Will this function below be able to prevent XSS attacks and sql injections ?
require_once('security.class.php');
function secure_data($data) {
$data = mysql_real_escape_string($data);
$filtered_data = filter_var($data, FILTER_SANITIZE_STRING);
$secure_class = new security_class();
$clean_data = $secure_class->xss_clean($filtered_data);
return $clean_data;
}
The security class is from codeigniter.
You shouldn't be trying to "brute force" security like this - layering all of these different filters/escapes one after another on every piece of data is silly and may actually make the escaping not work as intended.
This is because the kinds of characters that are added for one kind of escaping may be removed by another. You may also end up with over-escaping.
Instead, you should use the escaping function that is specifiy for what you are actually trying to do:
Before you put values into a SQL query, run them through mysqli_real_escape_string() (or better yet, use prepared statements via MySQLi/PDO).
Before you echo values out to a HTML response, run them through HTML escaping and/or XSS cleaning.
Etc.
Related
I'm trying to make sanitize function to keep rest of the code simple.
Since I'm using MYSQLi I wonder if the following code is correct?
function sanitize ($data){
global $db_connect;
return htmlentities(strip_tags($db_connect->real_escape_string($data)));
}
function array_sanitize ($item) {
global $db_connect;
$item = htmlentities(strip_tags($db_connect->real_escape_string($item)));
}
I see two reasons why you sanitize the string:
Prevent from SQL injections
You should use prepared statements instead of using real_escape_string() to prevent from SQL injections. The Mysqli Extension supports prepared statements. They are most secure and easy to use. Use them.
Prevent from XSS attacks
To prevent from XSS attacks htmlentities() and strip_tags() may help. You should also make sure, that the functions handling the input charset correctly.
You should also read this document from OWASP
I am creating a function for my $_POST inputs to prevent SQL Injection BEFORE adding the values into database. I use it on login/register and when a user needs to post an article. As far as I know, this does not secure it from XSS.
Should I create a different function when I output data or edit this?
Thank you.
function clean($str) {
$str = #trim($str);
if(get_magic_quotes_gpc()) {
$str = stripslashes($str);
}
return mysql_real_escape_string($str);
}
Try using prepared statements. They are designed to automatically escape things. They should also keep your queries cleaner in the source code.
http://www.ultramegatech.com/blog/2009/07/using-mysql-prepared-statements-in-php/
http://php.net/manual/en/mysqli.prepare.php
http://php.net/manual/en/book.pdo.php
You talk about XSS and then SQL injection...
SQL
Use mysql_real_escape_string() or better still bind params with a library such as PDO.
If magic_quotes is a possibility, use...
function sqlEscape($str) {
if (get_magic_quotes_gpc()) {
$str = stripslashes($str);
}
return mysql_real_escape_string($str);
}
Regarding your example, why do you need to use trim() to make data safe? Also, why use the error supressor on trim()?
XSS
Use htmlspecialchars($str, ENT_QUOTES) to prevent HTML special characters from having special meaning.
I use the following, which works just fine to prevent injections:
function clean($str) {
$value = mysql_escape_string(stripslashes(htmlspecialchars($str)));
return $value;
}
You shouldn't save values as encoded HTML to your database. Do that when outputting them, not when saving them (saving encoded HTML makes it harder to search in it, makes their size bigger, makes it harder to use them in formats other than HTML and generally just wrong - your database should store the actual text, not the text formatted to be displayed in a specific way).
Also, as Quamis said, you should probably look at PDO or some other DBAL that lets you use prepared statements instead of escaping it manually.
I am tring to make my PHP as secure as possible, and the two main things I am trying to avoid are
mySQL Injections
Cross-Side Scripting (XSS)
This is the script I got against mySQL Injections:
function make_safe($variable) {
$variable = mysql_real_escape_string(trim($variable));
return $variable; }
http://www.addedbytes.com/writing-secure-php/writing-secure-php-1/
Against XSS, I found this:
$username = strip_tags($_POST['username']);
Now I want to unite the two into a single function. Would this be the best way to do so? :
function make_safe($variable) {
$variable = strip_tags(mysql_real_escape_string(trim($variable)));
return $variable; }
Or does the mysql_real_escape_string already prevent XSS? And lastly, is there anything else that I could add into this function to prevent other forms of hacking?
mysql_real_escape_string() doesn't prevent XSS. It will only make impossible to do SQL injections.
To fight XSS, you need to use htmlspecialchars() or strip_tags(). 1st will convert special chars like < to < that will show up as <, but won't be executed. 2nd just strip all tags out.
I don't recommend to make special function to do it or even make one function to do it all, but your given example would work. I assume.
This function:
function make_safe($variable)
{
$variable = strip_tags(mysql_real_escape_string(trim($variable)));
return $variable;
}
Will not work
SQL injection and XSS are two different beasts. Because they each require different escaping you need to use each escape function strip_tags and mysql_real_escape_string separatly.
Joining them up will defeat the security of each.
Use the standard mysql_real_escape_string() when inputting data into the database.
Use strip_tags() when querying stuff out of the database before outputting them to the screen.
