Tell me more ×
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It's 100% free, no registration required.

I need to create a simple search but I can't afford to use Sphinx.

Here's what I wrote:


keywords = input.split(/\s+/)
queries = []

keywords.each do |keyword|
  queries << sanitize_sql_for_conditions(
              "(classifications.species LIKE '%#{keyword}%' OR 
               classifications.family LIKE '%#{keyword}%' OR 
               classifications.trivial_names LIKE '%#{keyword}%' OR
               place LIKE '%#{keyword}%')")
end

options[:conditions] = queries.join(' AND ')

Now, sanitize_sql_for_conditions does NOT work! It returns simply returns the original string.

How can I rewrite this code to escape malicious code?

share|improve this question
1  
What do you mean you can't afford to use Sphinx? It's free! – John Topley Jul 17 '09 at 14:38

2 Answers

up vote 7 down vote accepted

If you replace the "#{keyword}" with a "?", you can do something like this. Using the question mark will automatically sanitize SQL.

keywords = input.split(/\s+/)
queries = []
vars = []

keywords.each do |keyword|
  queries << "(classifications.species LIKE '%?%' OR 
               classifications.family LIKE '%?%' OR 
               classifications.trivial_names LIKE '%?%' OR
               place LIKE '%?%')"
  vars = vars << keyword << keyword << keyword << keyword
end

options[:conditions] = [queries.join(' AND '), vars].flatten
share|improve this answer

I use a lot of custom conditions in ActiveRecord, but I like to package them in an array of condition arrays, then combine 'em, using the ? value lets AR santize them automatically:

conditions = Array.new
conditions << ["name = ?", "bob"]
conditions << ["(created_at > ? and created_at < ?)", 1.year.ago, 1.year.from_now]  

User.find(:first, :conditions => combine_conditions(conditions))

 def combine_conditions(somearray) # takes an array of condition set arrays and reform them into a AR-compatible condition array
   conditions = Array.new
   values = Array.new
   somearray.each do |conditions_array|
     conditions << conditions_array[0] # place the condition in an array
     # extract values
     for i in (1..conditions_array.size - 1)
       values << conditions_array[i]
     end 
   end
   [conditions.join(" AND "), values].flatten
 end
share|improve this answer

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.