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What are the best practices for mitigating SQL injection attacks when using SQLAlchemy?

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6  
Using SQLAlchemy is the best practice. :-) – Martijn Pieters Aug 5 '12 at 12:22

2 Answers

up vote 20 down vote accepted

From the documentation

If you have any "special" characters (such as semicolons or apostrophes) in your data, they will be automatically quoted for you by the SQLEngine object, so you don't have to worry about quoting. This also means that unless you deliberately bypass SQLAlchemy's quoting mechanisms, SQL-injection attacks are basically impossible.

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tldr: Avoid raw SQL as much as possible.

The accepted answer is lazy and incorrect. The filter method accepts raw SQL, and if used in that way, is fully susceptible to SQL injection attacks. For instance, if you were to accept a value from a url and combine it with raw sql in the filter, you are open to attack:

session.query(MyClass).filter("foo={}".format(getArgs['val']))

using the above code and the below url, you would be injecting SQL in to your filter statement. The code above would return all rows in your database.

http://domain.com/?val=2%20or%201%20=%201

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