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I am using mysql database for an application. I get some user details. Once user uses select keyword in his answer, the Insert query causes problems in mysql. I am using nearly 300 insert queries in my over all application. Select keyword makes problem.

How to solve it in easy way?

Thanks in advance

UPDATED:

$query = "INSERT INTO `feedback_entry_mailactivity_log` (  `subject`, `body_text`, `to_mail_id`, `from_mail_id`, `cc_mail_id`, `created_user_id`, `created_date_time`, `last_updated_user_id`, `last_updated_date_time`, `feedback_entry_id`, `feedback_id`, `account_id`, `section_id`)
                    VALUES ('".$subject."', '".$body_text."','".$to_mail_id."','".$from_mail_id."','".$cc_mail_id."','".$assign_to_userid."', NOW(),'".$assign_to_userid."', NOW(),'".$feedback_entry_id."','".$feedback_id."','".$this->account_id."','".$temp_sectionid."' );";
        $this->db->execute($query);

In this case if $subject="select a tag";

Thus when I use keyword select insert query doesn't works

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  • Sorry, I don't understand. Can you please re-write your issue, and provide details (including code examples)?
    – OMG Ponies
    Feb 26, 2011 at 4:22
  • Please post the offending line of code. Feb 26, 2011 at 4:23
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    I bet 20¢ it's mod_security blocking it or a simpleminded badwords filter in the forgotten mysql query wrapper.
    – mario
    Feb 26, 2011 at 4:23
  • how to solve this @mario
    – Mohan Ram
    Feb 26, 2011 at 4:37
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    @Mohan: Look at php.net/manual/en/mysqli.prepare.php (or search for "prepared statement PHP") to find out the proper way to do these queries. Feb 26, 2011 at 4:48

1 Answer 1

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The problem is the use of string-generated SQL statement -- this can lead to incorrect escaping and injection attacks (or mis-behaviors) leading to errors like above. Imagine if one of the input variables -- the one with 'SELECT' in it -- contains the SQL string-escape character such as Wish this would' SELECT FAIL. (This might not be the exact problem in this case and the real problem could lay with some other layer trying to "protect" the use of the bad access method(s).)

To fix this problem correctly use PDO (or similar) and prepared-statements. (Jeremiah Willcock suggested mysqli_prepare).

The parameters to prepared statements don't need to be quoted; the driver automatically handles this. If an application exclusively uses prepared statements, the developer can be sure that no SQL injection will occur (however, if other portions of the query are being built up with unescaped input, SQL injection is still possible).

Note: Incorrect "solutions" include mysql_real_escape_string and similar. There are very few -- perhaps none for static DQL -- cases when "manual escaping with SQL string-building" approaches like this should be used.

Happy coding.

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