PDO lacks brevity and simplicity; EasyDB makes separating data from instructions easy (and aesthetically pleasing).
EasyDB was created by Paragon Initiative Enterprises as part of our effort to encourage better application security practices.
Check out our other open source projects too.
If you're looking for a full-fledged query builder, check out Latitude and Aura.SqlQuery, which can be used with EasyDB.
If you'd like to use EasyDB but cache prepared statements in memory for multiple queries (i.e. to reduce database round-trips), check out our EasyDB-Cache wrapper class.
First, get Composer, if you don't already use it.
Next, run the following command:
/path/to/your/local/composer.phar require paragonie/easydb:^2
If you've installed Composer in /usr/bin
, you can replace
/path/to/your/local/composer.phar
with just composer
.
Let's refactor a dangerous PHP snippet that previously used string concatenation to pass user input
instead of prepared statements. For example, imagine something that just dropped {$_GET['blogpostid']}
into the
middle of a mysql_query()
statement. Let's make it secure.
$db = new \PDO(
'mysql:host=localhost;dbname=something',
'username',
'putastrongpasswordhere'
);
$statement = $db->prepare('SELECT * FROM comments WHERE blogpostid = ? ORDER BY created ASC');
$exec = $statement->execute([$_GET['blogpostid']]);
$rows = $statement->fetchAll(\PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
foreach ($rows as $row) {
$template_engine->render('comment', $row);
}
That's a little wordy for such a simple task. If we do this in multiple places, we end up repeating ourselves a lot.
$db = \ParagonIE\EasyDB\Factory::fromArray([
'mysql:host=localhost;dbname=something',
'username',
'putastrongpasswordhere'
]);
$rows = $db->run('SELECT * FROM comments WHERE blogpostid = ? ORDER BY created ASC', $_GET['blogpostid']);
foreach ($rows as $row) {
$template_engine->render('comment', $row);
}
We made it a one-liner.
$db->insert('comments', [
'blogpostid' => $_POST['blogpost'],
'userid' => $_SESSION['user'],
'comment' => $_POST['body'],
'parent' => isset($_POST['replyTo']) ? $_POST['replyTo'] : null
]);
This is equivalent to the following SQL query (assuming $_POST['blogpostid']
is equal to 123
, $_SESSION['user']
is equal to 234
, $_POST['body']
is
equal to test
, and $_POST['replyTo']
is equal to 3456
):
INSERT INTO comments (blogpostid, userid, comment, parent) VALUES (
123,
234,
'test',
3456
);
$sql = $db->buildInsertQuery('comments', [
'blogpostid',
'userid',
'comment'
]);
// INSERT INTO comments (blogpostid, userid, comment) VALUES (?, ?, ?)
$result = $db->q(
$sql,
$values,
\PDO::FETCH_BOTH,
true
);
$db->update('comments', [
'column' => 'foo',
'otherColumn' => 123456,
'approved' => true
], [
'commentid' => $_POST['comment']
]);
This is equivalent to the following SQL query
(assuming $_POST['comment']
is equal to 789
):
UPDATE comments
SET
column = 'foo',
otherColumn = 123456,
approved = TRUE
WHERE commentid = 789
// Delete all of this user's comments
$db->delete('comments', [
'userid' => 3
]);
This is equivalent to the following SQL query:
DELETE FROM comments WHERE userid = 3
$userData = $db->row(
"SELECT * FROM users WHERE userid = ?",
$_GET['userid']
);
Note: This expects a variadic list of arguments, not an array. If you have multiple parameters, stack them like this:
$userData = $db->row(
"SELECT * FROM users WHERE userid = ? AND other = ?",
$_GET['userid'],
$_GET['other']
);
This is wrong:
$userData = $db->row(
"SELECT * FROM users WHERE userid = ? AND other = ?",
array($userid, $other) // WRONG, should not be in an array
);
$exists = $db->cell(
"SELECT count(id) FROM users WHERE email = ?",
$_POST['email']
);
/* OR YOU CAN CALL IT THIS WAY: */
$exists = $db->single(
"SELECT count(id) FROM users WHERE email = ?",
array(
$_POST['email']
)
);
Note: cell()
expects a variadic list of arguments, not an array. If you have
multiple parameters, stack them like this:
$exists = $db->cell(
"SELECT count(id) FROM users WHERE email = ? AND username = ?",
$_POST['email'],
$_POST['usenrame']
);
This is wrong:
$exists = $db->cell(
"SELECT count(id) FROM users WHERE email = ? AND username = ?",
array($email, $username) // WRONG, should not be in an array
);
Alternatively, you can use single()
instead of cell()
if you really
want to pass an array.
