I understand that (now)...

Was more concerned with SQL injection...

The manual has the following example:
%FUNCTION(DTW_SQL) query1() {
select * from shopper where shlogid = ’$(shlogid)’
%}

The value of the shlogid variable is intended to be a shopper ID. Its
purpose is to limit the rows returned by the SELECT statement to rows that
contain information about the shopper identified by the shopper ID.
However, if the string “smith’ or shlogid<>’smith” is passed as the value of
the variable shlogid, the query becomes:
select * from shopper where shlogid = ’smith’ or shlogid<>’smith’

This user-modified version of the original SQL SELECT statement returns the
entire shopper table.

The Net.Data string functions can be used to verify that the SQL statement
is not modified by the user in inappropriate ways. For example, the
following logic can be used to ensure that single-quotes are not used to
modify SQL statements:
@DTW_ADDQUOTE(shlogid, shlogid)
@query1()

The query then becomes:
select * from shopper where shlogid = ’smith’’ or shlogid<>’’smith’



On Fri, Oct 24, 2014 at 10:30 AM, Allen, Todd <Todd.Allen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:

Using @dtw_addquote will handle quotes within the string itself. For
example, if you are comparing to a name such as O'Leary. Without
@dtw_addquote the SQL select statement would fail due to the single quote
in the name.

You still need to enclose character field in quotes for the comparison in
the WHERE clause.

Thanks,
Todd


-----Original Message-----
From: WEB400 [mailto:web400-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Charles
Wilt
Sent: Friday, October 24, 2014 10:21 AM
To: Web Enabling the IBM i (AS/400 and iSeries)
Subject: Re: [WEB400] Net.Data - extra blank rows and an SQLSTATE 22003

Per the manual, I'm using @dtw_addquote()...

Is that enough?

Charles

On Thu, Oct 23, 2014 at 5:51 PM, Holger Scherer <hs@xxxxxxx> wrote:

Yes, please ;-)
If the data field is CHAR, use quotes.
And maybe you should have some casting routines to avoid trouble when
a user enters

'‘ OR 1=1

into your input field...

-h

Am 23.10.2014 um 23:40 schrieb Charles Wilt <charles.wilt@xxxxxxxxx>:



Do I always need to quote character values? Or is this some
funkyness
due
to the numeric value in a character column?


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