When seeing people writing MySQL queries using variable interpolation/concatenation into the SQL string, it's common to recommend that they switch to using prepared statements with bound parameters. This is fine.
Many of the comments make reference to Little Bobby Tables, a cute XKCD comic that shows the danger of interpolating unsanitized user input into queries. The only problem is that this example won't really work -- the danger isn't really as bad as it makes it seem.
The example in the comic has ;DROP TABLE Students; --
in it. The intent is that when you concatenate this into your original query, it splits it into multiple queries, the second of which is supposed to remove a table from the database. But this won't actually work, because most database APIs in common use do not allow multiple queries in a single request.
In particular, the only way to do it from PHP is by using the mysqli
extension and its mysqli_multi_query()
function; the more common mysqli_query()
function will not accept multiple queries.
There certainly are good reasons to worry about SQL-Injection, and one of the most up-voted php questions on SO is about how to prevent it. Am I being too pedantic in finding this reference inappropriate in our technical context, though? Is it OK to exaggerate the danger to get the point across to newbies?
If there's a concensus that agrees with me, what could we do about it? Would a comment filter that detects URLs like this be appropriate?