SEC_SQL VARA Objects
SEC_SQL or Secure SQL VARA objects securely retrieve values from external databases. SEC_SQL VARA objects are similar to SQL VARA objects because they also run SQL statements on an external database. As opposed to SQL VARA objects, with SEC_SQL you can use all supported variables within SQL statements without putting the database at risk of an SQL injection. The variables are replaced regardless of the VAR_SECURITY_LEVEL settings in the UC_SYSTEM_SETTINGS - Systemwide Settings variable.
Important Considerations
- For technical reasons, the system cannot check whether only SELECT commands are used in the variable's SQL. To prevent that SQL commands other that SELECT are run, it is advisable to deploy a database user who has read-only access rights.
- This VARA type also requires a DB Service Agent that was started in DB service mode and that is version v9 SP3 or later. Older Agents do not support this VARA type. For more information, see Installing the Agent for Database Variables.
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When using SEC_SQL VARA objects take the following into account:
- The maximum number of lines that is returned is specified in the SQLVAR_MAX_ROWS setting in the UC_SYSTEM_SETTINGS variable.
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Database VARA objects (SEC_SQLI, SEC_SQL, SQLI, and SQL types) do not support binary fields. Binary data that result from an SQL query causes an error in the preview or when the values are retrieved at runtime.
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In database VARA objects (SEC_SQLI, SEC_SQL, SQLI, and SQL types), the system does not check the SQL statements that are processed for technical reasons. You can change or delete data records by using VARA objects. For security reasons, consider restricting user access accordingly. If possible, deploy a database user with read-only rights for VARA objects that can access an external database (SQL, SQL SECURE). For internal SQL variables (SQLI, SQLI SECURE), you can limit object access via a privilege (create and modify SQL-internal variables).
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Depending on the data type, database VARA objects (SEC_SQLI, SEC_SQL, SQLI, and SQL types) return the value "" (string, date, time, timestamp) or 0 (number) for NULL values.
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PromptSet variables are supported in select fields for BACKEND, EXEC, FILELIST, SEC_SQLI, SEC_SQL, SQLI, SQL, and XML variable types. Using PromptSet variables is necessary when using the Dynamic Reload (Combobox Prompts) feature.
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In the Variables Settings and Bind Parameters sections:
You can include PromptSet variables here when using the Dynamic Reload (Combobox Prompts) feature for combo box prompts. When you use PromptSet variables in a dynamic VARA object, the Preview feature returns an error. This is because the PromptSet variables do not exist in the dynamic VARA object. However, the PromptSet variables will be resolved when objects including the PromptSet are executed.
A SEC_SQL VARA object definition is made up of the following pages:
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Common to all object types, here you define basic object information and apply custom values to it
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Variables
Here you define the object-specific settings. Some sections on this page are common to all VARA objects and are described for all of them in dedicated topics. This topic describes the SEC_SQL-specific settings on the Variables page.
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Common to all object types, here you find a list of all versions of the object
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Common to all object types, here you enter information that you consider important to understand the configuration and behavior of the object
Defining the Variables Page
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In the Variable Settings section, specify the following:
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Type
Read-only, always SEC_SQL
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Connection
Connection (CONN) object of type Database that contains the connection parameters for the selected database
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Login
Login object that stores the name and password of the database user
If you neither specify a Login object nor set the option Default login, the login data for accessing the database is retrieved from the Connection object.
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Default Login
Default Login object that is assigned to your Users (USER) definition.
If you select this option, the Login object that is specified in the VARA object is ignored.
An error occurs when resolving the VARA object if no login is defined in the User object.
PromptSet variables cannot be used here.
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SQL Statement
SQL statements used to select specific database entries that serve as variable values.
Variables that are directly specified in SQL are replaced. To include variables, use bind parameters.
Maximum length: 4096 characters
Note: You cannot directly specify the variables ihere, but you can include them using bind parameters. These bind parameters are maintained in the related tables and can include predefined variables, placeholders for VARA objects and PromptSet variables. In the SQL script, use the "?" character in the locations where the bind parameters will be inserted.
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You insert variable values within SQL statements in the Bind Parameters section. You can use variable or VARA object names as bind parameters with any values of your choice. If a variable or VARA object does not exist, no values are replaced but the variable or VARA object name is used. This can cause an error when the variable or VARA object is resolved.
You can enter the following type of variables and VARA objects:
- Script variables
- Object variables
- Predefined variables
- Predefined and user-defined VARA objects
Each line in the table represents one bind parameter.
Supported Data Types and Input Formats
- Date: yyyy-mm-dd
- Time: hh:mm:ss
- Timestamp: yyyy-mm-dd hh:mm:ss
- String: any string
- Boolean: possible values: 0 / 1 or true / false
- Number: no thousand separator, a decimal point as a decimal separator
Important!
- Only the field types and formats previously listed are supported
- Data types are not converted (no conversion from timestamp to date)
- Inserting an invalid value causes an error when the SQL commands are processed
- The VAR_SECURITY_LEVEL variable does not impose any limitations
- In the SQL statements, you must use a "?" character at every location where the replaced value of a bind parameter should be inserted. A bind parameter must exist for each "?". Ensure that you maintain the correct order (table).
- You cannot use bind parameters multiple times
- Define the Data Types and Formatting.
- Define the Script Access.
- If you are logged in to Client 0, an additional section is available. For more information, see Client 0 VARA Objects in Other Clients.
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To run a command, select it and click Preview. The statements are executed and their results displayed. The preview function serves to check for potential errors in the database statements (for example, it the data type of the VARA object and of the database do not match).
The database Agent sends the preview data to the Automation Engine in the form of a message. If this message exceeds the maximum message length that a server process accepts, an error occurs.
Maximum length: Set in the MaxMsgSize= parameter of the Automation EngineUCSRV.INI file.
Default value: 3145 728 bytes.
- Save your changes.
See also: