CakePHP PDO prepare statement - php

I am using CakePHP 2.4.1 and I need to get direct access to PDO in order to pull a set of records from my MySQL DB, row by row.
This is the piece of code that I am using and that is generating the issue:
// Get PDO access
$this->_pdo = $this->Event->getDataSource();
try {
// Start transaction
$this->_pdo->begin();
// All the past events
$stm = $this->_pdo->prepare("SELECT `id` FROM `events` WHERE `stop_time` < '" . date('Y-m-d H:i:s') . "'");
// Loop through the events
if( $stm->execute() ) {
while ($row = $stmt->fetch(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC)) {
// ....
}
}
// Commit transaction
$this->_pdo->commit();
} catch (Exception $e) {
// Rollback transaction
$this->_pdo->rollback();
CakeLog::write('error', $e );
}
However as soon as I launch the script I get back this error message
PHP Fatal error: Call to undefined method Mysql::prepare()
but I have seen that this framework is supporting PDO and in particular the prepare() function.
CakePHP PDO Documentation
Any ideas?
Thanks a lot

Actually the class you are using is http://api.cakephp.org/2.4/class-DataSource.html
No prepare() method there. Use this to get PDO
$myPDO = $this->SomeModel->getDataSource()->getConnection();

Related

Can anyone see what's wrong with this PHP PDO statement [duplicate]

I do know that PDO does not support multiple queries getting executed in one statement. I've been Googleing and found few posts talking about PDO_MYSQL and PDO_MYSQLND.
PDO_MySQL is a more dangerous
application than any other traditional
MySQL applications. Traditional MySQL
allows only a single SQL query. In
PDO_MySQL there is no such limitation,
but you risk to be injected with
multiple queries.
From: Protection against SQL Injection using PDO and Zend Framework (June 2010; by Julian)
It seems like PDO_MYSQL and PDO_MYSQLND do provide support for multiple queries, but I am not able to find more information about them. Were these projects discontinued? Is there any way now to run multiple queries using PDO.
As I know, PDO_MYSQLND replaced PDO_MYSQL in PHP 5.3. Confusing part is that name is still PDO_MYSQL. So now ND is default driver for MySQL+PDO.
Overall, to execute multiple queries at once you need:
PHP 5.3+
mysqlnd
Emulated prepared statements. Make sure PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES is set to 1 (default). Alternatively you can avoid using prepared statements and use $pdo->exec directly.
Using exec
$db = new PDO("mysql:host=localhost;dbname=test", 'root', '');
// works regardless of statements emulation
$db->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, 0);
$sql = "
DELETE FROM car;
INSERT INTO car(name, type) VALUES ('car1', 'coupe');
INSERT INTO car(name, type) VALUES ('car2', 'coupe');
";
$db->exec($sql);
Using statements
$db = new PDO("mysql:host=localhost;dbname=test", 'root', '');
// works not with the following set to 0. You can comment this line as 1 is default
$db->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, 1);
$sql = "
DELETE FROM car;
INSERT INTO car(name, type) VALUES ('car1', 'coupe');
INSERT INTO car(name, type) VALUES ('car2', 'coupe');
";
$stmt = $db->prepare($sql);
$stmt->execute();
A note:
When using emulated prepared statements, make sure you have set proper encoding (that reflects actual data encoding) in DSN (available since 5.3.6). Otherwise there can be a slight possibility for SQL injection if some odd encoding is used.
After half a day of fiddling with this, found out that PDO had a bug where...
--
//This would run as expected:
$pdo->exec("valid-stmt1; valid-stmt2;");
--
//This would error out, as expected:
$pdo->exec("non-sense; valid-stmt1;");
--
//Here is the bug:
$pdo->exec("valid-stmt1; non-sense; valid-stmt3;");
It would execute the "valid-stmt1;", stop on "non-sense;" and never throw an error. Will not run the "valid-stmt3;", return true and lie that everything ran good.
I would expect it to error out on the "non-sense;" but it doesn't.
Here is where I found this info:
Invalid PDO query does not return an error
Here is the bug:
https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=61613
So, I tried doing this with mysqli and haven't really found any solid answer on how it works so I thought I's just leave it here for those who want to use it..
try{
// db connection
$mysqli = new mysqli("host", "user" , "password", "database");
if($mysqli->connect_errno){
throw new Exception("Connection Failed: [".$mysqli->connect_errno. "] : ".$mysqli->connect_error );
exit();
}
// read file.
// This file has multiple sql statements.
$file_sql = file_get_contents("filename.sql");
if($file_sql == "null" || empty($file_sql) || strlen($file_sql) <= 0){
throw new Exception("File is empty. I wont run it..");
}
//run the sql file contents through the mysqli's multi_query function.
// here is where it gets complicated...
// if the first query has errors, here is where you get it.
$sqlFileResult = $mysqli->multi_query($file_sql);
// this returns false only if there are errros on first sql statement, it doesn't care about the rest of the sql statements.
