Prepared statements only work with literals, not with identifiers. So you need to construct the SQL statement with the identifiers filled in (and properly escaped).
Properly escaping literals is tricky, though. PDO doesn't provide a method for doing literal-escaping, and MySQL's method of escaping literals (using `
) is completely different from every other database and from the ANSI SQL standard. See this question for more detail and for workarounds.
If we simplify the issue of escaping the identifiers, you can use a solution like this:
// assuming mysql semantics
function escape_sql_identifier($ident) {
if (preg_match('/[\x00`\\]/', $ident)) {
throw UnexpectedValueException("SQL identifier cannot have backticks, nulls, or backslashes: {$ident}");
}
return '`'.$ident.'`';
}
// returns a prepared statement and the positional parameter values
function prepareinsert(PDO $pdo, $table, $assoc) {
$params = array_values($assoc);
$literals = array_map('escape_sql_identifier', array_keys($assoc));
$sqltmpl = "INSERT INTO %s (%s) VALUES (%s)";
$sql = sprintf($sqltmpl, escape_sql_identifier($table), implode(',',$literals), implode(',', array_fill(0,count($literals),'?'));
return array($pdo->prepare($sql), $params);
}
function prefixkeys($arr) {
$prefixed = array();
for ($arr as $k=>$v) {
$prefixed[':'.$k] = $v;
}
return $prefixed;
}
// returns a prepared statement with named parameters
// this is less safe because the parameter names (keys) may be vulnerable to sql injection
// In both circumstances make sure you do not trust column names given through user input!
function prepareinsert_named(PDO $pdo, $table, $assoc) {
$params = prefixkeys($assoc);
$literals = array_map('escape_sql_identifier', array_keys($assoc));
$sqltmpl = "INSERT INTO %s (%s) VALUES (%s)";
$sql = sprintf($sqltmpl, escape_sql_identifier($table), implode(',',$literals), implode(', ', array_keys($params)));
return array($pdo->prepare($sql), $params);
}