$save = function (EasyDB $db) use ($userData, $query) : int {
$db->safeQuery($query, [$userData['userId']]);
return \Some\Other\Package::CleanUpTable($db);
};
// auto starts, commits and rolls back a transaction as necessary
$returnedInt = $db->tryFlatTransaction($save);
$statement = EasyStatement::open()
->with('last_login IS NOT NULL');
if (strpos($_POST['search'], '@') !== false) {
// Perform a username search
$statement->orWith('username LIKE ?', '%' . $db->escapeLikeValue($_POST['search']) . '%');
} else {
// Perform an email search
$statement->orWith('email = ?', $_POST['search']);
}
// The statement can compile itself to a string with placeholders:
echo $statement; /* last_login IS NOT NULL OR username LIKE ? */
// All the values passed to the statement are captured and can be used for querying:
$user = $db->single("SELECT * FROM users WHERE $statement", $statement->values());
Note: Passing values with conditions is entirely optional but recommended.
// Statements also handle translation for IN conditions with variable arguments,
// using a special ?* placeholder:
$roles = [1];
if ($_GET['with_managers']) {
$roles[] = 2;
}
$statement = EasyStatement::open()->in('role IN (?*)', $roles);
// The ?* placeholder is replaced by the correct number of ? placeholders:
echo $statement; /* role IN (?, ?) */
// And the values will be unpacked accordingly:
print_r($statement->values()); /* [1, 2] */
// Statements can also be grouped when necessary:
$statement = EasyStatement::open()
->group()
->with('subtotal > ?')
->andWith('taxes > ?')
->end()
->orGroup()
->with('cost > ?')
->andWith('cancelled = 1')
->end();
echo $statement; /* (subtotal > ? AND taxes > ?) OR (cost > ? AND cancelled = 1) */
$db->insert('user_auth', [
'user_id' => 1,
'timestamp' => new EasyPlaceholder('NOW()'),
'expired' => new EasyPlaceholder('TIMESTAMPADD(HOUR, 2, NOW())'),
'location' => new EasyPlaceholder("ST_GeomFromText(CONCAT('POINT(', ?, ' ', ?, ')'))", 50.4019514, 30.3926105)
])
$db->update('user_auth', [
'last_update' => new EasyPlaceholder('NOW()'),
])
EasyPlaceholder
can use in insert()
, insertIgnore()
, insertOnDuplicateKeyUpdate()
, update()
.
$pdo = $db->getPdo();
Yes! It's as simple as doing this:
$easy = new \ParagonIE\EasyDB\EasyDB($pdo, 'mysql');
vendor/bin/phpunit
This comes up a lot when trying to pass an array of parameters to run()
.
EasyDB::run()
expects a query string, then any number of optional parameters.
It does NOT expect an array of all the parameters.
If you want to use an API that looks like $obj->method($string, $array)
,
use safeQuery()
instead of run()
.
<?php
/**
* @var EasyDB $db
* @var string $query
* @var array $params
*/
- $rows = $db->run($query, $params);
+ $rows = $db->safeQuery($query, $params);
Alternatively, you can flatten your array with the splat operator:
<?php
/**
* @var EasyDB $db
* @var string $query
* @var array $params
*/
- $rows = $db->run($query, $params);
+ $rows = $db->run($query, ...$params);
EasyDB's run()
method is a variadic wrapper for safeQuery()
, so either
solution is correct.
If your company uses this library in their products or services, you may be interested in purchasing a support contract from Paragon Initiative Enterprises.