$sqlCount = 1;
if( $sqlFileResult == false ){
throw new Exception("File: '".$fullpath."' , Query#[".$sqlCount."], [".$mysqli->errno."]: '".$mysqli->error."' }");
}
// so handle the errors on the subsequent statements like this.
// while I have more results. This will start from the second sql statement. The first statement errors are thrown above on the $mysqli->multi_query("SQL"); line
while($mysqli->more_results()){
$sqlCount++;
// load the next result set into mysqli's active buffer. if this fails the $mysqli->error, $mysqli->errno will have appropriate error info.
if($mysqli->next_result() == false){
throw new Exception("File: '".$fullpath."' , Query#[".$sqlCount."], Error No: [".$mysqli->errno."]: '".$mysqli->error."' }");
}
}
}
catch(Exception $e){
echo $e->getMessage(). " <pre>".$e->getTraceAsString()."</pre>";
}
A quick-and-dirty approach:
function exec_sql_from_file($path, PDO $pdo) {
if (! preg_match_all("/('(\\\\.|.)*?'|[^;])+/s", file_get_contents($path), $m))
return;
foreach ($m[0] as $sql) {
if (strlen(trim($sql)))
$pdo->exec($sql);
}
}
Splits at reasonable SQL statement end points. There is no error checking, no injection protection. Understand your use before using it. Personally, I use it for seeding raw migration files for integration testing.
Like thousands of people, I'm looking for this question:
Can run multiple queries simultaneously, and if there was one error, none would run
I went to this page everywhere
But although the friends here gave good answers, these answers were not good for my problem
So I wrote a function that works well and has almost no problem with sql Injection.
It might be helpful for those who are looking for similar questions so I put them here to use
function arrayOfQuerys($arrayQuery)
{
$mx = true;
$conn->beginTransaction();
try {
foreach ($arrayQuery AS $item) {
$stmt = $conn->prepare($item["query"]);
$stmt->execute($item["params"]);
$result = $stmt->rowCount();
if($result == 0)
$mx = false;
}
if($mx == true)
$conn->commit();
else
$conn->rollBack();
} catch (Exception $e) {
$conn->rollBack();
echo "Failed: " . $e->getMessage();
}
return $mx;
}
for use(example):
$arrayQuery = Array(
Array(
"query" => "UPDATE test SET title = ? WHERE test.id = ?",
"params" => Array("aa1", 1)
),
Array(
"query" => "UPDATE test SET title = ? WHERE test.id = ?",
"params" => Array("bb1", 2)
)
);
arrayOfQuerys($arrayQuery);
and my connection:
try {
$options = array(
//For updates where newvalue = oldvalue PDOStatement::rowCount() returns zero. You can use this:
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_FOUND_ROWS => true
);
$conn = new PDO("mysql:host=$servername;dbname=$database", $username, $password, $options);
$conn->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE, PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION);
} catch (PDOException $e) {
echo "Error connecting to SQL Server: " . $e->getMessage();
}
Note:
This solution helps you to run multiple statement together,
If an incorrect a statement occurs, it does not execute any other statement
PDO does support this (as of 2020). Just do a query() call on a PDO object as usual, separating queries by ; and then nextRowset() to step to the next SELECT result, if you have multiple. Resultsets will be in the same order as the queries. Obviously think about the security implications - so don't accept user supplied queries, use parameters, etc. I use it with queries generated by code for example.
$statement = $connection->query($query);
do {
$data[] = $statement->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
} while ($statement->nextRowset());
Try this function : multiple queries and multiple values insertion.
function employmentStatus($Status) {
$pdo = PDO2::getInstance();
$sql_parts = array();
for($i=0; $i<count($Status); $i++){
$sql_parts[] = "(:userID, :val$i)";
}
$requete = $pdo->dbh->prepare("DELETE FROM employment_status WHERE userid = :userID; INSERT INTO employment_status (userid, status) VALUES ".implode(",", $sql_parts));
$requete->bindParam(":userID", $_SESSION['userID'],PDO::PARAM_INT);
for($i=0; $i<count($Status); $i++){
$requete->bindParam(":val$i", $Status[$i],PDO::PARAM_STR);
}
if ($requete->execute()) {
return true;
}
return $requete->errorInfo();
}
Tried following code
$db = new PDO("mysql:host={$dbhost};dbname={$dbname};charset=utf8", $dbuser, $dbpass, array(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE => PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION));
Then
try {
$db->query('SET NAMES gbk');
$stmt = $db->prepare('SELECT * FROM 2_1_paidused WHERE NumberRenamed = ? LIMIT 1');
$stmt->execute(array("\xbf\x27 OR 1=1 /*"));
}
catch (PDOException $e){
echo "DataBase Errorz: " .$e->getMessage() .'<br>';
}
catch (Exception $e) {
echo "General Errorz: ".$e->getMessage() .'<br>';
}
And got
DataBase Errorz: SQLSTATE[42000]: Syntax error or access violation: 1064 You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near '/*' LIMIT 1' at line 1
If added $db->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, false); after $db = ...
