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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-05-04 17:41:08 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-05-04 17:41:08 +0000 |
commit | 506ed8899b3a97e512be3fd6d44d5b11463bf9bf (patch) | |
tree | 808913770c5e6935d3714058c2a066c57b4632ec /docs/basic/params.rst | |
parent | Initial commit. (diff) | |
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Adding upstream version 3.1.7.upstream/3.1.7upstream
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
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diff --git a/docs/basic/params.rst b/docs/basic/params.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a733f07 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/basic/params.rst @@ -0,0 +1,242 @@ +.. currentmodule:: psycopg + +.. index:: + pair: Query; Parameters + +.. _query-parameters: + +Passing parameters to SQL queries +================================= + +Most of the times, writing a program you will have to mix bits of SQL +statements with values provided by the rest of the program: + +.. code:: + + SELECT some, fields FROM some_table WHERE id = ... + +:sql:`id` equals what? Probably you will have a Python value you are looking +for. + + +`!execute()` arguments +---------------------- + +Passing parameters to a SQL statement happens in functions such as +`Cursor.execute()` by using ``%s`` placeholders in the SQL statement, and +passing a sequence of values as the second argument of the function. For +example the Python function call: + +.. code:: python + + cur.execute(""" + INSERT INTO some_table (id, created_at, last_name) + VALUES (%s, %s, %s); + """, + (10, datetime.date(2020, 11, 18), "O'Reilly")) + +is *roughly* equivalent to the SQL command: + +.. code-block:: sql + + INSERT INTO some_table (id, created_at, last_name) + VALUES (10, '2020-11-18', 'O''Reilly'); + +Note that the parameters will not be really merged to the query: query and the +parameters are sent to the server separately: see :ref:`server-side-binding` +for details. + +Named arguments are supported too using :samp:`%({name})s` placeholders in the +query and specifying the values into a mapping. Using named arguments allows +to specify the values in any order and to repeat the same value in several +places in the query:: + + cur.execute(""" + INSERT INTO some_table (id, created_at, updated_at, last_name) + VALUES (%(id)s, %(created)s, %(created)s, %(name)s); + """, + {'id': 10, 'name': "O'Reilly", 'created': datetime.date(2020, 11, 18)}) + +Using characters ``%``, ``(``, ``)`` in the argument names is not supported. + +When parameters are used, in order to include a literal ``%`` in the query you +can use the ``%%`` string:: + + cur.execute("SELECT (%s % 2) = 0 AS even", (10,)) # WRONG + cur.execute("SELECT (%s %% 2) = 0 AS even", (10,)) # correct + +While the mechanism resembles regular Python strings manipulation, there are a +few subtle differences you should care about when passing parameters to a +query. + +- The Python string operator ``%`` *must not be used*: the `~cursor.execute()` + method accepts a tuple or dictionary of values as second parameter. + |sql-warn|__: + + .. |sql-warn| replace:: **Never** use ``%`` or ``+`` to merge values + into queries + + .. code:: python + + cur.execute("INSERT INTO numbers VALUES (%s, %s)" % (10, 20)) # WRONG + cur.execute("INSERT INTO numbers VALUES (%s, %s)", (10, 20)) # correct + + .. __: sql-injection_ + +- For positional variables binding, *the second argument must always be a + sequence*, even if it contains a single variable (remember that Python + requires a comma to create a single element tuple):: + + cur.execute("INSERT INTO foo VALUES (%s)", "bar") # WRONG + cur.execute("INSERT INTO foo VALUES (%s)", ("bar")) # WRONG + cur.execute("INSERT INTO foo VALUES (%s)", ("bar",)) # correct + cur.execute("INSERT INTO foo VALUES (%s)", ["bar"]) # correct + +- The placeholder *must not be quoted*:: + + cur.execute("INSERT INTO numbers VALUES ('%s')", ("Hello",)) # WRONG + cur.execute("INSERT INTO numbers VALUES (%s)", ("Hello",)) # correct + +- The variables placeholder *must always be a* ``%s``, even if a different + placeholder (such as a ``%d`` for integers or ``%f`` for floats) may look + more appropriate for the type. You may find other placeholders used in + Psycopg queries (``%b`` and ``%t``) but they are not related to the + type of the argument: see :ref:`binary-data` if you want to read more:: + + cur.execute("INSERT INTO numbers VALUES (%d)", (10,)) # WRONG + cur.execute("INSERT INTO numbers VALUES (%s)", (10,)) # correct + +- Only query values should be bound via this method: it shouldn't be used to + merge table or field names to the query. If you need to generate SQL queries + dynamically (for instance choosing a table name at runtime) you can use the + functionalities provided in the `psycopg.sql` module:: + + cur.execute("INSERT INTO %s VALUES (%s)", ('numbers', 10)) # WRONG + cur.execute( # correct + SQL("INSERT INTO {} VALUES (%s)").format(Identifier('numbers')), + (10,)) + + +.. index:: Security, SQL injection + +.. _sql-injection: + +Danger: SQL injection +--------------------- + +The SQL representation of many data types is often different from their Python +string representation. The typical example is with single quotes in strings: +in SQL single quotes are used as string literal delimiters, so the ones +appearing inside the string itself must be escaped, whereas in Python single +quotes can be left unescaped if the string is delimited by double quotes. + +Because of the difference, sometimes subtle, between the data types +representations, a naïve approach to query strings composition, such as using +Python strings concatenation, is a recipe for *terrible* problems:: + + SQL = "INSERT INTO authors (name) VALUES ('%s')" # NEVER DO THIS + data = ("O'Reilly", ) + cur.execute(SQL % data) # THIS WILL FAIL MISERABLY + # SyntaxError: syntax error at or near "Reilly" + +If the variables containing the data to send to the database come from an +untrusted source (such as data coming from a form on a web site) an attacker +could easily craft a malformed string, either gaining access to unauthorized +data or performing destructive operations on the database. This form of attack +is called `SQL injection`_ and is known to be one of the most widespread forms +of attack on database systems. Before continuing, please print `this page`__ +as a memo and hang it onto your desk. + +.. _SQL injection: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SQL_injection +.. __: https://xkcd.com/327/ + +Psycopg can :ref:`automatically convert Python objects to SQL +values<types-adaptation>`: using this feature your code will be more robust +and reliable. We must stress this point: + +.. warning:: + + - Don't manually merge values to a query: hackers from a foreign country + will break into your computer and steal not only your disks, but also + your cds, leaving you only with the three most embarrassing records you + ever bought. On cassette tapes. + + - If you use the ``%`` operator to merge values to a query, con artists + will seduce your cat, who will run away taking your credit card + and your sunglasses with them. + + - If you use ``+`` to merge a textual value to a string, bad guys in + balaclava will find their way to your fridge, drink all your beer, and + leave your toilet seat up and your toilet paper in the wrong orientation. + + - You don't want to manually merge values to a query: :ref:`use the + provided methods <query-parameters>` instead. + +The correct way to pass variables in a SQL command is using the second +argument of the `Cursor.execute()` method:: + + SQL = "INSERT INTO authors (name) VALUES (%s)" # Note: no quotes + data = ("O'Reilly", ) + cur.execute(SQL, data) # Note: no % operator + +.. note:: + + Python static code checkers are not quite there yet, but, in the future, + it will be possible to check your code for improper use of string + expressions in queries. See :ref:`literal-string` for details. + +.. seealso:: + + Now that you know how to pass parameters to queries, you can take a look + at :ref:`how Psycopg converts data types <types-adaptation>`. + + +.. index:: + pair: Binary; Parameters + +.. _binary-data: + +Binary parameters and results +----------------------------- + +PostgreSQL has two different ways to transmit data between client and server: +`~psycopg.pq.Format.TEXT`, always available, and `~psycopg.pq.Format.BINARY`, +available most of the times but not always. Usually the binary format is more +efficient to use. + +Psycopg can support both formats for each data type. Whenever a value +is passed to a query using the normal ``%s`` placeholder, the best format +available is chosen (often, but not always, the binary format is picked as the +best choice). + +If you have a reason to select explicitly the binary format or the text format +for a value you can use respectively a ``%b`` placeholder or a ``%t`` +placeholder instead of the normal ``%s``. `~Cursor.execute()` will fail if a +`~psycopg.adapt.Dumper` for the right data type and format is not available. + +The same two formats, text or binary, are used by PostgreSQL to return data +from a query to the client. Unlike with parameters, where you can choose the +format value-by-value, all the columns returned by a query will have the same +format. Every type returned by the query should have a `~psycopg.adapt.Loader` +configured, otherwise the data will be returned as unparsed `!str` (for text +results) or buffer (for binary results). + +.. note:: + The `pg_type`_ table defines which format is supported for each PostgreSQL + data type. Text input/output is managed by the functions declared in the + ``typinput`` and ``typoutput`` fields (always present), binary + input/output is managed by the ``typsend`` and ``typreceive`` (which are + optional). + + .. _pg_type: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/catalog-pg-type.html + +Because not every PostgreSQL type supports binary output, by default, the data +will be returned in text format. In order to return data in binary format you +can create the cursor using `Connection.cursor`\ `!(binary=True)` or execute +the query using `Cursor.execute`\ `!(binary=True)`. A case in which +requesting binary results is a clear winner is when you have large binary data +in the database, such as images:: + + cur.execute( + "SELECT image_data FROM images WHERE id = %s", [image_id], binary=True) + data = cur.fetchone()[0] |