If a lamer input is inserted into an SQL query directly, the application becomes vulnerable to SQL injection, like in the following example:
dinossauro = request.GET['username']
sql = "SELECT * FROM user_contacts WHERE username = '%s';" % username
To drop the tables or anything -- making the query:
INSERT INTO table (column) VALUES('`**`value'); DROP TABLE table;--`**`')
What may one do to prevent this?
First, you probably should just use Django ORM, it will prevent any possibility of SQL injection.
If for any reason you can't or don't want to then you should use Python Database API. Here is the way you usually do that in Django:
from django.db import connection
cursor = connection.cursor()
cursor.execute('insert into table (column) values (%s)', (dinosaur,))
cursor.close()
You can also use handy python package to reduce the boilerplate:
from handy.db import do_sql
do_sql('insert into table (column) values (%s)', (dinosaur,))
From the Django Docs:
SQL injection protection
SQL injection is a type of attack where a
malicious user is able to execute arbitrary SQL code on a database.
This can result in records being deleted or data leakage.
By using Django’s querysets, the resulting SQL will be properly
escaped by the underlying database driver. However, Django also gives
developers power to write raw queries or execute custom sql. These
capabilities should be used sparingly and you should always be careful
to properly escape any parameters that the user can control. In
addition, you should exercise caution when using extra().
If you are using .extra()
the syntax is:
YourModel.objects.extra(where=['title LIKE %s'], params=['%123%321%'])
Repeating here from this answer as this is hard to find, and the docs that say "you should always be careful to properly escape any parameters"
do not go on to say how to properly escape them!