Then got blank page
If instead SELECT tried DELETE, then in both cases got error like
DataBase Errorz: SQLSTATE[42000]: Syntax error or access violation: 1064 You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near '* FROM 2_1_paidused WHERE NumberRenamed = '¿\' OR 1=1 /*' LIMIT 1' at line 1
So my conclusion that no injection possible...

PDO::exec multiple create tables in one string [duplicate]

I do know that PDO does not support multiple queries getting executed in one statement. I've been Googleing and found few posts talking about PDO_MYSQL and PDO_MYSQLND.
PDO_MySQL is a more dangerous
application than any other traditional
MySQL applications. Traditional MySQL
allows only a single SQL query. In
PDO_MySQL there is no such limitation,
but you risk to be injected with
multiple queries.
From: Protection against SQL Injection using PDO and Zend Framework (June 2010; by Julian)
It seems like PDO_MYSQL and PDO_MYSQLND do provide support for multiple queries, but I am not able to find more information about them. Were these projects discontinued? Is there any way now to run multiple queries using PDO.
As I know, PDO_MYSQLND replaced PDO_MYSQL in PHP 5.3. Confusing part is that name is still PDO_MYSQL. So now ND is default driver for MySQL+PDO.
Overall, to execute multiple queries at once you need:
PHP 5.3+
mysqlnd
Emulated prepared statements. Make sure PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES is set to 1 (default). Alternatively you can avoid using prepared statements and use $pdo->exec directly.
Using exec
$db = new PDO("mysql:host=localhost;dbname=test", 'root', '');
// works regardless of statements emulation
$db->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, 0);
$sql = "
DELETE FROM car;
INSERT INTO car(name, type) VALUES ('car1', 'coupe');
INSERT INTO car(name, type) VALUES ('car2', 'coupe');
";
$db->exec($sql);
Using statements
$db = new PDO("mysql:host=localhost;dbname=test", 'root', '');
// works not with the following set to 0. You can comment this line as 1 is default
$db->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, 1);
$sql = "
DELETE FROM car;
INSERT INTO car(name, type) VALUES ('car1', 'coupe');
INSERT INTO car(name, type) VALUES ('car2', 'coupe');
";
$stmt = $db->prepare($sql);
$stmt->execute();
A note:
When using emulated prepared statements, make sure you have set proper encoding (that reflects actual data encoding) in DSN (available since 5.3.6). Otherwise there can be a slight possibility for SQL injection if some odd encoding is used.
After half a day of fiddling with this, found out that PDO had a bug where...
--
//This would run as expected:
$pdo->exec("valid-stmt1; valid-stmt2;");
--
//This would error out, as expected:
$pdo->exec("non-sense; valid-stmt1;");
--
//Here is the bug:
$pdo->exec("valid-stmt1; non-sense; valid-stmt3;");
It would execute the "valid-stmt1;", stop on "non-sense;" and never throw an error. Will not run the "valid-stmt3;", return true and lie that everything ran good.
I would expect it to error out on the "non-sense;" but it doesn't.
Here is where I found this info:
Invalid PDO query does not return an error
Here is the bug:
https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=61613
So, I tried doing this with mysqli and haven't really found any solid answer on how it works so I thought I's just leave it here for those who want to use it..
try{
// db connection
$mysqli = new mysqli("host", "user" , "password", "database");
if($mysqli->connect_errno){
throw new Exception("Connection Failed: [".$mysqli->connect_errno. "] : ".$mysqli->connect_error );
exit();
}
// read file.
// This file has multiple sql statements.
$file_sql = file_get_contents("filename.sql");
if($file_sql == "null" || empty($file_sql) || strlen($file_sql) <= 0){
throw new Exception("File is empty. I wont run it..");
}
//run the sql file contents through the mysqli's multi_query function.
// here is where it gets complicated...
// if the first query has errors, here is where you get it.
$sqlFileResult = $mysqli->multi_query($file_sql);
// this returns false only if there are errros on first sql statement, it doesn't care about the rest of the sql statements.
$sqlCount = 1;
if( $sqlFileResult == false ){
throw new Exception("File: '".$fullpath."' , Query#[".$sqlCount."], [".$mysqli->errno."]: '".$mysqli->error."' }");
}
// so handle the errors on the subsequent statements like this.
