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Home/ Questions/Q 6989221
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 27, 20262026-05-27T19:11:00+00:00 2026-05-27T19:11:00+00:00

Possible Duplicate: Best way to stop SQL Injection in PHP If I were to

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Possible Duplicate:
Best way to stop SQL Injection in PHP

If I were to use the $_GET function to retrieve a variable from the URL how can I make it hack proof? Right now I just have addSlashes, what else should I add?

$variable1 = addslashes($_GET['variable1']);
//www.xxxxx.com/GetTest.php?variable1=xxxx
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-27T19:11:01+00:00Added an answer on May 27, 2026 at 7:11 pm

    The first and foremost rule with ANY input, not just $_GET but even with $_POST, $_FILES and anything you read from disk or from a stream you should always VALIDATE.

    Now to answer your question in more details, you have several HACKS that exist in this world. Let me show you some:

    XSS injections

    If you accept data from the URL such as from the $_GET and output this data without stripping out possible tags, you might render your site prone to XSS injection or code injection. For example:

    http://myhoturl.com/?search=<script>window.location.href="http://thisisahack.com/"</script>
    

    This would output a hack to your site and people would be redirected to another page. This page could be a phishing attempt to steal credentials

    SQL Injection

    It is possible to inject SQL to your application. For example:

    http://myhoturl.com/?search=%'; UPDATE users SET password=MD5('hello'); SELECT * FROM users WHERE username LIKE '%
    

    Would make your SQL look like this:

    SELECT * FROM articles WHERE title LIKE '%%'; UPDATE users SET password=MD5('hello'); SELECT * FROM users WHERE username LIKE '%%';
    

    And thus you’d update all your user’s password to Hello and then return something that doesn’t match.

    This is only a brief overview of what you can do with SQL injection. To protect yourself, use mysql_real_escape_string or PDO or any good DB abstraction layer.

    Code injection

    Lots of people like to include data from somewhere on the disk and allow uploads of files. For example:

    //File igotuploaded.txt
    <?php echo 'helloworld'; ?>
    

    And the url allows you to INCLUDE a file by name. ?show=myhotfile.txt

    //In this file we include myhotfile.txt
    include($_GET['show']);
    

    The person changes that to ?show=../uploads/igotuploaded.txt and you will run echo ‘Hello world’;

    That is dangerous.

    rule of thumb… NEVER TRUST USER INPUT, always validate, prevent, validate, fix, validate and again correct…

    Good luck

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