Why combining the two function is dangerous
From the horses mouth: http://php.net/manual/en/function.strip-tags.php
Because strip_tags() does not actually validate the HTML, partial or broken tags can result in the removal of more text/data than expected.
So by inputting malformed html into a database field a smart attacker can use your naive implementation to defeat mysql_real_escape_string() in your combo.
What you should really be looking into is using prepared statements and PDO to both provide an abstraction layer against your database as well as completely eradicate SQL injection attacks.
As for XSS, just make sure to never trust user input. Either run strip_tags or htmlentities when you store the data, or when you output it (not both as this will mess with your output), and you'll be all right.
I have done some research and still confused, This is my outcome of that research. Can someone please comment and advise to how I can make these better or if there is a rock solid implementation already out there I can use?
Method 1:
array_map('trim', $_GET);
array_map('stripslashes', $_GET);
array_map('mysql_real_escape_string', $_GET);
Method 2:
function filter($data) {
$data = trim(htmlentities(strip_tags($data)));
if (get_magic_quotes_gpc())
$data = stripslashes($data);
$data = mysql_real_escape_string($data);
return $data;
}
foreach($_GET as $key => $value) {
$data[$key] = filter($value);
}
Both methods you show are not recommendable
Blanket "sanitizing" data is counter-productive, because data needs to be sanitised in different ways depending on how it is going to be used: Using it in a database query needs different sanitation from outputting it in HTML, or from using it as parameters in a command line call, etc. etc.
The best way to do sanitation is immediately before the data is being used. That way, it is easy for the programmer to see whether all data is actually getting sanitized.
If you use the mysql_* family of functions, do a mysql_real_escape_string() on every argument you use in a query:
$safe_name = mysql_real_escape_string($_POST["name"]);
$safe_address = mysql_real_escape_string($_POST["address"]);
$result = mysql_query ("INSERT INTO table VALUES '$safe_name', '$safe_address'");
If you use the PDO or mysqli families of functions, you can make use of parametrized queries, which eliminate most of the SQL injection woes - all everyday ones at any rate.
It is perfectly possible to write safe queries with mysql_*, and it is also perfectly possible to introduce a security hole in a PDO query, but if you are starting from scratch, consider using PDO or mysqli straight away.
Use strip_tags() only if you are planning to output user entered data in HTML; note that you need to do an additional htmlspecialchars() to reliably prevent XSS attacks.
The only blanket sanitation method that has some merit is the
if (get_magic_quotes_gpc())
$data = stripslashes($data);
call which filters out the layer of escaping added by the now-deprecated "magic quotes" feature of earlier versions of PHP.
I think this is enough (EDIT: with $data we mean here e.g. one text field from a form, $_POST['example'] etc):
if (get_magic_quotes_gpc())
$data = stripslashes($data);
$data = mysql_real_escape_string($data);
I usually do the first when receiving the $_POST or $_GET data (before input testing) and the latter right before - or during - composing of the sql query.
Additionaly trim it, if you want (maybe you don't always want that). However the best solution would be using some libraries for working with database.
You can either:
Escape all user input supposed for the DB using mysql_real_escape_string (or the mysqli_variant)
Use prepared statements (with mysqli_ or PDO)
Note that you should turn off magic_quotes if possible. If it's on, just use stripslashes (like in your example) as it's deprecated and you should not rely on it.
Also note that you should not do this for data which is not supposed to be inserted into the database as it's completely useless.
I like type-casting whenever you're dealing with ints;
e.g.
$id=(int)$_GET['id'];
if($id<1){//I generally don't pass around 0 or negative numbers
//Injection Attempt
die('Go Away');
}
//Continue with the number I **know** is a number
Well, among your codes only mysql_real_escape_string() function is SQL injection related. However, being completely misplaced.
And it's not enough.
In fact, this function should be used with quoted strings only.
And it's useless for the everything else. So, in any other case other precautions should be taken.
For the complete explanation see my earlier answer: In PHP when submitting strings to the database should I take care of illegal characters using htmlspecialchars() or use a regular expression?
All other functions you're using have no relation to SQL at all.
Note that using both strip_tags and htmlentities is redundant. and htmlentities is obsolete.
I'd use only htmlspecialchars() instead of these two, and not before inserting into database but right before sending it to browser.
Question: Is preventing XSS (cross-site scripting) as simple using strip_tags on any saved input fields and running htmlspecialchars on any displayed output ... and preventing SQL Injection by using PHP PDO prepared statements?
Here's an example:
// INPUT: Input a persons favorite color and save to database
// this should prevent SQL injection ( by using prepared statement)
// and help prevent XSS (by using strip_tags)
$sql = 'INSERT INTO TABLE favorite (person_name, color) VALUES (?,?)';
$sth = $conn->prepare($sql);
$sth->execute(array(strip_tags($_POST['person_name']), strip_tags($_POST['color'])));
// OUTPUT: Output a persons favorite color from the database
// this should prevent XSS (by using htmlspecialchars) when displaying
$sql = 'SELECT color FROM favorite WHERE person_name = ?';
$sth = $conn->prepare($sql);
$sth->execute(array(strip_tags($_POST['person_name'])));
$sth->setFetchMode(PDO::FETCH_BOTH);
while($color = $sth->fetch()){
echo htmlspecialchars($color, ENT_QUOTES, 'UTF-8');
}
It's even more simple. Just htmlspecialchars() (with quote style and character set) on user-controlled input is enough. The strip_tags() is only useful if you already want to sanitize data prior to processing/save in database, which is often not used in real world. HTML code doesn't harm in PHP source, but PHP code may do so if you use eval() on non-sanitized user-controlled input or that kind of evil stuff.