// while I have more results. This will start from the second sql statement. The first statement errors are thrown above on the $mysqli->multi_query("SQL"); line
while($mysqli->more_results()){
$sqlCount++;
// load the next result set into mysqli's active buffer. if this fails the $mysqli->error, $mysqli->errno will have appropriate error info.
if($mysqli->next_result() == false){
throw new Exception("File: '".$fullpath."' , Query#[".$sqlCount."], Error No: [".$mysqli->errno."]: '".$mysqli->error."' }");
}
}
}
catch(Exception $e){
echo $e->getMessage(). " <pre>".$e->getTraceAsString()."</pre>";
}
A quick-and-dirty approach:
function exec_sql_from_file($path, PDO $pdo) {
if (! preg_match_all("/('(\\\\.|.)*?'|[^;])+/s", file_get_contents($path), $m))
return;
foreach ($m[0] as $sql) {
if (strlen(trim($sql)))
$pdo->exec($sql);
}
}
Splits at reasonable SQL statement end points. There is no error checking, no injection protection. Understand your use before using it. Personally, I use it for seeding raw migration files for integration testing.
Like thousands of people, I'm looking for this question:
Can run multiple queries simultaneously, and if there was one error, none would run
I went to this page everywhere
But although the friends here gave good answers, these answers were not good for my problem
So I wrote a function that works well and has almost no problem with sql Injection.
It might be helpful for those who are looking for similar questions so I put them here to use
function arrayOfQuerys($arrayQuery)
{
$mx = true;
$conn->beginTransaction();
try {
foreach ($arrayQuery AS $item) {
$stmt = $conn->prepare($item["query"]);
$stmt->execute($item["params"]);
$result = $stmt->rowCount();
if($result == 0)
$mx = false;
}
if($mx == true)
$conn->commit();
else
$conn->rollBack();
} catch (Exception $e) {
$conn->rollBack();
echo "Failed: " . $e->getMessage();
}
return $mx;
}
for use(example):
$arrayQuery = Array(
Array(
"query" => "UPDATE test SET title = ? WHERE test.id = ?",
"params" => Array("aa1", 1)
),
Array(
"query" => "UPDATE test SET title = ? WHERE test.id = ?",
"params" => Array("bb1", 2)
)
);
arrayOfQuerys($arrayQuery);
and my connection:
try {
$options = array(
//For updates where newvalue = oldvalue PDOStatement::rowCount() returns zero. You can use this:
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_FOUND_ROWS => true
);
$conn = new PDO("mysql:host=$servername;dbname=$database", $username, $password, $options);
$conn->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE, PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION);
} catch (PDOException $e) {
echo "Error connecting to SQL Server: " . $e->getMessage();
}
Note:
This solution helps you to run multiple statement together,
If an incorrect a statement occurs, it does not execute any other statement
PDO does support this (as of 2020). Just do a query() call on a PDO object as usual, separating queries by ; and then nextRowset() to step to the next SELECT result, if you have multiple. Resultsets will be in the same order as the queries. Obviously think about the security implications - so don't accept user supplied queries, use parameters, etc. I use it with queries generated by code for example.
$statement = $connection->query($query);
do {
$data[] = $statement->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
} while ($statement->nextRowset());
Try this function : multiple queries and multiple values insertion.
function employmentStatus($Status) {
$pdo = PDO2::getInstance();
$sql_parts = array();
for($i=0; $i<count($Status); $i++){
$sql_parts[] = "(:userID, :val$i)";
}
$requete = $pdo->dbh->prepare("DELETE FROM employment_status WHERE userid = :userID; INSERT INTO employment_status (userid, status) VALUES ".implode(",", $sql_parts));
$requete->bindParam(":userID", $_SESSION['userID'],PDO::PARAM_INT);
for($i=0; $i<count($Status); $i++){
$requete->bindParam(":val$i", $Status[$i],PDO::PARAM_STR);
}
if ($requete->execute()) {
return true;
}
return $requete->errorInfo();
}
Tried following code
$db = new PDO("mysql:host={$dbhost};dbname={$dbname};charset=utf8", $dbuser, $dbpass, array(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE => PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION));
Then
try {
$db->query('SET NAMES gbk');
$stmt = $db->prepare('SELECT * FROM 2_1_paidused WHERE NumberRenamed = ? LIMIT 1');
$stmt->execute(array("\xbf\x27 OR 1=1 /*"));
}
catch (PDOException $e){
echo "DataBase Errorz: " .$e->getMessage() .'<br>';
}
catch (Exception $e) {
echo "General Errorz: ".$e->getMessage() .'<br>';
}
And got
DataBase Errorz: SQLSTATE[42000]: Syntax error or access violation: 1064 You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near '/*' LIMIT 1' at line 1
If added $db->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, false); after $db = ...
Then got blank page
If instead SELECT tried DELETE, then in both cases got error like
DataBase Errorz: SQLSTATE[42000]: Syntax error or access violation: 1064 You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near '* FROM 2_1_paidused WHERE NumberRenamed = '¿\' OR 1=1 /*' LIMIT 1' at line 1
So my conclusion that no injection possible...

MySQL Complete CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW before moving on to SELECT Statement [duplicate]

I do know that PDO does not support multiple queries getting executed in one statement. I've been Googleing and found few posts talking about PDO_MYSQL and PDO_MYSQLND.
