Where and when do you use the quote method in PDO? I'm asking this in the light of the fact that in PDO, all quoting is done by the PDO object therefore no user input should be escaped/quoted etc. This makes one wonder why worry about a quote method if it's not gonna get used in a prepared statement anyway?
When using Prepared Statements with PDO::prepare() and PDOStatement::execute(), you don't have any quoting to do : this will be done automatically.
But, sometimes, you will not (or cannot) use prepared statements, and will have to write full SQL queries and execute them with PDO::exec() ; in those cases, you will have to make sure strings are quoted properly -- this is when the PDO::quote() method is useful.
While this may not be the only use-case it's the only one I've needed quote for. You can only pass values using PDO_Stmt::execute, so for example this query wouldn't work:
SELECT * FROM tbl WHERE :field = :value
quote comes in so that you can do this:
// Example: filter by a specific column
$columns = array("name", "location");
$column = isset($columns[$_GET["col"]]) ? $columns[$_GET["col"]] : $defaultCol;
$stmt = $pdo->prepare("SELECT * FROM tbl WHERE " . $pdo->quote($column) . " = :value");
$stmt->execute(array(":value" => $value));
$stmt = $pdo->prepare("SELECT * FROM tbl ORDER BY " . $pdo->quote($column) . " ASC");
and still expect $column to be filtered safely in the query.
The PDO system does not have (as far as I can find) any mechanism to bind an array variable in PHP into a set in SQL. That's a limitation of SQL prepared statements as well... thus you are left with the task of stitching together your own function for this purpose. For example, you have this:
$a = array(123, 'xyz', 789);
You want to end up with this:
$sql = "SELECT * FROM mytable WHERE item IN (123, 'xyz', 789)";
Using PDO::prepare() does not work because there's no method to bind the array variable $a into the set. You end up needing a loop where you individually quote each item in the array, then glue them together. In which case PDO::quote() is probably better than nothing, at least you get the character set details right.
Would be excellent if PDO supported a cleaner way to handle this. Don't forget, the empty set in SQL is a disgusting special case... which means any function you build for this purpose becomes more complex than you want it to be. Something like PDO::PARAM_SET as an option on the binding, with the individual driver deciding how to handle the empty set. Of course, that's no longer compatible with SQL prepared statements.
Happy if someone knows a way to avoid this difficulty.
A bit late anwser, but one situation where its useful is if you get a load of data out of your table which you're going to put back in later.
for example, i have a function which gets a load of text out of a table and writes it to a file. that text might later be inserted into another table. the quote() method makes all the quotes safe.
it's real easy:
$safeTextToFile = $DBH->quote($textFromDataBase);
Related
I've read many times over - and just want to clarify (I think I'm confused)
I switched to mysqli today, and started using prepared statements.
Example of my prepared statement
function read($table, $var) {
if($stmt = mysqli_prepare($link, "SELECT * FROM ? WHERE `uid`=?")) {
mysqli_stmt_bind_param($stmt, "si", $table, $var);
mysqli_stmt_execute($stmt);
return mysqli_fetch_assoc($stmt);
} else {
echo '<script type="text/javascript>">alert("Something went wrong");</script>';
}
}
$info = read("users", $_SESSION['uid']);
$char = read("characters", $_SESSION['uid']);
Do i still need to escape anything? I know, i know, i've read it everywhere that you dont need to escape when using prepared statements, but then there are questions like this and this that make me worried.
the only problem with you query is that you cannot pass the tableName as a paramater. Only values can be parameterized. So the other way is to concatenate the tableName along with your query.
"SELECT * FROM `" . $tableNameHere . "` WHERE `uid`=?"
Well, first of all this code just won't work.
So, there are 2 questions actually
Do I need to do any additional escaping on the bound parameters
No.
How to safely insert an identifier into query?
It depends. As long as you have your table name hardcoded in your code - it's ok to insert it as is.
But if it's coming from the untrusted source, you have to filter it out, using whitelisting.
I've explained it in my other answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/8255054/285587
As for the questions you linked to, the second one is irrelevant and first one just makes very little sense. LIKE is supposed to return many rows, so, one have to either use no LIKE at all or worry not about it (in terms of safety). Though in terms of returning correct result you may want to escape characters that have special meaning in LIKE, but I wouldn't use LIKE for the search purposes at all.
