan stated injection comes from none sanitized input. Fortunately for MongoDB it has object orientated querying.
The problem with SQL injection comes from the word "SQL". SQL is a querying language built up of strings. On the other hand MongoDB actually uses a BSON document to specify a query (an Object). If you keep to the basic common sense rules I gave you above you should never have a problem with an attack vector like:
SELECT * FROM tbl_user WHERE ='';DROP TABLE;
Also MongoDB only supports one operation per command atm (without using eval
, don't ever do that though) so that wouldn't work anyway...
I should add that this does not apply to data validation only injection.