PDO_MySQL is a more dangerous
application than any other traditional
MySQL applications. Traditional MySQL
allows only a single SQL query. In
PDO_MySQL there is no such limitation,
but you risk to be injected with
multiple queries.
From: Protection against SQL Injection using PDO and Zend Framework (June 2010; by Julian)
It seems like PDO_MYSQL and PDO_MYSQLND do provide support for multiple queries, but I am not able to find more information about them. Were these projects discontinued? Is there any way now to run multiple queries using PDO.
As I know, PDO_MYSQLND replaced PDO_MYSQL in PHP 5.3. Confusing part is that name is still PDO_MYSQL. So now ND is default driver for MySQL+PDO.
Overall, to execute multiple queries at once you need:
PHP 5.3+
mysqlnd
Emulated prepared statements. Make sure PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES is set to 1 (default). Alternatively you can avoid using prepared statements and use $pdo->exec directly.
Using exec
$db = new PDO("mysql:host=localhost;dbname=test", 'root', '');
// works regardless of statements emulation
$db->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, 0);
$sql = "
DELETE FROM car;
INSERT INTO car(name, type) VALUES ('car1', 'coupe');
INSERT INTO car(name, type) VALUES ('car2', 'coupe');
";
$db->exec($sql);
Using statements
$db = new PDO("mysql:host=localhost;dbname=test", 'root', '');
// works not with the following set to 0. You can comment this line as 1 is default
$db->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, 1);
$sql = "
DELETE FROM car;
INSERT INTO car(name, type) VALUES ('car1', 'coupe');
INSERT INTO car(name, type) VALUES ('car2', 'coupe');
";
$stmt = $db->prepare($sql);
$stmt->execute();
A note:
When using emulated prepared statements, make sure you have set proper encoding (that reflects actual data encoding) in DSN (available since 5.3.6). Otherwise there can be a slight possibility for SQL injection if some odd encoding is used.
After half a day of fiddling with this, found out that PDO had a bug where...
--
//This would run as expected:
$pdo->exec("valid-stmt1; valid-stmt2;");
--
//This would error out, as expected:
$pdo->exec("non-sense; valid-stmt1;");
--
//Here is the bug:
$pdo->exec("valid-stmt1; non-sense; valid-stmt3;");
It would execute the "valid-stmt1;", stop on "non-sense;" and never throw an error. Will not run the "valid-stmt3;", return true and lie that everything ran good.
I would expect it to error out on the "non-sense;" but it doesn't.
Here is where I found this info:
Invalid PDO query does not return an error
Here is the bug:
https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=61613
So, I tried doing this with mysqli and haven't really found any solid answer on how it works so I thought I's just leave it here for those who want to use it..
try{
// db connection
$mysqli = new mysqli("host", "user" , "password", "database");
if($mysqli->connect_errno){
throw new Exception("Connection Failed: [".$mysqli->connect_errno. "] : ".$mysqli->connect_error );
exit();
}
// read file.
// This file has multiple sql statements.
$file_sql = file_get_contents("filename.sql");
if($file_sql == "null" || empty($file_sql) || strlen($file_sql) <= 0){
throw new Exception("File is empty. I wont run it..");
}
//run the sql file contents through the mysqli's multi_query function.
// here is where it gets complicated...
// if the first query has errors, here is where you get it.
$sqlFileResult = $mysqli->multi_query($file_sql);
// this returns false only if there are errros on first sql statement, it doesn't care about the rest of the sql statements.
$sqlCount = 1;
if( $sqlFileResult == false ){
throw new Exception("File: '".$fullpath."' , Query#[".$sqlCount."], [".$mysqli->errno."]: '".$mysqli->error."' }");
}
// so handle the errors on the subsequent statements like this.
// while I have more results. This will start from the second sql statement. The first statement errors are thrown above on the $mysqli->multi_query("SQL"); line
while($mysqli->more_results()){
$sqlCount++;
// load the next result set into mysqli's active buffer. if this fails the $mysqli->error, $mysqli->errno will have appropriate error info.
if($mysqli->next_result() == false){
throw new Exception("File: '".$fullpath."' , Query#[".$sqlCount."], Error No: [".$mysqli->errno."]: '".$mysqli->error."' }");
}
}
}
catch(Exception $e){
echo $e->getMessage(). " <pre>".$e->getTraceAsString()."</pre>";
}
A quick-and-dirty approach:
function exec_sql_from_file($path, PDO $pdo) {
if (! preg_match_all("/('(\\\\.|.)*?'|[^;])+/s", file_get_contents($path), $m))
return;
foreach ($m[0] as $sql) {
if (strlen(trim($sql)))
$pdo->exec($sql);
}
}
Splits at reasonable SQL statement end points. There is no error checking, no injection protection. Understand your use before using it. Personally, I use it for seeding raw migration files for integration testing.
