MAHI
MAHI

Reputation: 10183

Insert text with single quotes in PostgreSQL

I have a table test(id,name).

I need to insert values like: user's log, 'my user', customer's.

 insert into test values (1,'user's log');
 insert into test values (2,''my users'');
 insert into test values (3,'customer's');

I am getting an error if I run any of the above statements.

If there is any method to do this correctly please share. I don't want any prepared statements.

Is it possible using sql escaping mechanism?

Upvotes: 797

Views: 787613

Answers (8)

Erwin Brandstetter
Erwin Brandstetter

Reputation: 659047

String literals

Escaping single quotes ' by doubling them up → '' is the standard way and works of course:

'user's log'     -- incorrect syntax (unbalanced quote)
'user''s log'

Plain single quotes (ASCII / UTF-8 code 39), mind you, not backticks `, which have no special purpose in Postgres (unlike certain other RDBMS) and not double-quotes ", used for identifiers.

In old versions or if you still run with standard_conforming_strings = off or, generally, if you prepend your string with E to declare Posix escape string syntax, you can also escape with the backslash \:

E'user\'s log'

Backslash itself is escaped with another backslash. But that's generally not preferable.
If you have to deal with many single quotes or multiple layers of escaping, you can avoid quoting hell in PostgreSQL with dollar-quoted strings:

'escape '' with '''''
$$escape ' with ''$$

To further avoid confusion among dollar-quotes, add a unique token to each pair:

$token$escape ' with ''$token$

Which can be nested any number of levels:

$token2$Inner string: $token1$escape ' with ''$token1$ is nested$token2$

Pay attention if the $ character should have special meaning in your client software. You may have to escape it in addition. This is not the case with standard PostgreSQL clients like psql or pgAdmin.

That is all very useful for writing PL/pgSQL functions or ad-hoc SQL commands. It cannot alleviate the need to use prepared statements or some other method to safeguard against SQL injection in your application when user input is possible, though. @Craig's answer has more on that. More details:

Values inside Postgres

When dealing with values inside the database, there are a couple of useful functions to quote strings properly:

  • quote_literal() or quote_nullable() - the latter outputs the unquoted string NULL for null input.
    There is also quote_ident() to double-quote strings where needed to get valid SQL identifiers.
  • format() with the format specifier %L is equivalent to quote_nullable().
    Like: format('%L', string_var)
  • concat() or concat_ws() are typically no good for this purpose as those do not escape nested single quotes and backslashes.

Upvotes: 1337

MD. SHIFULLAH
MD. SHIFULLAH

Reputation: 1769

You must have to add an extra single quotes -> ' and make doubling quote them up like below examples -> ' ' is the standard way and works of course:

Wrong way: 'user's log'
Right way: 'user''s log'

problem:

insert into test values (1,'user's log');
insert into test values (2,''my users'');
insert into test values (3,'customer's');

Solutions:

insert into test values (1,'user''s log');
insert into test values (2,'''my users''');
insert into test values (3,'customer''s');

Upvotes: 2

Wonz
Wonz

Reputation: 455

When I used Python to insert values into PostgreSQL, I also met the question: column "xxx" does not exist.

The I find the reason in wiki.postgresql:

PostgreSQL uses only single quotes for this (i.e. WHERE name = 'John'). Double quotes are used to quote system identifiers; field names, table names, etc. (i.e. WHERE "last name" = 'Smith').
MySQL uses ` (accent mark or backtick) to quote system identifiers, which is decidedly non-standard.

It means PostgreSQL can use only single quote for field names, table names, etc. So you can not use single quote in value.

My situation is: I want to insert values "the difference of it’s adj for sb and it's adj of sb" into PostgreSQL.

How I figure out this problem:

I replace ' with , and I replace " with '. Because PostgreSQL value does not support double quote.

So I think you can use following codes to insert values:

 insert into test values (1,'user’s log');
 insert into test values (2,'my users');
 insert into test values (3,'customer’s');

Upvotes: 4

Claudi
Claudi

Reputation: 5416

According to PostgreSQL documentation (4.1.2.1. String Constants):

To include a single-quote character within a string constant, write two adjacent single quotes, e.g. 'Dianne''s horse'.

See also the standard_conforming_strings parameter, which controls whether escaping with backslashes works.

Upvotes: 74

Slava Struminski
Slava Struminski

Reputation: 97

you can use the postrgesql chr(int) function:

insert into test values (2,'|| chr(39)||'my users'||chr(39)||');

Upvotes: 8

hatenine
hatenine

Reputation: 526

If you need to get the work done inside Pg:

to_json(value)

https://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.3/static/functions-json.html#FUNCTIONS-JSON-TABLE

Upvotes: 3

Hunter
Hunter

Reputation: 890

In postgresql if you want to insert values with ' in it then for this you have to give extra '

 insert into test values (1,'user''s log');
 insert into test values (2,'''my users''');
 insert into test values (3,'customer''s');

Upvotes: 46

Craig Ringer
Craig Ringer

Reputation: 325121

This is so many worlds of bad, because your question implies that you probably have gaping SQL injection holes in your application.

You should be using parameterized statements. For Java, use PreparedStatement with placeholders. You say you don't want to use parameterised statements, but you don't explain why, and frankly it has to be a very good reason not to use them because they're the simplest, safest way to fix the problem you are trying to solve.

See Preventing SQL Injection in Java. Don't be Bobby's next victim.

There is no public function in PgJDBC for string quoting and escaping. That's partly because it might make it seem like a good idea.

There are built-in quoting functions quote_literal and quote_ident in PostgreSQL, but they are for PL/PgSQL functions that use EXECUTE. These days quote_literal is mostly obsoleted by EXECUTE ... USING, which is the parameterised version, because it's safer and easier. You cannot use them for the purpose you explain here, because they're server-side functions.


Imagine what happens if you get the value ');DROP SCHEMA public;-- from a malicious user. You'd produce:

insert into test values (1,'');DROP SCHEMA public;--');

which breaks down to two statements and a comment that gets ignored:

insert into test values (1,'');
DROP SCHEMA public;
--');

Whoops, there goes your database.

Upvotes: 57

Related Questions