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I'm working on a Login System for my website, however when I insert all the information (User, password, Email) Into the databse for the sigm-up function, it is setting all the variables to 0. I know that it is not an issue with passing variables, because I have echo'd the Username and Password and they are at what they are meant to be. The code for my sign-up page is as follows:

<?php

include '../includes/conn.php';
include 'salt.php';

if($_POST['signup']){

    $user = $_POST['user'];
    $pass = $_POST['pass'];
    $cpass = $_POST['cpass'];
    $email = $_POST['email'];

        if($pass == $cpass){
            $hpass = create_hash($pass);

            $query = $conn->prepare("INSERT INTO Users (Name, Password, Email) VALUES (?, ?, ?)");
        $query->bind_param('sss', $user, $hpass, $email);
        $query->execute();

            if($query){
                $msg = 'Account created successfully, please check your email to verify it.';
            }else{
                $msg = 'There was an error creating your account: ' . $conn->error . ', please try again later';
            }

            //echo $user . ' ' . $pass . ' ' . $hpass . ' ' . $email;

        }else{
            $msg = 'Passwords do not match.';
        }
}

?>

<html>

    <head>

        <title>DiscFire Softworks - Login test</title>

        <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../includes/ie-styles.css">

        <style type="text/css">

            @import url('../includes/styles.css');

        </style>

    </head>

    <body>

        <div class="body">

            <img src="../images/header.jpg" />

            <div class="navbar">

                <?php

                    $query = $conn->prepare("SELECT Name FROM pages ORDER BY ID asc");
                    $query->execute();
                    $query->bind_result($name);

                    while($query->fetch())
                    {
                        echo '<a href="/?page=' . $name . '">' . $name . '</a>';
                    }

                ?>

            </div>

            <?php
                echo '<p>' . $msg . '</p>';
            ?>

            <form method="POST" action="index.php" id="sign-up">

                <input type="hidden" name="signup" value="1"/>
                <label for="user">Username: </label>
                <input type="text" style="width: 30%; margin-left: 59px;" name="user"></textarea>
                <br />
                <label for="pass">Password: </label>
                <input type="password" style="width: 30%; margin-left: 60px;" name="pass"></textarea>
                <br />
                <label for="cpass">Confirm Password: </label>
                <input type="password" style="width: 30%; margin-left: 1px;" name="cpass"></textarea>
                <br />
                <label for="user">Email: </label>
                <input type="text" style="width: 30%; margin-left: 90px;" name="email"></textarea>
                <input type="submit" />
            </form>

        </div>

    </body>

</html>

Here is the SQL Structure, as requested by @Prix:

http://prntscr.com/2vsmjv

Thanks in advance!

29
  • 1
    It looks like you have significant SQL injection vulnerability. Also, why check for the existing user first and tell the end user that an account already exists? That is generally frowned upon from a security standpoint and actually wastefully adds an extra query call against the database. Simply go for the inset, and if it fails because of unique contraints, just tell the user that the account cannot be created. Can you show a dump of your query before it is executed?
    – Mike Brant
    Feb 24, 2014 at 18:16
  • 1
    why are you using textarea instead of input fields? You know they can use enter and several other character that can break your login system if not properly sanitized? Also you should make Name a unique field so you don't have to waste a query just to know if its open or not. You're already using MySQLi it seems why not use prepared statements so you can be safe against injection? There is no point moving from mysql_* library into MySQLi if you're going to repeat the same mistakes.
    – Prix
    Feb 24, 2014 at 18:18
  • Looks like you have significantly nonsensical table declaration. Feb 24, 2014 at 18:20
  • @prix: and exactly how does switching to an input field prevent injection problems? You realize that textarea and input are fundamentally identical once the form's submitted? they're both just key=value in the data stream.
    – Marc B
    Feb 24, 2014 at 18:26
  • @programmingturtle Please look at using this library for db connection/interaction. doctrine-project.org/projects/dbal.html Feb 24, 2014 at 18:26

1 Answer 1

-1

Seems I set the row's to integers... whoops.

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