Like thousands of people, I'm looking for this question:
Can run multiple queries simultaneously, and if there was one error, none would run
I went to this page everywhere
But although the friends here gave good answers, these answers were not good for my problem
So I wrote a function that works well and has almost no problem with sql Injection.
It might be helpful for those who are looking for similar questions so I put them here to use
function arrayOfQuerys($arrayQuery)
{
$mx = true;
$conn->beginTransaction();
try {
foreach ($arrayQuery AS $item) {
$stmt = $conn->prepare($item["query"]);
$stmt->execute($item["params"]);
$result = $stmt->rowCount();
if($result == 0)
$mx = false;
}
if($mx == true)
$conn->commit();
else
$conn->rollBack();
} catch (Exception $e) {
$conn->rollBack();
echo "Failed: " . $e->getMessage();
}
return $mx;
}
for use(example):
$arrayQuery = Array(
Array(
"query" => "UPDATE test SET title = ? WHERE test.id = ?",
"params" => Array("aa1", 1)
),
Array(
"query" => "UPDATE test SET title = ? WHERE test.id = ?",
"params" => Array("bb1", 2)
)
);
arrayOfQuerys($arrayQuery);
and my connection:
try {
$options = array(
//For updates where newvalue = oldvalue PDOStatement::rowCount() returns zero. You can use this:
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_FOUND_ROWS => true
);
$conn = new PDO("mysql:host=$servername;dbname=$database", $username, $password, $options);
$conn->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE, PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION);
} catch (PDOException $e) {
echo "Error connecting to SQL Server: " . $e->getMessage();
}
Note:
This solution helps you to run multiple statement together,
If an incorrect a statement occurs, it does not execute any other statement
PDO does support this (as of 2020). Just do a query() call on a PDO object as usual, separating queries by ; and then nextRowset() to step to the next SELECT result, if you have multiple. Resultsets will be in the same order as the queries. Obviously think about the security implications - so don't accept user supplied queries, use parameters, etc. I use it with queries generated by code for example.
$statement = $connection->query($query);
do {
$data[] = $statement->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
} while ($statement->nextRowset());
Try this function : multiple queries and multiple values insertion.
function employmentStatus($Status) {
$pdo = PDO2::getInstance();
$sql_parts = array();
for($i=0; $i<count($Status); $i++){
$sql_parts[] = "(:userID, :val$i)";
}
$requete = $pdo->dbh->prepare("DELETE FROM employment_status WHERE userid = :userID; INSERT INTO employment_status (userid, status) VALUES ".implode(",", $sql_parts));
$requete->bindParam(":userID", $_SESSION['userID'],PDO::PARAM_INT);
for($i=0; $i<count($Status); $i++){
$requete->bindParam(":val$i", $Status[$i],PDO::PARAM_STR);
}
if ($requete->execute()) {
return true;
}
return $requete->errorInfo();
}
Tried following code
$db = new PDO("mysql:host={$dbhost};dbname={$dbname};charset=utf8", $dbuser, $dbpass, array(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE => PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION));
Then
try {
$db->query('SET NAMES gbk');
$stmt = $db->prepare('SELECT * FROM 2_1_paidused WHERE NumberRenamed = ? LIMIT 1');
$stmt->execute(array("\xbf\x27 OR 1=1 /*"));
}
catch (PDOException $e){
echo "DataBase Errorz: " .$e->getMessage() .'<br>';
}
catch (Exception $e) {
echo "General Errorz: ".$e->getMessage() .'<br>';
}
And got
DataBase Errorz: SQLSTATE[42000]: Syntax error or access violation: 1064 You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near '/*' LIMIT 1' at line 1
If added $db->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, false); after $db = ...
Then got blank page
If instead SELECT tried DELETE, then in both cases got error like
DataBase Errorz: SQLSTATE[42000]: Syntax error or access violation: 1064 You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near '* FROM 2_1_paidused WHERE NumberRenamed = '¿\' OR 1=1 /*' LIMIT 1' at line 1
So my conclusion that no injection possible...

PDO::exec() blocking further query from working

I'm trying to implement pagination using PHP. I found that calling exec to the connected database prevents the further query calls from working.
The piece of code at hand:
<?php
// Pagination logic
//Here we count the number of results
$query = "SELECT COUNT(*) as num FROM gig";
$total_pages = $db->exec($query);
$total_pages = $total_pages[num];
?>
After it if I try to use a query such as:
<?php>
foreach ($db->query("SELECT sname, start, venue FROM gig WHERE start = '0000-00-00 00:00:00'") as $a) {
$row="<tr><td>$a[sname]</td><td>To be announced</td><td>$a[venue]</td></tr>\n";
print $row;
}
?>
it returns
Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach()
As soon as the first code block is removed, the query works fine. When I check the value of $total_pages, it's 0, so something must be going wrong along the way. As far as I know, I use it in the same way as the query(which works on its own), so is there any reason why it doesn't work?
