It is only small step from the Google+ API documentation to the Google search site. A very small one. I think if you combine the two, you will get exceptional results. — hakre7 secs ago
@Whisperity I have issues between compatibility sometimes when I use the old mysql functions. I always try to use the newer ones but if they don't work I give the older ones a shot.
@Alec Also, mysql_real_escape_string needs a previously opened (mysql_connect()) connection or a link identifier as a second parameter for it to work, as the escaping is done by the database server, not PHP.
@Darkeden Don't use unfinished code in production. What sort of attacks are you talking about? Your code might be in the need of serious refactoring then if it needs mysql_escape_string() to work. Is the server you are hosting on updated?
@Whisperity I'm trying to escape "_GET" variables of my file "content.php", which loads inside "index.php" (index.php has command "include_once("db.php");)
yes, the host is updated. The problem I have already noticed...bad code.
@PeeHaa I tried to make PDO, but I guess I'm doing wrong.
First of all, you should try to ask a proper question on the main site. You might also try to share your code on GitHub or anything alike so we can check and help you to refactor it, but it sounds really smelly (pardon my senses being miswired).
> Why is the constant, which is supposed to be global, not "inherited" when including from a remote server?
@Darkeden: NEVER EVER EVER EVER EVER EVER EVER EVER EVER EVER EVER EVER pass a raw password to a database connection. Always hash it in your application, and then pass the hashed value to the database...
I'm completely lost... I'm like: "My site is being attacked. Ok, I'm Google "how to protect against sql injections". Fine, now I'm have found millions of ideas (mysql_escape_strin, PDO, mysqli, etc). My code is very particular and I don' know neither where nor how to go into fixing my website."
@Alec you are using mysql_* functions, you are first trying to do stuff with $action and only after that you check whether it isset() and you could just use in_array()
If user input is inserted into an SQL query directly, the application becomes vulnerable to SQL injection, like in the following example:
$unsafe_variable = $_POST['user_input'];
mysql_query("INSERT INTO table (column) VALUES ('" . $unsafe_variable . "')");
That's because the user can input s...
I escaped "_GET" variables of my file "content.php", which loads inside "index.php" (index.php has command "include_once("db.php");) Then, when I tried to access any place of my site that talks to DB, it didn't loaded
How you called the function is wrong. You should have called, assuming $conn is the database connection pointer, mysqli_real_escape_string($conn, $somestring);.
Every developer who studies computer science (and most who haven't) has heard the phrase "Garbage In, Garbage Out" before. It's such a logical concept that it's almost beyond refuting. Almost. While the phrase still definitely holds true for some situations, it doesn't hold for most. How can such a logical and straight forward saying lead us down the wrong path? Read more »
I had a slightly weird education and use a mish mash of metric and imperial. Though US imperial confused the hell out of me the first time I was there, asked for a pint and got a tiny little thing back. Here a pint is 20 fluid ounces but it's apparently 16 in America!
the hacker is kidding me. He came to me and said he was attacking my site. Then, he said how he was doing that and what should I search in order to avoid that (sql injections). Right after he said, "as soon as you close this hole I'll keep attacking it by other holes."