While this question is rather old, some topics were not really discussed that should be outlined here for others researching the same as the OP.
To summarize everything below:
- Yes always use prepare statements
- Yes use PDO over mysqli over mysql. This way if you switch database systems all you need to do is update the queries instead of queries, function calls, and arguments given it supports prepared statements.
- Always sanitize user supplied data despite using prepared statements with parameters
- Look into a DBAL (Database Abstraction Layer) to ease working with all of these factors and manipulating queries to suit your needs.
There is the topic of PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES which will increase the performance of calling cached queries in MySQL >= 5.1.21 when emulation is turned OFF, which is ENABLED by default. Meaning PHP will emulate the prepare before execute sends it to the actual database. The time between emulated and non-emulated is normally negligible unless working with an external database (not localhost), such as on a cloud, that may have an abnormally high ping rate.
The caching depends on your MySQL settings in my.cnf as well, but MySQL optimization outside the scope of this post.
<?php
$pdo = new \PDO($connection_string);
$pdo->setAttribute( \PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, false );
?>
So keep this in mind since mysqli_ does not provide an API for client side emulation and is always going to use MySQL for preparing statements.
http://www.php.net/manual/en/mysqli.quickstart.prepared-statements.php
Despite having similar features there are differences and you may need features that one API provides while the other does not. See PHP's reference on choosing one API over the other: http://www.php.net/manual/en/mysqlinfo.api.choosing.php
So this pretty much goes along with what you asked with defining your statements application-wide, as cacheable queries would be cached on the MySQL server, and wouldn't need to be prepared application-wide.
The other benefit is that exceptions in your Query would be thrown at prepare() instead of execute() which aids in development to ensure your Queries are correct.
Regardless there is no real world performance benefits of using prepare or not.
Another benefit of prepared statements is working with Transactions if you use InnoDB for MySQL. You can start a transaction, insert a record, get the last insert id, update another table, delete from another, and if anything fails along the way you can rollBack() to before the transaction took place. Otherwise commit the changes if you choose to. For example working with a new order and setting the user's last order column to the new order id, and delete a pending order, but the supplied payment type did not meet the criteria for placing orders from the order_flags table, so you can rollBack() and show the user a friendly error message.
As for security, I am rather baffled no one touched on this. When sending any user supplied data to ANY system including PHP and MySQL, sanitize and standardize it.
Yes prepared statements do provide some security when it comes to escaping the data but it is NOT 100% bullet proof.
So always using prepared statements is far more beneficial than not with no real performance loss, and some benefits with caching, but you should still sanitize your user supplied data.
One step is to typecast the variables to the desired data type you are working with. Using objects would further ease this since you work within a single Model for the data types as opposed to having to remember it each time you work with the same data.
To add on to the above you should look into a database abstraction layer that uses PDO.
For example Doctrine DBAL: http://docs.doctrine-project.org/projects/doctrine-dbal/en/latest/reference/query-builder.html
The added benefits of working with a DBAL+PDO are that
- You can standardize and shorten the amount of work you have to do.
- Aid in sanitization of user supplied data
- Easily manipulate complex queries
- Use nested transactions
- Easily switch between databases
- Your code becomes more portable and usable in other projects
For example I extended PDO and overrode the query(), fetchAll(), and fetch() methods so that they would always use prepared statements and so that I could write SQL statements inside fetch() or fetchAll() instead of having to write everything out again.
EG:
<?php
$pdo = new PDOEnhanced( $connection );
$pdo->fetchAll( "SELECT * FROM foo WHERE bar = 'hi'", PDO::FETCH_OBJ );
//would automatically provide
$stmt = $pdo->prepare( "SELECT * FROM foo WHERE bar=?" );
$stmt->execute( array( 'hi' ) );
$resultSet = $stmt->fetchAll( PDO::FETCH_OBJ )
?>
As for people suggesting that mysql_* style, is much easier to just replace with mysqli_* API. It is not the case. A large portion of mysql_* functions were left out or had arguments changes with mysqli_*
See: http://php.net/manual/en/mysqli.summary.php
You can however get a converter released by Oracle to ease the process: https://wikis.oracle.com/display/mysql/Converting+to+MySQLi
Keep in mind that it is a file source text parser and is not 100% accurate so validate the changes before merging them. It will also add a significant amount of overhead for the globals it creates.