unsigned long mysql_real_escape_string(MYSQL *mysql,
char *to, const char *from, unsigned long length)
Note that mysql must be a valid, open
connection. This is needed because the escaping depends on the
character set in use by the server.
This function is used to create a legal SQL string that you can use in an SQL statement. See Section 9.1.1, “String Literals”.
The string in from is encoded to an escaped
SQL string, taking into account the current character set of the
connection. The result is placed in to and a
terminating null byte is appended. Characters encoded are
“\”,
“'”,
“"”, NUL
(ASCII 0), “\n”,
“\r”, and Control+Z. Strictly
speaking, MySQL requires only that backslash and the quote
character used to quote the string in the query be escaped.
mysql_real_escape_string()
quotes the other characters to make them easier to read in log
files. For comparison, see the quoting rules for literal strings
and the QUOTE() SQL function in
Section 9.1.1, “String Literals”, and
Section 12.5, “String Functions”.
The string pointed to by from must be
length bytes long. You must allocate the
to buffer to be at least
length*2+1 bytes long. (In the worst case,
each character may need to be encoded as using two bytes, and
you need room for the terminating null byte.) When
mysql_real_escape_string()
returns, the contents of to is a
null-terminated string. The return value is the length of the
encoded string, not including the terminating null character.
If you need to change the character set of the connection, use
the mysql_set_character_set()
function rather than executing a SET NAMES
(or SET CHARACTER SET) statement.
mysql_set_character_set() works
like SET NAMES but also affects the character
set used by
mysql_real_escape_string(),
which SET NAMES does not.
char query[1000],*end;
end = strmov(query,"INSERT INTO test_table values(");
*end++ = '\'';
end += mysql_real_escape_string(&mysql, end,"What is this",12);
*end++ = '\'';
*end++ = ',';
*end++ = '\'';
end += mysql_real_escape_string(&mysql, end,"binary data: \0\r\n",16);
*end++ = '\'';
*end++ = ')';
if (mysql_real_query(&mysql,query,(unsigned int) (end - query)))
{
fprintf(stderr, "Failed to insert row, Error: %s\n",
mysql_error(&mysql));
}
The strmov() function used in the example is
included in the libmysqlclient library and
works like strcpy() but returns a pointer to
the terminating null of the first parameter.
The length of the value placed into to, not
including the terminating null character.
None.