The PDO is initialized in the following way:
try {
$db = new PDO("mysql:dbname=$db_name;host=$db_server", $db_user, $db_pw);
} catch (PDOException $e) {
die('Connection failed: ' . $e->getMessage());
}
session_start();
From Manual
PDO::exec() does not return results from a SELECT statement. For a
SELECT statement that you only need to issue once during your program,
consider issuing PDO::query(). For a statement that you need to issue
multiple times, prepare a PDOStatement object with PDO::prepare() and
issue the statement with PDOStatement::execute().
Used a function of the STATEMENT object had after using querying to count the rows instead of exec:
$dbq = $db->query("SELECT * FROM gig");
$rows = $dbq->rowCount();
About the latter code block not working because of the exec failing - it seems to just be the way php queries work, if one fails, all fail. The foreach() error is for the object it's provided is not an array, for it failed.

PDO support for multiple queries (PDO_MYSQL, PDO_MYSQLND)

I do know that PDO does not support multiple queries getting executed in one statement. I've been Googleing and found few posts talking about PDO_MYSQL and PDO_MYSQLND.
PDO_MySQL is a more dangerous
application than any other traditional
MySQL applications. Traditional MySQL
allows only a single SQL query. In
PDO_MySQL there is no such limitation,
but you risk to be injected with
multiple queries.
From: Protection against SQL Injection using PDO and Zend Framework (June 2010; by Julian)
It seems like PDO_MYSQL and PDO_MYSQLND do provide support for multiple queries, but I am not able to find more information about them. Were these projects discontinued? Is there any way now to run multiple queries using PDO.
As I know, PDO_MYSQLND replaced PDO_MYSQL in PHP 5.3. Confusing part is that name is still PDO_MYSQL. So now ND is default driver for MySQL+PDO.
Overall, to execute multiple queries at once you need:
PHP 5.3+
mysqlnd
Emulated prepared statements. Make sure PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES is set to 1 (default). Alternatively you can avoid using prepared statements and use $pdo->exec directly.
Using exec
$db = new PDO("mysql:host=localhost;dbname=test", 'root', '');
// works regardless of statements emulation
$db->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, 0);
$sql = "
DELETE FROM car;
INSERT INTO car(name, type) VALUES ('car1', 'coupe');
INSERT INTO car(name, type) VALUES ('car2', 'coupe');
";
$db->exec($sql);
Using statements
$db = new PDO("mysql:host=localhost;dbname=test", 'root', '');
// works not with the following set to 0. You can comment this line as 1 is default
$db->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, 1);
$sql = "
DELETE FROM car;
INSERT INTO car(name, type) VALUES ('car1', 'coupe');
INSERT INTO car(name, type) VALUES ('car2', 'coupe');
";
$stmt = $db->prepare($sql);
$stmt->execute();
A note:
When using emulated prepared statements, make sure you have set proper encoding (that reflects actual data encoding) in DSN (available since 5.3.6). Otherwise there can be a slight possibility for SQL injection if some odd encoding is used.
After half a day of fiddling with this, found out that PDO had a bug where...
--
//This would run as expected:
$pdo->exec("valid-stmt1; valid-stmt2;");
--
//This would error out, as expected:
$pdo->exec("non-sense; valid-stmt1;");
--
//Here is the bug:
$pdo->exec("valid-stmt1; non-sense; valid-stmt3;");
It would execute the "valid-stmt1;", stop on "non-sense;" and never throw an error. Will not run the "valid-stmt3;", return true and lie that everything ran good.
I would expect it to error out on the "non-sense;" but it doesn't.
Here is where I found this info:
Invalid PDO query does not return an error
Here is the bug:
https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=61613
So, I tried doing this with mysqli and haven't really found any solid answer on how it works so I thought I's just leave it here for those who want to use it..
try{
// db connection
$mysqli = new mysqli("host", "user" , "password", "database");
if($mysqli->connect_errno){
throw new Exception("Connection Failed: [".$mysqli->connect_errno. "] : ".$mysqli->connect_error );
exit();
}
// read file.
// This file has multiple sql statements.
$file_sql = file_get_contents("filename.sql");
if($file_sql == "null" || empty($file_sql) || strlen($file_sql) <= 0){
throw new Exception("File is empty. I wont run it..");
}
//run the sql file contents through the mysqli's multi_query function.
// here is where it gets complicated...
// if the first query has errors, here is where you get it.
$sqlFileResult = $mysqli->multi_query($file_sql);
// this returns false only if there are errros on first sql statement, it doesn't care about the rest of the sql statements.
$sqlCount = 1;
if( $sqlFileResult == false ){
throw new Exception("File: '".$fullpath."' , Query#[".$sqlCount."], [".$mysqli->errno."]: '".$mysqli->error."' }");
}
// so handle the errors on the subsequent statements like this.