This however doesn't save you from SQL injections, but that's another story.
Update: to get clean user input from the request to avoid magic quotes in user-controlled input, you can use the following function:
function get_string($array, $index, $default = null) {
if (isset($array[$index]) && strlen($value = trim($array[$index])) > 0) {
return get_magic_quotes_gpc() ? stripslashes($value) : $value;
} else {
return $default;
}
}
which can be used as:
$username = get_string($_POST, "username");
$password = get_string($_POST, "password");
(you can do simliar for get_number, get_boolean, get_array, etc)
To prepare the SQL query to avoid SQL injections, do:
$sql = sprintf(
"SELECT id FROM user WHERE username = '%s' AND password = MD5('%s')",
mysql_real_escape_string($user),
mysql_real_escape_string($password)
);
To display user-controlled input to avoid XSS, do:
echo htmlspecialchars($data, ENT_QUOTES, 'UTF-8');
It depends on where and how you want to use the user data. You need to know the context you want to insert your data in and the meta characters of that context.
If you just want to allow the user to put text up on your website, htmlspecialchars suffices to escape the HTML meta characters. But if you want to allow certain HTML or want to embed user data in existing HTML elements (like a URL into a A/IMG element), htmlspecialchars is not enough as you’re not in the HTML context anymore but in the URL context.
So entering <script>alert("xss")</script> into a image URL field will yield:
<img src="<script>alert("xss")</script>" />
But entering javascript:alert("xss") will succeed:
<img src="javascript:alert("xss")" />
Here you should take a look at the fabulous XSS (Cross Site Scripting) Cheat Sheet to see what contexts your user data can be injected in.
strip_tags is not necessary. In most cases strip_tags is just irritating, because some of your users may want to use < and > in their texts. Just use htmlspecialchars (or htmlentities if you prefer) before you echo the texts to the browser.
(Don't forget mysql_real_esacpe_string before you insert anything into your database!)
The general rule/meme is "Filter Input, Escape Output." Using strip_tags on your input to remove any HTML is a good idea for input filtering, but you should be as strict as possible in what input you allow. For example, if an input parameter is only supposed to be an integer, only accept numeric input and always convert it to an integer before doing anything with it. A well-vetted input filtering library is going to help you a lot here; one that isn't specific to a particular framework is Inspekt (which I wrote, so I'm a bit biased).
For output, htmlspecialchars should be able to escape XSS attacks, but only if you pass the correct parameters. You must pass the quote escaping style and a charset.
In general, this should remove XSS attacks:
$safer_str = htmlspecialchars($unsafe_str, ENT_QUOTES, 'UTF-8');
Without passing ENT_QUOTES as the second parameter, single-quote chars are not encoded. Additionally, XSS attacks have been demonstrated when the correct charset is not passed (typically UTF-8 will be adequate). htmlspecialchars should always be called with ENT_QUOTES and a charset parameter.
Note that PHP 5.2.12 contains a fix for a multibyte XSS attack.
You may find the OWASP ESAPI PHP port interesting and useful, although the PHP version is not complete AFAIK.
Yes, using PDO prepared statements protects from SQL injection. The SQL injection attack is based on the fact that the data submitted by the attacker is treated as a part of the query. For example, the attacker submits the string "a' or 'a'='a" as his password. Instead of the whole string being compared to the passwords in the database, it is included in the query, so the query becomes "SELECT * FROM users WHERE login='joe' AND password='a' or 'a'='a'". The part of attacker input is interpreted as a part of the query. However in case of prepared statements, you are telling the SQL engine specifically, what part is the query, and what part is data (by setting the parameters), so no such confusion is possible.
No, using strip_tags will not always protect you from cross-site scripting. Consider the following example. Let's say your page contains:
<script>
location.href='newpage_<?php echo strip_tags($_GET['language']); ?>.html';
</script>
The attacker submits the request with "language" set to "';somethingevil();'" . strip_tags() returns this data as is (there are no tags in it). The produced page code becomes:
<script>
location.href='newpage_';somethingevil();'.html';
</script>
somethingevil() gets executed. Replace somethingevil() with actual XSS exploit code.
Your last example with htmlspecialchars() will protect against this one, because it will escape single quotes. However I have seen even weirder cases of user-supplied data inside JavaScript code, where it is not even within a quoted string. I think it was in the variable or function name. In that last case no amount of escaping will probably help. I beleive that it is best to avoid using user input to generate JavaScript code.
Simple answer : no
Longer answer : There are ways to inject xss that PHP strip_stags cannot avoid.
For better protection try HTML purifier