I'm learning PDO, and finding it tricky to make sure my statements work correctly. I have a PHP function which is updating my database by simply adding the number 1 to the total.
function add_rating($place_id,$rating_id) {
//make $db accessible inside the function
global $db;
// query v1
$sql = "UPDATE places_ratings SET ? +1 WHERE place_id=?";
$q = $db->prepare($sql);
$q->execute(array($rating_id,$place_id));
}
I tried variations of this, none of which I could get to work. I don't know if I was using question marks wrong. I was following this guide and also a previous SO question. In the end I tried a different method which worked first time, so I am tempted to re-use it as it also seems a lot simpler.
function add_rating($place_id,$rating_id) {
//make $db accessible inside the function
global $db;
// query v2
$query = "UPDATE places_ratings SET $rating_id = ($rating_id +1) WHERE place_id = $place_id";
$update = $db->query($query);
}
My question is: which statement is better/safer? And secondly, what am I doing wrong with the first version with question marks? Thanks...
In general prepared statements as in your first example are safer because they are immune to SQL injection.
Your example doesn't work because you can't specify field names using a ? parameter in a prepared statement. Even if you could your SQL still would be wrong, this would expand to
UPDATE places_ratings SET whatever +1 WHERE place_id=?
which is not valid.
If your $rating_id is generated in code and not taken from user input you could combine both approaches.
Prepared statements are not simply like copy'n'pasting variables into a piece of text. Prepared statements separate between the query logic and the values the query should work on. They're there so you're able to tell your database "You're supposed to do this", let the database understand it, then give it the values it's supposed to do that something with. The logic itself cannot be variable, it needs to be complete the first time.
Therefore, you can only use placeholders for values. Your query needs to read UPDATE ... SET FIELD = VALUE WHERE FIELD = VALUE. The FIELD parts need to be in the statement, the VALUE parts you can use placeholders for. It looks like your $rating_id variable is a variable field name. First of all, that's a bad idea. You should not make field names variable if possible. But if you have to, you cannot use prepared statement placeholders for them. Instead, you'll have to do it like this:
$rating_id = 'field_name';
$query = "UPDATE places_ratings SET `$rating_id` = `$rating_id` + 1 WHERE `place_id` = ?";
$stmt = $db->prepare($query);
$stmt->execute(array($place_id));
It's up to you to make sure $rating_id is safe and contains known, whitelisted values. Don't let the user supply the value for it in any way.
Please, go an learn what prepared statements are. And you could also use a tutorial, that does not promote bad practices and vulnerable code.
A correctly created and used prepared statement will always be more secure then concatenated query string, because prepared statements send query logic and data separately.
Also , if you are using PDO, then quite often the use of bindParam() method should be preferred over passing the values directly in the execute() method as an array. This is because, when passing values in execute(), the values are bound as PDO::PARAM_STR, even if DB column expects and integer.
P.S. Stop using global in your code !!
I do understand that the prepared statements is the ultimate way to seek protection against the SQL injection. However, they provide coverage in a limited fashion; for example, in cases where I let the user to decide how the order by operation to be ( i.e, is it ASC or DESC? etc ), I get no coverage there with the prepared statements.
I understand that I can map the user input to a pre-defined white list for that. But, this is only possible when a whitelist can be created or guessed thoroughly beforehand.
For example, in the cases I mention above ( the ASC, or DESC ), this can easily be mapped and verified against a list of accepted values. But isn't there a situation where the portion of the SQL statement cannot be verified against a white list?
If such a situation exists, then what's the recommended approach?
If I were to escape the user_input using the underlying database's built-in escape utility (such as mysqL_real_escape_string for mysql) across the board, where would I fail?
I'm asking this question with the assumption that I always construct my sql statements with quoted values - even for integers...
Let's take a look at the following example and reflect upon it..
select {$fields} from {$table} where Age='{$age}' order by {$orderby_pref}
Assume all vars are user supplied.
If I were to mysql_real_escape_string all the variables in the above SQL ( as opposed to using prepared statements which covers me only half-way forcing me to come up whitelists for the other half that it cannot help), wouldn't it be equally safe (and easier to code)? If not, in which input scenario escape utility would fail?
$fields = mysql_escape($fields);
$table = mysql_escape($table);
$age = mysql_escape($age);
$orderby_pref = mysql_escape($orderby_pref);
select {$fields} from {$table} where Age='{$age}' order by {$orderby_pref}
You always need to use white-lists for stuff like table- or column names, whether you use prepared statements or the mysql escape functions.
