On Jul4, 2010, at 13:57 , Pavel Stehule wrote: >> I don't really buy that argument. By using a psql variable, you simply move >> the quoting & escaping business from SQL to the shell where psql is called. >> True, you avoid SQL injectiont, but in turn you make yourself vulnerable to >> shell injection. > > can you show some example of shell injection? For me, this way via > psql variables is the best. There are clean interface between outer > and inner space. And I can call simply just psql scripts - without > external bash.
Well, on the one hand you have (with your syntax) echo "DO (a int := $VALUE) $$ ... $$" | psql which allows sql injection if $VALUE isn't sanitized or quoted & escaped properly. On the other hand you have echo "DO (a int := :value) $$ ... $$$ | psql --variable value=$VALUE which allows at least injection of additional arguments to psql if $VALUE contains spaces. You might try to avoid that by encoding value=$VALUE in double quotes, but I doubt that it's 100% safe even then. The point is that interpolating the value into the command is always risky, independent from whether it's a shell command or an sql command. best regards, Florian Pflug -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers