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Posted by "bruce" on 10/21/32 11:27
here's psuedo of what i envision
now, in my psuedo code, i don't use the stripslashes/quotes/etc... so, i'm
still trying to understand why these functions are needed/required?
thoughts/comments/etc....
thanks
-bruce
--------------------------------------
index.php
if isset($REQUEST['submit'])
{
if (isset($_REQUEST['foo'])
{
get the 'foo' var
$foo = $_REQUEST['foo']
validate the foo var...
$valid_chars = preg_match('valid char vars', $foo)
$len = str_len($foo) >max_str_len
if(valid_chars && len)
{
we have a valid 'foo' var!!!
go ahead and add to the db...
}
else
{
'foo' is invalid, set err msg and return to login
}
}
else
{
gen err and redirect to login page
}
}
else
{
<form php_self post>
<input name=foo>
<submit>
</form>
}
function add_to_db($var)
{
assume that 'var' is valid, but it hasn't been quoted..
$test_sql = "insert into TestTBL name values (%s)";
$test_sql = sprintf($test_sql, $var);
mysql_query($test_sql);
}
-----Original Message-----
From: Gustav Wiberg [mailto:gustav@varupiraten.se]
Sent: Thursday, September 22, 2005 11:14 AM
To: bedouglas@earthlink.net; php-general@lists.php.net
Subject: Re: [PHP] basic user/input form questions... more validation!
----- Original Message -----
From: "bruce" <bedouglas@earthlink.net>
To: <php-general@lists.php.net>
Sent: Thursday, September 22, 2005 8:05 PM
Subject: [PHP] basic user/input form questions... more validation!
> hi...
>
> forgive me!!!
Ok; -) Why? You're just asking... :-)
>
> continuing the thread from yesterday regarding filtering. (and thanks to
> all
> the msgs)
>
> for simplicity. let's deal wit a simple user input form, that's going to
> place the information in a db.
>
> if the app allows the user to enter the input (call it 'foo') and then
> submits the form via a POST, where the data is then written to the db,
> what
> kind of validation should occur? and where should the validation take
> place?
What kind of validation depends on your application. If the foo variable
must be an integer, then you'll have to check if foo is numeric with
is_numberic(). If foo is a string and the length matters, then you would
have to validate so the length isn't more than expected with
strlen()-function
But in all cases you'll have to check if the foo-variable is set with isset.
>
> for my $0.02 worth, there should be be validation of the 'foo' var, to
> determine if the var is legitimate. there should also be
> validation/filterin
> of the var when it's placed in the db_sql command...
>
> my question (and it's basic), what validation should be performed on the
> 'foo' var, and why? i've seen htmlspecialchars/magic_quotes/etc.. in
> varius
> articles, but i can't find a definitive answer!!
You'll have to quote only the variables inside a sql-string. You must use
mysql_real_escape_string for creating a "safe" db-string..
Example:
$sql = "SELECT ID from Table WHERE Foo=" . safeQuote($foo);
and the function safeQuote is like this...
function safeQuote($value)
{
// Stripslashes
if (get_magic_quotes_gpc()) {
$foo = stripslashes($foo);
}
// Quote if not integer
if (!is_numeric($value)) {
$value = "'" . mysql_real_escape_string($foo) . "'";
}
}
I hope this helps a little...
/G
http://www.varupiraten.se/
>
> also, when inserting/updating a db item, what is the 'correct' process for
> data? should all data that gets inserted into a db be quoted? if it
> should,
> what's the 'standard' practice?
>
> psuedo examples of this stuff would be really helpful!
>
> thanks for clarifying some of these issues...
>
> -bruce
> bedouglas@earthlink.net
>
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