// while I have more results. This will start from the second sql statement. The first statement errors are thrown above on the $mysqli->multi_query("SQL"); line
while($mysqli->more_results()){
$sqlCount++;
// load the next result set into mysqli's active buffer. if this fails the $mysqli->error, $mysqli->errno will have appropriate error info.
if($mysqli->next_result() == false){
throw new Exception("File: '".$fullpath."' , Query#[".$sqlCount."], Error No: [".$mysqli->errno."]: '".$mysqli->error."' }");
}
}
}
catch(Exception $e){
echo $e->getMessage(). " <pre>".$e->getTraceAsString()."</pre>";
}
A quick-and-dirty approach:
function exec_sql_from_file($path, PDO $pdo) {
if (! preg_match_all("/('(\\\\.|.)*?'|[^;])+/s", file_get_contents($path), $m))
return;
foreach ($m[0] as $sql) {
if (strlen(trim($sql)))
$pdo->exec($sql);
}
}
Splits at reasonable SQL statement end points. There is no error checking, no injection protection. Understand your use before using it. Personally, I use it for seeding raw migration files for integration testing.
Like thousands of people, I'm looking for this question:
Can run multiple queries simultaneously, and if there was one error, none would run
I went to this page everywhere
But although the friends here gave good answers, these answers were not good for my problem
So I wrote a function that works well and has almost no problem with sql Injection.
It might be helpful for those who are looking for similar questions so I put them here to use
function arrayOfQuerys($arrayQuery)
{
$mx = true;
$conn->beginTransaction();
try {
foreach ($arrayQuery AS $item) {
$stmt = $conn->prepare($item["query"]);
$stmt->execute($item["params"]);
$result = $stmt->rowCount();
if($result == 0)
$mx = false;
}
if($mx == true)
$conn->commit();
else
$conn->rollBack();
} catch (Exception $e) {
$conn->rollBack();
echo "Failed: " . $e->getMessage();
}
return $mx;
}
for use(example):
$arrayQuery = Array(
Array(
"query" => "UPDATE test SET title = ? WHERE test.id = ?",
"params" => Array("aa1", 1)
),
Array(
"query" => "UPDATE test SET title = ? WHERE test.id = ?",
"params" => Array("bb1", 2)
)
);
arrayOfQuerys($arrayQuery);
and my connection:
try {
$options = array(
//For updates where newvalue = oldvalue PDOStatement::rowCount() returns zero. You can use this:
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_FOUND_ROWS => true
);
$conn = new PDO("mysql:host=$servername;dbname=$database", $username, $password, $options);
$conn->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE, PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION);
} catch (PDOException $e) {
echo "Error connecting to SQL Server: " . $e->getMessage();
}
Note:
This solution helps you to run multiple statement together,
If an incorrect a statement occurs, it does not execute any other statement
PDO does support this (as of 2020). Just do a query() call on a PDO object as usual, separating queries by ; and then nextRowset() to step to the next SELECT result, if you have multiple. Resultsets will be in the same order as the queries. Obviously think about the security implications - so don't accept user supplied queries, use parameters, etc. I use it with queries generated by code for example.
$statement = $connection->query($query);
do {
$data[] = $statement->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
} while ($statement->nextRowset());
Try this function : multiple queries and multiple values insertion.
function employmentStatus($Status) {
$pdo = PDO2::getInstance();
$sql_parts = array();
for($i=0; $i<count($Status); $i++){
$sql_parts[] = "(:userID, :val$i)";
}
$requete = $pdo->dbh->prepare("DELETE FROM employment_status WHERE userid = :userID; INSERT INTO employment_status (userid, status) VALUES ".implode(",", $sql_parts));
$requete->bindParam(":userID", $_SESSION['userID'],PDO::PARAM_INT);
for($i=0; $i<count($Status); $i++){
$requete->bindParam(":val$i", $Status[$i],PDO::PARAM_STR);
}
if ($requete->execute()) {
return true;
}
return $requete->errorInfo();
}
Tried following code
$db = new PDO("mysql:host={$dbhost};dbname={$dbname};charset=utf8", $dbuser, $dbpass, array(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE => PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION));
Then
try {
$db->query('SET NAMES gbk');
$stmt = $db->prepare('SELECT * FROM 2_1_paidused WHERE NumberRenamed = ? LIMIT 1');
$stmt->execute(array("\xbf\x27 OR 1=1 /*"));
}
catch (PDOException $e){
echo "DataBase Errorz: " .$e->getMessage() .'<br>';
}
catch (Exception $e) {
echo "General Errorz: ".$e->getMessage() .'<br>';
}
And got
DataBase Errorz: SQLSTATE[42000]: Syntax error or access violation: 1064 You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near '/*' LIMIT 1' at line 1
If added $db->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, false); after $db = ...
Then got blank page
If instead SELECT tried DELETE, then in both cases got error like
DataBase Errorz: SQLSTATE[42000]: Syntax error or access violation: 1064 You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near '* FROM 2_1_paidused WHERE NumberRenamed = '¿\' OR 1=1 /*' LIMIT 1' at line 1
So my conclusion that no injection possible...

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