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II would like to store two values (an email and a password) in a MySQL db using PHP. The input is passed to the PHP page via Ajax in jQuery (through an onclick event on a website).

Now I want to protect this PHP query against SQL injection - I am talking about a standard website so I don't want to overdo it but I think some standard protection can't be bad.

Below is what I had before just to ensure that the general procedure is working which it is. I then tried to increase security by using password encryption and statements but I am not sure if I did this the right way + I don't know if and how this needs to be applied to the Select part as well (where I am checking if the email already exists).

I've seen plenty of pages on this topic but as a beginner that's exactly my problem here. Can someone tell with this as an example what should be changed or added here and maybe provide some short explanations ? I would like to keep using MySQLi if possible.

Old PHP:

$conn = new mysqli($servername, $username, $password, $dbname);
$conn->set_charset("utf8");
if($conn->connect_error){
    die("Connection failed: " . $conn->connect_error);
}
$email = $_POST["email"];
$pw = $_POST["pw"]; 

$sql = "SELECT email FROM Users WHERE email = '" . $email . "'";
$query = $conn->query($sql);
if(mysqli_num_rows($query) > 0){
    echo "Record already exists";
}else{
    $sql = "INSERT INTO Users (email, pw) VALUES ('" . $email . "', '" . $pw . "')";
    if($conn->query($sql)){
        echo "Update successful";
    }else{
        echo "Update failed";
    };
}
$conn->close();

New PHP:

$conn = new mysqli($servername, $username, $password, $dbname);
$conn->set_charset("utf8");
if($conn->connect_error){
    die("Connection failed: " . $conn->connect_error);
}
$email = $_POST["email"];
$pw = password_hash($_POST["pw"], PASSWORD_BCRYPT); 

$sql = "SELECT email FROM Users WHERE email = '" . $email . "'";
$query = $conn->query($sql);
if(mysqli_num_rows($query) > 0){
    echo "Record already exists";
}else{
    $sql = $conn->prepare("INSERT INTO Users (email, pw) VALUES ('" . $email . "', '" . $pw . "')");
    $sql->bind_param('s', $name);
    $sql->execute();
    $result = $sql->get_result();
    if($result){
        echo "Update successful";
    }else{
        echo "Update failed";
    };
}
$conn->close();
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2 Answers 2

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In the New PHP code snippet, you are still vulnerable to injections.
You are using a prepared statement in the insert part, but you are not actually using the preparations strengths correctly.

When creating a prepared statement, you create a query in which you add placeholders instead of the raw values:

$stmt = $conn->prepare("INSERT INTO Users (email, pw) VALUES (?, ?)");

The question marks are the placeholders and are later replaced by using the bind_param method:

$stmt->bind_param('ss', $email, $pw);

The ss part of the bind call tells the mysql db that its two strings that are passed to the database (s for string, i for int etc).
You are binding a param ($name) but it has no placeholder nor any type of reference in the query..?

Your select statement on the other hand is still unsafe and open to vulnerabilities.
I would probably use a prepared statement there to, just as with the insert part.

You always want to make sure that input from the user is "safe" for the database, if you concat a query string and add user input into it, the database will not escape the strings, it will just run it.

Only use standard query method calls when you write the full query yourself, without any input params, and especially no input params that the user passed!

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  • Thanks a lot for this and sorry for the late response. This is awesome and the explanations here are really helpful ! Is there a way I can send you the updated query once I completed the above ? Just want to make sure it is ok then since this is the first time I am writing something like this.
    – keewee279
    Jun 22, 2015 at 9:01
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    Looks a lot better. You could change your mysqli_num_rows($result) to use the OOP mysqli style(which you use in all the other code): $stmt->num_rows. You could also throw in a regex check on the email to validate it (so that it is actually an email address), but what you have now should work (have not ran code, so there might be syntax errors that i cant see in the code snippet, but the general idea is correct, hehe).
    – Jite
    Jun 22, 2015 at 9:19
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    No need, the statement already know about the result, so all you need to do is check the num_rows property of the statement object. Data from javascript can always be modified by the user, thats why its so important to validate all input on the server side (php). Now, the email address wont be vulnerable, due to the prepared statements, but it could potentially be something else than a email address.
    – Jite
    Jun 22, 2015 at 9:35
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    Instead of checking $result, check if there is any error in the statement: if($stmt->errno !== 0) { echo "Update failed: " . $stmt->error; } Should show you the error.
    – Jite
    Jun 22, 2015 at 9:37
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    Well, you don't HAVE to validate it again, but it would be good to do if you wish to make sure that it actually is an email address, as it could have been tampered with by the user.
    – Jite
    Jun 22, 2015 at 9:39
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$query = $mysqli->prepare("INSERT INTO `table` (`col1`, `col2`) VALUES (?, ?)");
$col1 = 100;
$col2 = 14;
$query->bind_param('ii', $col1, $col2);
$query->execute();
$query->close();
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  • Thanks for this as well and sorry for the late response !
    – keewee279
    Jun 22, 2015 at 9:01

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