How to apply bindValue method in LIMIT clause?
Here is a snapshot of my code:
$fetchPictures = $PDO->prepare("SELECT *
FROM pictures
WHERE album = :albumId
ORDER BY id ASC
LIMIT :skip, :max");
$fetchPictures->bindValue(':albumId', $_GET['albumid'], PDO::PARAM_INT);
if(isset($_GET['skip'])) {
$fetchPictures->bindValue(':skip', trim($_GET['skip']), PDO::PARAM_INT);
} else {
$fetchPictures->bindValue(':skip', 0, PDO::PARAM_INT);
}
$fetchPictures->bindValue(':max', $max, PDO::PARAM_INT);
$fetchPictures->execute() or die(print_r($fetchPictures->errorInfo()));
$pictures = $fetchPictures->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
I get
You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near ''15', 15' at line 1
It seems that PDO is adding single quotes to my variables in the LIMIT part of the SQL code. I looked it up I found this bug which I think is related: http://bug开发者_JAVA百科s.php.net/bug.php?id=44639
Is that what I'm looking at? This bug has been opened since April 2008! What are we supposed to do in the meantime?
I need to build some pagination, and need to make sure the data is clean, sql injection-safe, before sending the sql statement.
I remember having this problem before. Cast the value to an integer before passing it to the bind function. I think this solves it.
$fetchPictures->bindValue(':skip', (int) trim($_GET['skip']), PDO::PARAM_INT);
The simplest solution would be to switch the emulation mode off. You can do it by simply adding the following line
$PDO->setAttribute( PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, false );
Also, this mode can be set as a constructor parameter when creating a PDO connection. It could be a better solution as some report their driver doesn't support the setAttribute()
function.
It will not only solve your problem with binding, but also let you send values directly into execute()
, which will make your code dramatically shorter. Assuming the emulation mode has been already set, the whole affair will take as much as half a dozen lines of code
$skip = isset($_GET['skip']) ? (int)trim($_GET['skip']) : 0;
$sql = "SELECT * FROM pictures WHERE album = ? ORDER BY id LIMIT ?, ?";
$stmt = $PDO->prepare($sql);
$stmt->execute([$_GET['albumid'], $skip, $max]);
$pictures = $stmt->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
Looking at the bug report, the following might work:
$fetchPictures->bindValue(':albumId', (int)$_GET['albumid'], PDO::PARAM_INT);
$fetchPictures->bindValue(':skip', (int)trim($_GET['skip']), PDO::PARAM_INT);
but are you sure your incoming data is correct? Because in the error message, there seems to be only one quote after the number (as opposed to the whole number being enclosed in quotes). This could also be an error with your incoming data. Can you do a print_r($_GET);
to find out?
This just as summary.
There are four options to parameterize LIMIT/OFFSET values:
Disable
PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES
as mentioned above.Which prevents values passed per
->execute([...])
to always show up as strings.Switch to manual
->bindValue(..., ..., PDO::PARAM_INT)
parameter population.Which however is less convenient than an ->execute list[].
Simply make an exception here and just interpolate plain integers when preparing the SQL query.
$limit = intval($limit); $s = $pdo->prepare("SELECT * FROM tbl LIMIT {$limit}");
The casting is important. More commonly you see
->prepare(sprintf("SELECT ... LIMIT %d", $num))
used for such purposes.If you're not using MySQL, but for example SQLite, or Postgres; you can also cast bound parameters directly in SQL.
SELECT * FROM tbl LIMIT (1 * :limit)
Again, MySQL/MariaDB don't support expressions in the LIMIT clause. Not yet.
for LIMIT :init, :end
You need to bind that way. if you had something like $req->execute(Array());
it wont work as it will cast PDO::PARAM_STR
to all vars in the array and for the LIMIT
you absolutely need an Integer.
bindValue or BindParam as you want.
$fetchPictures->bindValue(':albumId', (int)$_GET['albumid'], PDO::PARAM_INT);
Since nobody has explained why this is happening, I'm adding an answer. The reason it is behaving this was is because you are using trim()
. If you look at the PHP manual for trim
, the return type is string
. You are then trying to pass this as PDO::PARAM_INT
. A few ways to get around this are:
- Use
filter_var($integer, FILTER_VALIDATE_NUMBER_INT)
to make sure you are passing an integer. - As others said, using
intval()
- Casting with
(int)
- Checking if it is an integer with
is_int()
There are plenty more ways, but this is basically the root cause.
bindValue offset and limit using PDO::PARAM_INT and it will work
//BEFORE (Present error) $query = " .... LIMIT :p1, 30;"; ... $stmt->bindParam(':p1', $limiteInferior);
//AFTER (Error corrected) $query = " .... LIMIT :p1, 30;"; ... $limiteInferior = (int)$limiteInferior; $stmt->bindParam(':p1', $limiteInferior, PDO::PARAM_INT);
PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES
gave me the
Driver does not support this function: This driver doesn't support setting attributes' error.
My workaround was to set a $limit
variable as a string, then combine it in the prepare statement as in the following example:
$limit = ' LIMIT ' . $from . ', ' . $max_results;
$stmt = $pdo->prepare( 'SELECT * FROM users WHERE company_id = :cid ORDER BY name ASC' . $limit . ';' );
try {
$stmt->execute( array( ':cid' => $company_id ) );
...
}
catch ( Exception $e ) {
...
}
There is alot going on between different versions of PHP and the oddities of PDO.
I tried 3 or 4 methods here but could not get LIMIT working.
My suggestion is to use string formatting / concatination WITH an intval() filter:
$sql = 'SELECT * FROM `table` LIMIT ' . intval($limitstart) . ' , ' . intval($num).';';
It is very important to use intval() to prevent SQL injection, particularly if you are getting your limit from $_GET or the like. If you do that this is the easiest way to get LIMIT working.
There is alot of talk about 'The problem with LIMIT in PDO' but my thought here is that PDO params were never ment to be used for LIMIT since they will alway be integers a quick filter works. Still, it is a bit misleading since the philosophy has always been to not do any SQL injection filtering yourself but rather 'Have PDO handle it'.
Try the following:
$sql2 = "SELECT * FROM tab ORDER BY id DESC limit 2
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