Note:

If you want to create a new page for developers, you should create it on the Moodle Developer Resource site.

Security:SQL injection

From MoodleDocs
Important:

This content of this page has been updated and migrated to the new Moodle Developer Resources. The information contained on the page should no longer be seen up-to-date.

Why not view this page on the new site and help us to migrate more content to the new site!

This page forms part of the Moodle security guidelines.

What is the danger?

Suppose your code in .../course/view.php?id=123 does something like

SELECT FROM mdl_course WHERE id = $id;

where the $id = 123 has come from the URL. Suppose that your code does not bother to clean that parameter properly.

Along comes Evil Hacker, and edits the URL to be

.../course/view.php?id=123;DELETE+FROM+mdl_user

I will let you work out why that is a very, very bad thing.

Of course, depending on exactly what the database query is, the malicious input needs to be constructed appropriately, but that is just a matter of trial and error for Evil Hacker.

How Moodle avoids this problem

Once again, it is a case of being very suspicious of any input that came from outside Moodle. In the example above, $id should clearly have been cleaned by passing PARAM_INT to required_param.

It is more tricky with a query like

UPDATE mdl_user SET lastname = '$lastname' WHERE id = $id;

What happens when $lastname is "O'Brian"? Well, you have to escape the ' like this: "O\'Brian".

In Moodle 1.9, addslashes is applied automatically to all input you get via required_param or optional_param.

In Moodle 2.0 we completely avoid the dangerous process of building SQL by concatenating strings. In Moodle 2.0 the SQL would look like

UPDATE mdl_user SET lastname = ? WHERE id = ?;

and then we would pass an array of values array($lastname, $id) to the database along with the SQL.


What you need to do in your code

In Moodle 2.0

  • Use higher level dmllib methods, like get_record, whenever possible, so you do not have to create SQL yourself.
  • When you have to insert values into SQL statements, use place-holders to insert the values safely.

In Moodle 1.9

  • Use higher level dmllib methods, like get_record, whenever possible, so you do not have to create SQL yourself.
  • Data from required_param and optional_param have already had addslashes applied, ready to be used in database queries, but make sure you put single quotes round each value.
  • If you have loaded some data from the database, and then want to re-insert it, then apply addslashes or addslashes_object to it first.
  • Test your code by using a tool like sqlmap, or by manually trying tricky inputs like
< > & &lt; &gt; &amp; ' \' 碁 \ \\


What you need to do as an administrator

  • This is not something that administrators can do anything about (other than keeping your Moodle up-to-date).


See also