The problem is that table names and column names are not quoted in single or double quotes, so if you use a function that specifically quotes these characters (and some more of course...), it will do nothing for your table name.
Consider the table name my_table; DELETE * FROM mysql; SELECT * FROM my_table. Nothing in this string will get escaped by mysql's escape functions but it is definitely a string you would want to check against a white-list.
Apart from that the mysql escape functions have a problem with character sets that can render them useless, so you are always better off with prepared statements.
You could use PDO and your life will get easier ... :
# Order
switch(strtoupper($Order)){
default:
case 'ASC':
$Order = 'ASC';
break;
case 'DESC':
$Order = 'DESC';
break;
}
# ID
$ID = 39;
$Username = 'David';
# Query
$Query = $this->DB->Main->prepare('SELECT * FROM Table WHERE ID = :ID AND Username = :Username ORDER BY HellBob '.$Order);
$Query->bindValue(':ID', $ID, PDO::PARAM_INT);
$Query->bindValue(':Username', $Username, PDO::PARAM_STR);
# All good ?
if(!$Query->execute()){
exit('Error');
}
// Results
$Row = $Query->fetch(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
You don't have to worry about quotes or SQL injections. You can use simple "white list" as you mention to get variable into your query.
I've always done the simple connection of mysql_connect, mysql_pconnect:
$db = mysql_pconnect('*host*', '*user*', '*pass*');
if (!$db) {
echo("<strong>Error:</strong> Could not connect to the database!");
exit;
}
mysql_select_db('*database*');
While using this I've always used the simple method to escape any data before making a query, whether that be INSERT, SELECT, UPDATE or DELETE by using mysql_real_escape_string
$name = $_POST['name'];
$name = mysql_real_escape_string($name);
$sql = mysql_query("SELECT * FROM `users` WHERE (`name` = '$name')") or die(mysql_error());
Now I understand this is safe, to an extent!
It escapes dangerous characters; however, it is still vulnerable to other attacks which can contain safe characters but may be harmful to either displaying data or in some cases, modifying or deleting data maliciously.
So, I searched a little bit and found out about PDO, MySQLi and prepared statements. Yes, I may be late to the game but I've read many, many tutorials (tizag, W3C, blogs, Google searches) out there and not a single one has mentioned these. It seems very strange as to why, as just escaping user input really isn't secure and not good practice to say the least. Yes, I'm aware you could use Regex to tackle it, but still, I'm pretty sure that's not enough?
It is to my understanding that using PDO/prepared statements is a much safer way to store and retrieve data from a database when the variables are given by user input. The only trouble is, the switch over (especially after being very stuck in my ways/habits of previous coding) is a little difficult.
Right now I understand that to connect to my database using PDO I would use
$hostname = '*host*';
$username = '*user*';
$password = '*pass*';
$database = '*database*'
$dbh = new PDO("mysql:host=$hostname;dbname=$database", $username, $password);
if ($dbh) {
echo 'Connected to database';
} else {
echo 'Could not connect to database';
}
Now, function names are different so no longer will my mysql_query, mysql_fetch_array, mysql_num_rows etc work. So I'm having to read/remember a load of new ones, but this is where I'm getting confused.
If I wanted to insert data from say a sign up/registration form, how would I go about doing this, but mainly how would I go about it securely? I assume this is where prepared statements come in, but by using them does this eliminate the need to use something like mysql_real_escape_string? I know that mysql_real_escape_string requires you to be connected to a database via mysql_connect/mysql_pconnect so now we aren't using either won't this function just produce an error?
I've seen different ways to approach the PDO method too, for example, I've seen :variable and ? as what I think are known as place holders (sorry if that is wrong).
But I think this is roughly the idea of what should be done to fetch a user from a database
$user_id = $_GET['id']; // For example from a URL query string
$stmt = $dbh->prepare("SELECT * FROM `users` WHERE `id` = :user_id");
$stmt->bindParam(':user_id', $user_id, PDO::PARAM_INT);
But then I'm stuck on a couple things, if the variable wasn't a number and was a string of text, you have to given a length after PDO:PARAM_STR if I'm not mistaken. But how can you give a set length if you're not sure on the value given from user in-putted data, it can vary each time? Either way, as far as I know to display the data you then do
$stmt->execute();
$result = $stmt->fetchAll();
// Either
foreach($result as $row) {
echo $row['user_id'].'<br />';
echo $row['user_name'].'<br />';
echo $row['user_email'];
}
// Or
foreach($result as $row) {
$user_id = $row['user_id'];
$user_name = $row['user_name'];
$user_email = $row['user_email'];
}
echo("".$user_id."<br />".$user_name."<br />".$user_email."");
Now, is this all safe?
If I am right, would inserting data be the same for example:
$username = $_POST['username'];
$email = $_POST['email'];
$stmt = $dbh->prepare("INSERT INTO `users` (username, email)
VALUES (:username, :email)");
$stmt->bindParam(':username, $username, PDO::PARAM_STR, ?_LENGTH_?);
$stmt->bindParam(':email, $email, PDO::PARAM_STR, ?_LENGTH_?);
$stmt->execute();
Would that work, and is that safe too? If it is right what value would I put in for the ?_LENGTH_?? Have I got this all completely wrong?
UPDATE
The replies I've had so far have been extremely helpful, can't thank you guys enough! Everyone has got a +1 for opening my eyes up to something a little different. It's difficult to choose the top answer, but I think Col. Shrapnel deserves it as everything is pretty much covered, even going into other arrays with custom libraries which I wasn't aware of!
But thanks to all of you:)
Thanks for the interesting question. Here you go:
It escapes dangerous characters,
Your concept is utterly wrong.
In fact "dangerous characters" is a myth, there are none.
And mysql_real_escape_string escaping but merely a string delimiters. From this definition you can conclude it's limitations - it works only for strings.
however, it is still vulnerable to other attacks which can contain safe characters but may be harmful to either displaying data or in some cases, modifying or deleting data maliciously.
You're mixing here everything.
Speaking of database,
for the strings it is NOT vulnerable. As long as your strings being quoted and escaped, they cannot "modify or delete data maliciously".*
for the other data typedata - yes, it's useless. But not because it is somewhat "unsafe" but just because of improper use.
As for the displaying data, I suppose it is offtopic in the PDO related question, as PDO has nothing to do with displaying data either.
escaping user input
^^^ Another delusion to be noted!
a user input has absolutely nothing to do with escaping. As you can learn from the former definition, you have to escape strings, not whatever "user input". So, again:
you have escape strings, no matter of their source
it is useless to escape other types of data, no matter of the source.
Got the point?
Now, I hope you understand the limitations of escaping as well as the "dangerous characters" misconception.
It is to my understanding that using PDO/prepared statements is a much safer
Not really.
In fact, there are four different query parts which we can add to it dynamically:
a string
a number
an identifier
a syntax keyword.
so, you can see that escaping covers only one issue. (but of course, if you treat numbers as strings (putting them in quotes), when applicable, you can make them safe as well)
while prepared statements cover - ugh - whole 2 isues! A big deal ;-)
For the other 2 issues 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?
Now, function names are different so no longer will my mysql_query, mysql_fetch_array, mysql_num_rows etc work.
That is another, grave delusion of PHP users, a natural disaster, a catastrophe:
Even when utilizing old mysql driver, one should never use bare API functions in their code! One have to put them in some library function for the everyday usage! (Not as a some magic rite but just to make the code shorter, less repetitive, error-proof, more consistent and readable).
The same goes for the PDO as well!
Now on with your question again.
but by using them does this eliminate the need to use something like mysql_real_escape_string?
YES.
But I think this is roughly the idea of what should be done to fetch a user from a database
Not to fetch, but to add a whatever data to the query!
you have to given a length after PDO:PARAM_STR if I'm not mistaken
You can, but you don't have to.
Now, is this all safe?
In terms of database safety there are just no weak spots in this code. Nothing to secure here.
for the displaying security - just search this site for the XSS keyword.
Hope I shed some light on the matter.
BTW, for the long inserts you can make some use of the function I wrote someday, Insert/update helper function using PDO
However, I am not using prepared statements at the moment, as I prefer my home-brewed placeholders over them, utilizing a library I mentioned above. So, to counter the code posted by the riha below, it would be as short as these 2 lines:
$sql = 'SELECT * FROM `users` WHERE `name`=?s AND `type`=?s AND `active`=?i';
$data = $db->getRow($sql,$_GET['name'],'admin',1);
But of course you can have the same code using prepared statements as well.
