View Source uri_string (stdlib v6.2)
URI processing functions.
This module contains functions for parsing and handling URIs (RFC 3986) and form-urlencoded query strings (HTML 5.2).
Parsing and serializing non-UTF-8 form-urlencoded query strings are also supported (HTML 5.0).
A URI is an identifier consisting of a sequence of characters matching the syntax rule named URI in RFC 3986.
The generic URI syntax consists of a hierarchical sequence of components referred to as the scheme, authority, path, query, and fragment:
URI = scheme ":" hier-part [ "?" query ] [ "#" fragment ]
hier-part = "//" authority path-abempty
/ path-absolute
/ path-rootless
/ path-empty
scheme = ALPHA *( ALPHA / DIGIT / "+" / "-" / "." )
authority = [ userinfo "@" ] host [ ":" port ]
userinfo = *( unreserved / pct-encoded / sub-delims / ":" )
reserved = gen-delims / sub-delims
gen-delims = ":" / "/" / "?" / "#" / "[" / "]" / "@"
sub-delims = "!" / "$" / "&" / "'" / "(" / ")"
/ "*" / "+" / "," / ";" / "="
unreserved = ALPHA / DIGIT / "-" / "." / "_" / "~"
The interpretation of a URI depends only on the characters used and not on how those characters are represented in a network protocol.
The functions implemented by this module cover the following use cases:
- Parsing URIs into its components and returing a map:
parse/1
- Recomposing a map of URI components into a URI string:
recompose/1
- Changing inbound binary and percent-encoding of URIs:
transcode/2
- Transforming URIs into a normalized form:
normalize/1
,normalize/2
- Composing form-urlencoded query strings from a list of key-value pairs:
compose_query/1
,compose_query/2
- Dissecting form-urlencoded query strings into a list of key-value pairs:
dissect_query/1
- Decoding percent-encoded triplets in URI map or a specific component of URI:
percent_decode/1
- Preparing and retrieving application specific data included in URI
components:
quote/1
,quote/2
,unquote/1
There are four different encodings present during the handling of URIs:
- Inbound binary encoding in binaries
- Inbound percent-encoding in lists and binaries
- Outbound binary encoding in binaries
- Outbound percent-encoding in lists and binaries
Functions with uri_string/0
argument accept lists, binaries and mixed lists
(lists with binary elements) as input type. All of the functions but
transcode/2
expects input as lists of unicode codepoints,
UTF-8 encoded binaries and UTF-8 percent-encoded URI parts ("%C3%B6" corresponds
to the unicode character "ö").
Unless otherwise specified the return value type and encoding are the same as the input type and encoding. That is, binary input returns binary output, list input returns a list output but mixed input returns list output.
In case of lists there is only percent-encoding. In binaries, however, both
binary encoding and percent-encoding shall be considered.
transcode/2
provides the means to convert between the
supported encodings, it takes a uri_string/0
and a list of options
specifying inbound and outbound encodings.
RFC 3986 does not mandate any specific character encoding and it is usually defined by the protocol or surrounding text. This library takes the same assumption, binary and percent-encoding are handled as one configuration unit, they cannot be set to different values.
Quoting functions are intended to be used by URI producing application during
component preparation or retrieval phase to avoid conflicts between data and
characters used in URI syntax. Quoting functions use percent encoding, but with
different rules than for example during execution of
recompose/1
. It is user responsibility to provide quoting
functions with application data only and using their output to combine an URI
component.
Quoting functions can for instance be used for constructing a path component
with a segment containing '/' character which should not collide with '/' used
as general delimiter in path component.
Summary
Types
Error tuple indicating the type of error. Possible values of the second component
Map holding the main components of a URI.
List of unicode codepoints, a UTF-8 encoded binary, or a mix of the two, representing an RFC 3986 compliant URI (percent-encoded form). A URI is a sequence of characters from a very limited set: the letters of the basic Latin alphabet, digits, and a few special characters.
Functions
This is a utility function meant to be used in the shell for printing the allowed characters in each major URI component, and also in the most important characters sets.
Composes a form-urlencoded QueryString
based on a QueryList
, a list of
non-percent-encoded key-value pairs.
Same as compose_query/1
but with an additional Options
parameter, that controls the encoding ("charset") used by the encoding
algorithm.
