The correct way to avoid SQL injection attacks, no matter which database you use, is to separate the data from SQL, so that data stays data and will never be interpreted as commands by the SQL parser. It is possible to create SQL statement with correctly formatted data parts, but if you don't fully understand the details, you should always use prepared statements and parameterized queries. These are SQL statements that are sent to and parsed by the database server separately from any parameters. This way it is impossible for an attacker to inject malicious SQL.
You basically have two options to achieve this:
Using PDO (for any supported database driver):
$stmt = $pdo->prepare('SELECT * FROM employees WHERE name = :name');
$stmt->execute([ 'name' => $name ]);
foreach ($stmt as $row) {
// Do something with $row
}
Using MySQLi (for MySQL):
$stmt = $dbConnection->prepare('SELECT * FROM employees WHERE name = ?');
$stmt->bind_param('s', $name); // 's' specifies the variable type => 'string'
$stmt->execute();
$result = $stmt->get_result();
while ($row = $result->fetch_assoc()) {
// Do something with $row
}
If you're connecting to a database other than MySQL, there is a driver-specific second option that you can refer to (for example, pg_prepare()
and pg_execute()
for PostgreSQL). PDO is the universal option.
Correctly setting up the connection
Note that when using PDO to access a MySQL database real prepared statements are not used by default. To fix this you have to disable the emulation of prepared statements. An example of creating a connection using PDO is:
$dbConnection = new PDO('mysql:dbname=dbtest;host=127.0.0.1;charset=utf8', 'user', 'password');
$dbConnection->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, false);
$dbConnection->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE, PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION);
In the above example the error mode isn't strictly necessary, but it is advised to add it. This way the script will not stop with a Fatal Error
when something goes wrong. And it gives the developer the chance to catch
any error(s) which are throw
n as PDOException
s.
What is mandatory, however, is the first setAttribute()
line, which tells PDO to disable emulated prepared statements and use real prepared statements. This makes sure the statement and the values aren't parsed by PHP before sending it to the MySQL server (giving a possible attacker no chance to inject malicious SQL).
Although you can set the charset
in the options of the constructor, it's important to note that 'older' versions of PHP (before 5.3.6) silently ignored the charset parameter in the DSN.
Explanation
The SQL statement you pass to prepare
is parsed and compiled by the database server. By specifying parameters (either a ?
or a named parameter like :name
in the example above) you tell the database engine where you want to filter on. Then when you call execute
, the prepared statement is combined with the parameter values you specify.
The important thing here is that the parameter values are combined with the compiled statement, not an SQL string. SQL injection works by tricking the script into including malicious strings when it creates SQL to send to the database. So by sending the actual SQL separately from the parameters, you limit the risk of ending up with something you didn't intend.
Any parameters you send when using a prepared statement will just be treated as strings (although the database engine may do some optimization so parameters may end up as numbers too, of course). In the example above, if the $name
variable contains 'Sarah'; DELETE FROM employees
the result would simply be a search for the string "'Sarah'; DELETE FROM employees"
, and you will not end up with an empty table.
Another benefit of using prepared statements is that if you execute the same statement many times in the same session it will only be parsed and compiled once, giving you some speed gains.
Oh, and since you asked about how to do it for an insert, here's an example (using PDO):
$preparedStatement = $db->prepare('INSERT INTO table (column) VALUES (:column)');
$preparedStatement->execute([ 'column' => $unsafeValue ]);
Can prepared statements be used for dynamic queries?
While you can still use prepared statements for the query parameters, the structure of the dynamic query itself cannot be parametrized and certain query features cannot be parametrized.
For these specific scenarios, the best thing to do is use a whitelist filter that restricts the possible values.
// Value whitelist
// $dir can only be 'DESC', otherwise it will be 'ASC'
if (empty($dir) || $dir !== 'DESC') {
$dir = 'ASC';
}
Best Solution
Several things to notice:
Adding security in a .htaccess can always be done without the .htaccess, by using
<Directory>
instructions in the main configuration (or the virtualhost configuration). It will go faster (if you remove completly support for .htaccess withAllowOverride None
) and you wont get the risk of someone altering your .htaccess.There's several ways of adding security in .htaccess files, one of these ways is by using Basic HTTP Authentification with
.htpasswd
files. These .htpasswd files shouldn't be in the web directory root. One of the other possibility is using HTTP Digest Authentification, with the restriction that very old browsers won't support it (like IE6).We usually encounter HTTP Basic Authentification. This is a very weak protection, simply because of the way it works. At the 1st request you're rejected, then your browser ask you for a password and login, and memorize this password login association for the webserver requested. Then for every request sent to this webserver until you close your browser the login and password will be added in the request header, unencrypted. There's simply a base64 encoding applied to the string 'Yourlogin:Yourpassword', to make it look like a pure ASCII7 strings and prevent encoding problems.
So anyone sniffing your request (wifi hotspot, man in the middle, local network, echo switch, etc) will know your password and login. Bad. The rule is ":
If your webserver is completly in HTTPS no problem (see edit on the bottom), the clear text/password are encrypted by SSL.
For the brute force problem (and yes, some people can try to brute force the login/password, except if you tune a mod_security module to prevent that) the Security Consideration of the htpasswd page is quite clear:
and:
So use SHA
encodinghashing for passwords (even if it's not salted).Another way to let authenticated user browse a directory content is to handle the directory listing and file upload within your application (PHP, Tomcat, etc) and not with the apache automatic listing. In term of security the automatic listing module (mod_autoindex) is something you shouldn't even have on your running apache.
Edit
Full HTTPS server is not required if you want to protect only some url with HTTP authentification. What you really need is that all these protected url should be in https, if non-protected url are in the http domain the authentification headers won't be used as this is a different domain (and the authentification headers are sent by domain). So you could add basic redirection rules in the http domain for these url, maybe something like that: