vote up 1 vote down star
6

According to the PHP manual, in order to make code more portable, they recommend using something like the following for escaping data:

if (!get_magic_quotes_gpc()) {
    $lastname = addslashes($_POST['lastname']);
} else {
    $lastname = $_POST['lastname'];
}

I have other validation checks that I will be performing, but how secure is the above strictly in terms of escaping data? I also saw that magic quotes will be deprecated in PHP 6. How will that affect the above code? I would prefer not to have to rely on a database-specific escaping function like mysql_real_escape_string().

flag

34% accept rate

10 Answers

vote up 0 vote down

Your sample code is backwards, you should be doing the following:

if (get_magic_quotes_gpc()) {
  $lastname = stripslashes($_POST['lastname']);
} else {
  $lastname = $_POST['lastname'];
}

Note that this leaves your input data in a 'raw' state exactly as the user typed it - no extra backslashes and potentially loaded with SQL Injection and XSRF attacks - and that's exactly what you want. Then, you make sure you always use one of the following:

  • When echoing the variable into HTML, wrap it in htmlentities()
  • When putting it into mysql, use prepared statements or else mysql_real_escape_string() as a minimum.
  • When echoing the variable into Javascritpt code, use json_encode()

Joel Spolsky has some good starting advice in Making Wrong Code Look Wrong

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Put a requirement of PHP 5.2 or higher on your code and use the filter API. The filter_* functions access the raw input data directly (they don't ever touch $_POST etc.) so they're completely unaffected by magic_quotes_gpc.

Then this example:

if (!get_magic_quotes_gpc()) {
    $lastname = addslashes($_POST['lastname']);
} else {
    $lastname = $_POST['lastname'];
}

Can become this:

$lastname = filter_input(INPUT_POST, 'lastname');
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

"I would prefer not to have to rely on a database-specific escaping function like mysql_real_escape_string()"

Also addslashes can be tricked as well check out this post:

http://shiflett.org/blog/2006/jan/addslashes-versus-mysql-real-escape-string

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

You may try this:

if (get_magic_quotes_gpc()) { 
          $_REQUEST = array_map('stripslashes', $_REQUEST); 
          $_GET = array_map('stripslashes', $_GET);
          $_POST = array_map('stripslashes', $_POST);
          $_GET = array_map('stripslashes', $_COOKIES);

    }
link|flag
vote up 5 vote down

Magic quotes were a design error. Their use is incompatible with retainnig your sanity.

I prefer:

if (get_magic_quotes_gpc()) {
   throw new Exception("Turn magic quotes off now!");
}

Don't write code for compatibility with inherently broken setups. Instead defend aginst their use by having your code FAIL FAST.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

"I would prefer not to have to rely on a database-specific escaping function like mysql_real_escape_string()"

Then use something like PDO. But you have to reverse the damage done by magic quotes anyway.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Regarding using a database specific escaping function, you pretty much need to. I have found just using addslashes() to fail in rare cases with MySQL. You can write a function to escape which determines which DB you are using and then use the approriate escape function.

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

I use the following code in the header file of my website to reverse the effects of magic_quotes:

<?php

// Strips slashes recursively only up to 3 levels to prevent attackers from
// causing a stack overflow error.
function stripslashes_array(&$array, $iterations=0) {
    if ($iterations < 3) {
        foreach ($array as $key => $value) {
            if (is_array($value)) {
                stripslashes_array($array[$key], $iterations + 1);
            } else {
                $array[$key] = stripslashes($array[$key]);
            }
        }
    }
}

if (get_magic_quotes_gpc()) {
    stripslashes_array($_GET);
    stripslashes_array($_POST);
    stripslashes_array($_COOKIE);
}

?>

Then I can write the rest of my code as if magic_quotes never existed.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Right, it's not the best way to do it and not the most secure. Escaping is best done in relation to what you are escaping for. If it is to store in a mysql database, use mysql_real_escape_string which takes into account other locales, character sets. For HTML, htmlentities. For use in code, escapeshellcmd, escapeshellarg. Yes, you probably need to stirpslashes first if magic quotes is on. But best not to count on it or use it.

link|flag
vote up 8 vote down

Magic quotes are inherently broken. They were meant to sanitize input to the PHP script, but without knowing how that input will be used it's impossible to sanitize correctly. If anything, you're better off checking if magic quotes are enabled, then calling stripslashes() on $_GET/$_POST/$_COOKIES/$_REQUEST, and then sanitizing your variables at the point where you're using it somewhere. E.g. urlencode() if you're using it in a URL, htmlentities() if you're printing it back to a web page, or using your database driver's escaping function if you're storing it to a database. Note those input arrays could contain sub-arrays so you might need to write a function can recurse into the sub-arrays to strip those slashes too.

The PHP man page on magic quotes agrees:

"This feature has been DEPRECATED as of PHP 5.3.0 and REMOVED as of PHP 6.0.0. Relying on this feature is highly discouraged. Magic Quotes is a process that automagically escapes incoming data to the PHP script. It's preferred to code with magic quotes off and to instead escape the data at runtime, as needed."

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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