I am forced to generate dynamic SQL. I realize it greatly complicates matters to do so, and the below example is silly and obviously does not require dynamic SQL, and is just used to illustrate this question.
Escaping user provided data is not enough, and the 3rd query in the below script is suspect to SQL Injection.
I have found that it is generally easiest to design the application so that all user inputs are integers, and simply typecast their input using (int)$_POST['user_input']
.
I now have a need where the user_input needs to be text. What should I do to prevent SQL injection? One option is PHP's ctype_alpha()
, however, I don't want "user,input" to result as FALSE, but should either remain as is or be converted to "userinput" (either scenerio is okay for me). I am thinking of something like $user_input= preg_replace('/[^a-z0-9,]/i', '', $_POST['user_input']);
. Will this be 100% safe?
EDIT
Note that I am not executing the below query, but inserting it into a database, and as such, prepared statements are not appliable. You might believe that dynamic SQL generation should never be used, but telling me to use prepared statements is not right.
<?php
$id=123;
$query='SELECT * FROM someTable WHERE someColumn="'.$_POST['user_input'].'"';
$sql='INSERT INTO meta_table (id,sql) VALUES (?,?)';
$stmt=db::db()->prepare($sql);
$stmt->execute(array($id,$query));
$sql='SELECT sql FROM meta_table WHERE id=123';
$stmt = db::db()->exec($sql);
$query=$stmt->fetchColumn();
$stmt = db::db()->exec($query); //Prone to SQL Injection
$rs=$stmt->fetchColumn();
?>