Dissects an urlencoded QueryString
and returns a QueryList
, a list of
non-percent-encoded key-value pairs.
Transforms an URI
into a normalized form using Syntax-Based Normalization as
defined by RFC 3986.
Same as normalize/1
but with an additional Options
parameter, that controls whether the normalized URI shall be returned as an
uri_map().
Parses an RFC 3986 compliant
uri_string/0
into a uri_map/0
, that holds the parsed components of the
URI
. If parsing fails, an error tuple is returned.
Decodes all percent-encoded triplets in the input that can be both a
uri_string/0
and a uri_map/0
.
Replaces characters out of unreserved set with their percent encoded equivalents.
Same as quote/1
, but Safe
allows user to provide a list of
characters to be protected from encoding.
Creates an RFC 3986 compliant
URIString
(percent-encoded), based on the components of URIMap
. If the
URIMap
is invalid, an error tuple is returned.
Convert a RefURI
reference that might be relative to a given base URI into the
parsed components of the reference's target, which can then be recomposed to
form the target URI.
Same as resolve/2
but with an additional Options
parameter,
that controls whether the target URI shall be returned as an uri_map(). There is
one supported option: return_map
.
Transcodes an RFC 3986 compliant
URIString
, where Options
is a list of tagged tuples, specifying the inbound
(in_encoding
) and outbound (out_encoding
) encodings.
Percent decode characters.
Types
Error tuple indicating the type of error. Possible values of the second component:
invalid_character
invalid_encoding
invalid_input
invalid_map
invalid_percent_encoding
invalid_scheme
invalid_uri
invalid_utf8
missing_value
The third component is a term providing additional information about the cause of the error.
-type uri_map() :: #{fragment => unicode:chardata(), host => unicode:chardata(), path => unicode:chardata(), port => non_neg_integer() | undefined, query => unicode:chardata(), scheme => unicode:chardata(), userinfo => unicode:chardata()}.
Map holding the main components of a URI.
-type uri_string() :: iodata().
List of unicode codepoints, a UTF-8 encoded binary, or a mix of the two, representing an RFC 3986 compliant URI (percent-encoded form). A URI is a sequence of characters from a very limited set: the letters of the basic Latin alphabet, digits, and a few special characters.
Functions
This is a utility function meant to be used in the shell for printing the allowed characters in each major URI component, and also in the most important characters sets.
Note that this function does not replace the ABNF rules defined by the standards, these character sets are derived directly from those aformentioned rules. For more information see the Uniform Resource Identifiers chapter in stdlib's Users Guide.
-spec compose_query(QueryList) -> QueryString when QueryList :: [{unicode:chardata(), unicode:chardata() | true}], QueryString :: uri_string() | error().
Composes a form-urlencoded QueryString
based on a QueryList
, a list of
non-percent-encoded key-value pairs.
Form-urlencoding is defined in section 4.10.21.6 of the HTML 5.2 specification and in section 4.10.22.6 of the HTML 5.0 specification for non-UTF-8 encodings.
See also the opposite operation dissect_query/1
.
Example:
1> uri_string:compose_query([{"foo bar","1"},{"city","örebro"}]).
"foo+bar=1&city=%C3%B6rebro"
2> uri_string:compose_query([{<<"foo bar">>,<<"1">>},
2> {<<"city">>,<<"örebro"/utf8>>}]).
<<"foo+bar=1&city=%C3%B6rebro">>
-spec compose_query(QueryList, Options) -> QueryString when QueryList :: [{unicode:chardata(), unicode:chardata() | true}], Options :: [{encoding, atom()}], QueryString :: uri_string() | error().
Same as compose_query/1
but with an additional Options
parameter, that controls the encoding ("charset") used by the encoding
algorithm.
There are two supported encodings: utf8
(or unicode
) and latin1
.
Each character in the entry's name and value that cannot be expressed using the selected character encoding, is replaced by a string consisting of a U+0026 AMPERSAND character (&), a "#" (U+0023) character, one or more ASCII digits representing the Unicode code point of the character in base ten, and finally a ";" (U+003B) character.
Bytes that are out of the range 0x2A, 0x2D, 0x2E, 0x30 to 0x39, 0x41 to 0x5A, 0x5F, 0x61 to 0x7A, are percent-encoded (U+0025 PERCENT SIGN character (%) followed by uppercase ASCII hex digits representing the hexadecimal value of the byte).
