Sunday, 31 July 2011

PHP - Magic Quotes

PHP - Magic Quotes

Prior to PHP 6 there was a feature called magic quotes that was created to help protect newbie programmers from writing bad form processing code. Magic quotes would automatically escape risky form data that might be used for SQL Injection with a backslash \. The characters escaped by PHP include: quote ', double quote ", backslash \ and NULL characters.

However, this newbie protection proved to cause more problems than it solved and is not
in PHP 6. If your PHP version is any version before 6 then you should use this lesson
to learn more about how magic quotes can affect you.

Magic Quotes - Are They Enabled?

First things first, you need to check to see if you have magic quotes enabled on you server.
The get_magic_quotes_gpc function will return a 0 (off) or a 1 (on). These boolean values
will fit nicely into an if statement where 1 is true and 0 is false.

PHP Code:

if(get_magic_quotes_gpc())
 echo "Magic quotes are enabled";
else
 echo "Magic quotes are disabled";

Display:


Magic quotes are enabled

If you received the message "Magic quotes are enabled" then you should definitely
continue reading this lesson, if not feel free to learn about it in case you
are developing for servers that might have quotes on or off.

Magic Quotes in Action

Now lets make a simple form processor to show how machines with magic quotes
enabled will escape those potentially risky characters. This form submits to itself, so
you only need to make one file, "magic-quotes.php" to test it out.

magic-quotes.php Code:

<?php
echo "Altered Text: ".$_POST['question'];
?>

<form method='post'>

Question: <input type='text' name='question'/><br />
<input type='submit'>

</form>

This simple form will display to you what magic quotes is doing. If you were to
enter and submit the string: Sandy said, "It's a beautiful day outside and I like to use \'s."
You would receive the following output.

Display:

Altered Text: Sandy said, \"It\'s a beautiful day outside and I like to use \\\'s.\"

Question:




Magic quotes did a number on that string, didn't it? Notice that
there is a backslash before all of those risky characters we talked about earlier.
After magic quotes:
  • A backslash \ becomes \\
  • A quote ' becomes \'
  • A double-quote " becomes \"

Now say that you wanted to remove the escaping that magic quotes puts in, you have two options:
disable magic quotes or strip the backslashes magic quotes adds.

Removing Backslashes - stripslashes()

Before you use PHP's backslash removal function stripslashes it's smart
to add some magic quote checking like our "Are They Enabled?" section above. This way
you won't accidentally be removing slashes that are legitimate in the future if
your PHP's magic quotes setting changes in the future.

magic-quotes.php Code:

<?php
echo "Removed Slashes: ";

// Remove those slashes
if(get_magic_quotes_gpc())
 echo stripslashes($_POST['question']);
else
 echo $_POST['question'];
 
?>

<form method='post'>
Question: <input type='text' name='question'/><br />
<input type='submit'>

</form>


Our new output for our string containing risky characters would now be:

Display:

Removed Slashes: Sandy said, "It's a beautiful day outside and I like to use \'s."
Question:

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