#35093: Allow SQL injection characters in QuerySet.annotate() aliases
-------------------------------------+-------------------------------------
     Reporter:  Eyal Segal           |                    Owner:  nobody
         Type:  New feature          |                   Status:  closed
    Component:  Database layer       |                  Version:  3.2
  (models, ORM)                      |
     Severity:  Normal               |               Resolution:  wontfix
     Keywords:  ORM, annotations     |             Triage Stage:
                                     |  Unreviewed
    Has patch:  0                    |      Needs documentation:  0
  Needs tests:  0                    |  Patch needs improvement:  0
Easy pickings:  0                    |                    UI/UX:  0
-------------------------------------+-------------------------------------
Description changed by Eyal Segal:

Old description:

> Encountered a limitation in Django ORM when using annotations with column
> aliases containing special characters like apostrophes or spaces. For
> example:
>
> `Model.objects.annotate(**{"VALUE_WITH_APOSTROPHE'-2":
> Count('attribute_name')})`
>
> This generates a `ValueError: Column aliases cannot contain whitespace
> characters, quotation marks, semicolons, or SQL comments.` While SQL
> syntax allows such aliases, Django ORM does not, leading to a lack of
> flexibility and unexpected errors in ORM interactions.
>
> Impact:
> - Causes flow errors during higher-level ORM interactions.
> - Limits application of ORM to real-world naming use cases.
> - Decreases reliability and user experience when special characters are
> present.
>
> Proposed Solution:
> Enhance the ORM's handling of annotate aliases to allow common special
> characters, aligning with real-world naming scenarios. Options could
> include:
> - Automatically transforming aliases before passing to SQL.
> - Configurable rules for "safe" special characters at the ORM level.
>
> Interested in community and maintainers' perspectives on potential
> solutions to provide ORM-level flexibility for end-user applications.
> Looking forward to contributing to the discussion and development of this
> feature.

New description:

 Encountered a limitation in Django ORM when using annotations with column
 aliases containing special characters like apostrophes or spaces. For
 example:

 `Model.objects.annotate(**{"VALUE_WITH_APOSTROPHE'-2":
 Count('attribute_name')})`

 This generates a `ValueError: Column aliases cannot contain whitespace
 characters, quotation marks, semicolons, or SQL comments.` While SQL
 syntax allows such value for fields, Django ORM does not, leading to a
 lack of flexibility and unexpected errors in ORM interactions.

 Impact:
 - Causes flow errors during higher-level ORM interactions.
 - Limits application of ORM to real-world naming use cases.
 - Decreases reliability and user experience when special characters are
 present.

 Proposed Solution:
 Enhance the ORM's handling of annotate aliases to allow common special
 characters, aligning with real-world naming scenarios. Options could
 include:
 - Automatically transforming aliases before passing to SQL.
 - Configurable rules for "safe" special characters at the ORM level.

 Interested in community and maintainers' perspectives on potential
 solutions to provide ORM-level flexibility for end-user applications.
 Looking forward to contributing to the discussion and development of this
 feature.

--

-- 
Ticket URL: <https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/35093#comment:2>
Django <https://code.djangoproject.com/>
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