* (yes I am aware of the Schiflett's scaring tales)
I never bother with bindParam() or param types or lengths.
I just pass an array of parameter values to execute(), like this:
$stmt = $dbh->prepare("SELECT * FROM `users` WHERE `id` = :user_id");
$stmt->execute( array(':user_id' => $user_id) );
$stmt = $dbh->prepare("INSERT INTO `users` (username, email)
VALUES (:username, :email)");
$stmt->execute( array(':username'=>$username, ':email'=>$email) );
This is just as effective, and easier to code.
You may also be interested in my presentation SQL Injection Myths and Fallacies, or my book SQL Antipatterns Volume 1: Avoiding the Pitfalls of Database Programming.
Yes, :something is a named placeholder in PDO, ? is an anonymous placeholder. They allow you to either bind values one by one or all at once.
So, basically that makes four options to provide your query with values.
One by one with bindValue()
This binds a concrete value to your placeholder as soon as you call it. You may even bind hard coded strings like bindValue(':something', 'foo') if desired.
Providing a parameter type is optional (but suggested). However, since the default is PDO::PARAM_STR, you only need to specify it when it is not a string. Also, PDO will take care of the length here - there is no length parameter.
$sql = '
SELECT *
FROM `users`
WHERE
`name` LIKE :name
AND `type` = :type
AND `active` = :active
';
$stm = $db->prepare($sql);
$stm->bindValue(':name', $_GET['name']); // PDO::PARAM_STR is the default and can be omitted.
$stm->bindValue(':type', 'admin'); // This is not possible with bindParam().
$stm->bindValue(':active', 1, PDO::PARAM_INT);
$stm->execute();
...
I usually prefer this approach. I find it the cleanest and most flexible.
One by one with bindParam()
A variable is bound to your placeholder that will be read when the query is executed, NOT when bindParam() is called. That may or may not be what you want. It comes in handy when you want to repeatedly execute your query with different values.
$sql = 'SELECT * FROM `users` WHERE `id` = :id';
$stm = $db->prepare($sql);
$id = 0;
$stm->bindParam(':id', $id, PDO::PARAM_INT);
$userids = array(2, 7, 8, 9, 10);
foreach ($userids as $userid) {
$id = $userid;
$stm->execute();
...
}
You only prepare and bind once which safes CPU cycles. :)
All at once with named placeholders
You just drop in an array to execute(). Each key is a named placeholder in your query (see Bill Karwins answer). The order of the array is not important.
On a side note: With this approach you cannot provide PDO with data type hints (PDO::PARAM_INT etc.). AFAIK, PDO tries to guess.
All at once with anonymous placeholders
You also drop in an array to execute(), but it is numerically indexed (has no string keys). The values will replace your anonymous placeholders one by one in the order they appear in your query/array - first array value replaces first placeholder and so forth. See erm410's answer.
As with the array and named placeholders, you cannot provide data type hints.
What they have in common
All of those require you to bind/provide as much values as you have
placeholders. If you bind too many/few, PDO will eat your children.
You don't have to take care about escaping, PDO handles that. Prepared PDO statements are SQL injection safe by design. However, that's not true for exec() and query() - you should generally only use those two for hardcoded queries.
Also be aware that PDO throws exceptions. Those could reveal potentially sensitive information to the user. You should at least put your initial PDO setup in a try/catch block!
If you don't want it to throw Exceptions later on, you can set the error mode to warning.
try {
$db = new PDO(...);
$db->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE, PDO::ERRMODE_WARNING)
} catch (PDOException $e) {
echo 'Oops, something went wrong with the database connection.';
}
To answer the length question, specifying it is optional unless the param you are binding is an OUT parameter from a stored procedure, so in most cases you can safely omit it.
As far as safety goes, escaping is done behind the scenes when you bind the parameters. This is possible because you had to create a database connection when you created the object. You are also protected from SQL injection attacks since by preparing the statement, you are telling your database the format of the statement before user input can get anywhere near to it. An example:
$id = '1; MALICIOUS second STATEMENT';
mysql_query("SELECT * FROM `users` WHERE `id` = $id"); /* selects user with id 1
and the executes the
malicious second statement */
$stmt = $pdo->prepare("SELECT * FROM `users` WHERE `id` = ?") /* Tells DB to expect a
single statement with
a single parameter */
$stmt->execute(array($id)); /* selects user with id '1; MALICIOUS second
STATEMENT' i.e. returns empty set. */
Thus, in terms of safety, your examples above seem fine.
