• php pdo prepare真的安全吗


    详见 这里

    Let's say I have code like this:

    $dbh = new PDO("blahblah");
    
    $stmt = $dbh->prepare('SELECT * FROM users where username = :username');
    $stmt->execute( array(':username' => $_REQUEST['username']) );

    The PDO documentation says:

    The parameters to prepared statements don't need to be quoted; the driver handles it for you.

    Is that truly all I need to do to avoid SQL injections? Is it really that easy?

    You can assume MySQL if it makes a difference. Also, I'm really only curious about the use of prepared statements against SQL injection. In this context, I don't care about XSS or other possible vulnerabilities.

    The short answer is NO, PDO prepares will not defend you from all possible SQL-Injection attacks. For certain obscure edge-cases.

    I'm adapting this answer to talk about PDO...

    The long answer isn't so easy. It's based off an attack demonstrated here.

    The Attack

    So, let's start off by showing the attack...

    $pdo->query('SET NAMES gbk');
    $var = "xbfx27 OR 1=1 /*";
    $query = 'SELECT * FROM test WHERE name = ? LIMIT 1';
    $stmt = $pdo->prepare($query);
    $stmt->execute(array($var));

    In certain circumstances, that will return more than 1 row. Let's dissect what's going on here:

    1 Selecting a Character Set

    $pdo->query('SET NAMES gbk');

    For this attack to work, we need the encoding that the server's expecting on the connection both to encode ' as in ASCII i.e. 0x27 and to have some character whose final byte is an ASCII  i.e. 0x5c. As it turns out, there are 5 such encodings supported in MySQL 5.6 by default: big5cp932gb2312gbk and sjis. We'll select gbk here.

    Now, it's very important to note the use of SET NAMES here. This sets the character set ON THE SERVER. There is another way of doing it, but we'll get there soon enough.

    2.The Payload

    The payload we're going to use for this injection starts with the byte sequence 0xbf27. In gbk, that's an invalid multibyte character; in latin1, it's the string ¿'. Note that in latin1 and gbk0x27 on its own is a literal ' character.

    We have chosen this payload because, if we called addslashes() on it, we'd insert an ASCII  i.e. 0x5c, before the ' character. So we'd wind up with 0xbf5c27, which in gbk is a two character sequence: 0xbf5c followed by 0x27. Or in other words, a valid character followed by an unescaped '. But we're not using addslashes(). So on to the next step...

    3. stmt->execute()

    The important thing to realize here is that PDO by default does NOT do true prepared statements. It emulates them (for MySQL). Therefore, PDO internally builds the query string, calling mysql_real_escape_string() (the MySQL C API function) on each bound string value.

    The C API call to mysql_real_escape_string() differs from addslashes() in that it knows the connection character set. So it can perform the escaping properly for the character set that the server is expecting. However, up to this point, the client thinks that we're still using latin1 for the connection, because we never told it otherwise. We did tell the server we're using gbk, but the client still thinks it's latin1.

    client使用latin1, server 使用 gbk, 不一样,轮为addslash一样的效果

    纵观以上两种触发漏洞的关键是addslashes()、mysql_real_escape_string()在Mysql配置为GBK时就可以触发漏洞, 
    另外:mysql_real_escape_string在执行前,必须正确连接到Mysql才有效。

    Therefore the call to mysql_real_escape_string() inserts the backslash, and we have a free hanging ' character in our "escaped" content! In fact, if we were to look at $var in the gbkcharacter set, we'd see:

    ' OR 1=1 /*

    Which is exactly what the attack requires.

    The Query

    This part is just a formality, but here's the rendered query:

    SELECT * FROM test WHERE name = '' OR 1=1 /*' LIMIT 1

    Congratulations, you just successfully attacked a program using PDO Prepared Statements...

    The Saving Grace

    As we said at the outset, for this attack to work the database connection must be encoded using a vulnerable character set. utf8mb4 is not vulnerable and yet can support every Unicode character: so you could elect to use that instead—but it has only been available since MySQL 5.5.3. An alternative is utf8, which is also not vulnerable and can support the whole of the Unicode Basic Multilingual Plane.

    Alternatively, you can enable the NO_BACKSLASH_ESCAPES SQL mode, which (amongst other things) alters the operation of mysql_real_escape_string(). With this mode enabled, 0x27 will be replaced with 0x2727 rather than 0x5c27 and thus the escaping process cannot create valid characters in any of the vulnerable encodings where they did not exist previously (i.e. 0xbf27 is still 0xbf27 etc.)—so the server will still reject the string as invalid. However, see @eggyal's answer for a different vulnerability that can arise from using this SQL mode (albeit not with PDO).

    Safe Examples

    The following examples are safe:

    Because the server's expecting utf8...

    mysql_query('SET NAMES utf8');
    $var = mysql_real_escape_string("xbfx27 OR 1=1 /*");
    mysql_query("SELECT * FROM test WHERE name = '$var' LIMIT 1");

    Because we've properly set the character set so the client and the server match.

    mysql_set_charset('gbk');
    $var = mysql_real_escape_string("xbfx27 OR 1=1 /*");
    mysql_query("SELECT * FROM test WHERE name = '$var' LIMIT 1");

    Because we've turned off emulated prepared statements.

    $pdo->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, false);
    $pdo->query('SET NAMES gbk');
    $stmt = $pdo->prepare('SELECT * FROM test WHERE name = ? LIMIT 1');
    $stmt->execute(array("xbfx27 OR 1=1 /*"));

    Because we've set the character set properly.

    $pdo = new PDO('mysql:host=localhost;dbname=testdb;charset=gbk', $user, $password);
    $stmt = $pdo->prepare('SELECT * FROM test WHERE name = ? LIMIT 1');
    $stmt->execute(array("xbfx27 OR 1=1 /*"));

    Because MySQLi does true prepared statements all the time.

    $mysqli->query('SET NAMES gbk');
    $stmt = $mysqli->prepare('SELECT * FROM test WHERE name = ? LIMIT 1');
    $param = "xbfx27 OR 1=1 /*";
    $stmt->bind_param('s', $param);
    $stmt->execute();
    

      

    Wrapping Up

    If you:

    • Use Modern Versions of MySQL (late 5.1, all 5.5, 5.6, etc) AND PDO's DSN charset parameter (in PHP ≥ 5.3.6)

    OR

    • Don't use a vulnerable character set for connection encoding (you only use utf8 / latin1 / ascii / etc)

    OR

    • Enable NO_BACKSLASH_ESCAPES SQL mode

    You're 100% safe.

    Otherwise, you're vulnerable even though you're using PDO Prepared Statements...

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  • 原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/taek/p/9850826.html
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