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I was wondering if it was possible to override column value in the Where clause of a SQL query (MySQL in my case).

To be more clear, here is an example :

Suppose a basic query is :

SELECT lastname, firstname FROM contacts WHERE lastname = "Doe";

Is it possible to force lastname and firstname to return value from an other table, just by modifying what is after the WHERE part ? Something like

SELECT lastname, firstname FROM contacts WHERE lastname = (SELECT name FROM companies);

I am currently testing a web application, and I found a SQL Injection flaw where I can change Doe to whatever I want, but I'm limited with only one query (mysql_query restriction of PHP) and addslashes (so no " and ').

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  • What happens when you execute this query? (You may want to "select top 1")
    – Ben
    Nov 5, 2012 at 19:22

2 Answers 2

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possible could be

SELECT lastname, firstname FROM contacts WHERE lastname = "{0}" UNION SELECT {1} --

where {0} non existed value and {1} data from other tables

UPDATE from wiki example

$res = mysql_query("SELECT author FROM news WHERE id=" . $_REQUEST['id'] ." AND author LIKE ('a%')");

become

SELECT author FROM news WHERE id=-1 UNION SELECT password FROM admin/* AND author LIKE ('a%')
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The syntax that you used in your SELECT ... WHERE clause is a standard SQL feature called a subquery.

In the context of your example there is a restriction on the subquery to return just single value. Otherwise your query is a valid SQL and you can change subquery to return multiple values (with implicit OR) using IN operator like this:

SELECT lastname, firstname FROM contacts 
 WHERE lastname IN (
                    SELECT name FROM companies
                   );

You can dig deeper into this subject to uncover correlated subquery.

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  • I'm not sure you understood what I asked (or I maybe didn't asked clearly enough :)), I want to list all the name from companies into lastname, not cross the result between contacts and companies.
    – Cyril N.
    Nov 5, 2012 at 20:24

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