Finally, I agree that binding parameters individually is tedious and is just as effectively done with an array passed to PDOStatement->execute() (see http://www.php.net/manual/en/pdostatement.execute.php).
I currently use Zend_Db to manage my queries.
I've written already code that preforms queries like the one below:
$handle->select()->from('user_id')
->where('first_name=?', $id)
->where('last_name=?', $lname)
I've done this without sanitizing the input, assuming Zend_Db will. Does Zend do this?
Another question:
Does Zend_Db sanitize insert('table', $data) and update queries?
Thanks.
I wrote a lot of the code for database parameters and quoting in Zend Framework while I was the team lead for the project (up to version 1.0).
I tried to encourage best practices where possible, but I had to strike a balance with ease of use.
Note that you can always examine the string value of a Zend_Db_Select object, to see how it has decided to do quoting.
print $select; // invokes __toString() method
Also you can use the Zend_Db_Profiler to inspect the SQL that is run on your behalf by Zend_Db.
$db->getProfiler()->setEnabled(true);
$db->update( ... );
print $db->getProfiler()->getLastQueryProfile()->getQuery();
print_r $db->getProfiler()->getLastQueryProfile()->getQueryParams();
$db->getProfiler()->setEnabled(false);
Here are some answers to your specific questions:
Zend_Db_Select::where('last_name=?', $lname)
Values are quoted appropriately. Although the "?" looks like a parameter placeholder, in this method the argument is actually quoted appropriately and interpolated. So it's not a true query parameter. In fact, the following two statements produce exactly the same query as the above usage:
$select->where( $db->quoteInto('last_name=?', $lname) );
$select->where( 'last_name=' . $db->quote($lname) );
However, if you pass a parameter that is an object of type Zend_Db_Expr, then it's not quoted. You're responsible for SQL injection risks, because it's interpolated verbatim, to support expression values:
$select->where('last_modified < ?', new Zend_Db_Expr('NOW()'))
Any other part of that expression that needs to be quoted or delimited is your responsibility. E.g., if you interpolate any PHP variables into the expression, safety is your responsibility. If you have column names that are SQL keywords, you need to delimit them yourself with quoteIdentifier(). Example:
$select->where($db->quoteIdentifier('order').'=?', $myVariable)
Zend_Db_Adapter_Abstract::insert( array('colname' => 'value') )
Table name and column names are delimited, unless you turn off AUTO_QUOTE_IDENTIFIERS.
Values are parameterized as true query parameters (not interpolated). Unless the value is a Zend_Db_Expr object, in which case it's interpolated verbatim, so you can insert expressions or NULL or whatever.
Zend_Db_Adapter_Abstract::update( array('colname' => 'value'), $where )
Table name and column names are delimited, unless you turn off AUTO_QUOTE_IDENTIFIERS.
Values are parameterized, unless they are Zend_Db_Expr objects, as in insert() method.
The $where argument is not filtered at all, so you're responsible for any SQL injection risks in that one. You can make use of the quoteInto() method to help make quoting more convenient.
Yes. See http://framework.zend.com/manual/en/zend.db.select.html . Don't worry. You're right to be skeptical.
by default when you use value binding in your SQL queries like this:
where('first_name=?', $id);
Zend_Db uses appropriate quoting of values to prevent SQL injection. although it is strongly recommended (by books, articles, manuals and self experience) to sanitize/filter user input. Zend_Filter can be very helpful.
The bit that should make you feel safe is the ? marks in the where clauses. These are parameters, which are safely replaced with the second argument by the database system.
When you need it somewhere else (like in join) or you are unsure if it will be escaped then you can always use $this->getAdapter()->quoteInto('type = ?',1);
Filtering input is always good, because likely it'll be going somewhere other than just the DB, and you at least want sane data in your database at some level.
Zend_Filter_Input on the way in
Prepared statements (or quoteInto if not in a prepared)
Escape filters on the way out (htmlentities, etc).
One thing about this, when value is NULL, you can achive not valid query
$value = NULL;
$select->where('prop=?', $value);
Result: SQL error