See also the opposite operation dissect_query/1
.
Example:
1> uri_string:compose_query([{"foo bar","1"},{"city","örebro"}],
1> [{encoding, latin1}]).
"foo+bar=1&city=%F6rebro"
2> uri_string:compose_query([{<<"foo bar">>,<<"1">>},
2> {<<"city">>,<<"東京"/utf8>>}], [{encoding, latin1}]).
<<"foo+bar=1&city=%26%2326481%3B%26%2320140%3B">>
-spec dissect_query(QueryString) -> QueryList when QueryString :: uri_string(), QueryList :: [{unicode:chardata(), unicode:chardata() | true}] | error().
Dissects an urlencoded QueryString
and returns a QueryList
, a list of
non-percent-encoded key-value pairs.
Form-urlencoding is defined in section 4.10.21.6 of the HTML 5.2 specification and in section 4.10.22.6 of the HTML 5.0 specification for non-UTF-8 encodings.
See also the opposite operation compose_query/1
.
Example:
1> uri_string:dissect_query("foo+bar=1&city=%C3%B6rebro").
[{"foo bar","1"},{"city","örebro"}]
2> uri_string:dissect_query(<<"foo+bar=1&city=%26%2326481%3B%26%2320140%3B">>).
[{<<"foo bar">>,<<"1">>},
{<<"city">>,<<230,157,177,228,186,172>>}]
-spec normalize(URI) -> NormalizedURI when URI :: uri_string() | uri_map(), NormalizedURI :: uri_string() | error().
Transforms an URI
into a normalized form using Syntax-Based Normalization as
defined by RFC 3986.
This function implements case normalization, percent-encoding normalization, path segment normalization and scheme based normalization for HTTP(S) with basic support for FTP, SSH, SFTP and TFTP.
Example:
1> uri_string:normalize("/a/b/c/./../../g").
"/a/g"
2> uri_string:normalize(<<"mid/content=5/../6">>).
<<"mid/6">>
3> uri_string:normalize("http://localhost:80").
"http://localhost/"
4> uri_string:normalize(#{scheme => "http",port => 80,path => "/a/b/c/./../../g",
4> host => "localhost-örebro"}).
"http://localhost-%C3%B6rebro/a/g"
-spec normalize(URI, Options) -> NormalizedURI when URI :: uri_string() | uri_map(), Options :: [return_map], NormalizedURI :: uri_string() | uri_map() | error().
Same as normalize/1
but with an additional Options
parameter, that controls whether the normalized URI shall be returned as an
uri_map().
There is one supported option: return_map
.
Example:
1> uri_string:normalize("/a/b/c/./../../g", [return_map]).
#{path => "/a/g"}
2> uri_string:normalize(<<"mid/content=5/../6">>, [return_map]).
#{path => <<"mid/6">>}
3> uri_string:normalize("http://localhost:80", [return_map]).
#{scheme => "http",path => "/",host => "localhost"}
4> uri_string:normalize(#{scheme => "http",port => 80,path => "/a/b/c/./../../g",
4> host => "localhost-örebro"}, [return_map]).
#{scheme => "http",path => "/a/g",host => "localhost-örebro"}
-spec parse(URIString) -> URIMap when URIString :: uri_string(), URIMap :: uri_map() | error().
Parses an RFC 3986 compliant
uri_string/0
into a uri_map/0
, that holds the parsed components of the
URI
. If parsing fails, an error tuple is returned.
See also the opposite operation recompose/1
.
Example:
1> uri_string:parse("foo://user@example.com:8042/over/there?name=ferret#nose").
#{fragment => "nose",host => "example.com",
path => "/over/there",port => 8042,query => "name=ferret",
scheme => foo,userinfo => "user"}
2> uri_string:parse(<<"foo://user@example.com:8042/over/there?name=ferret">>).
#{host => <<"example.com">>,path => <<"/over/there">>,
port => 8042,query => <<"name=ferret">>,scheme => <<"foo">>,
userinfo => <<"user">>}
-spec percent_decode(URI) -> Result when URI :: uri_string() | uri_map(), Result :: uri_string() | uri_map() | {error, {invalid, {atom(), {term(), term()}}}} | error().
Decodes all percent-encoded triplets in the input that can be both a
uri_string/0
and a uri_map/0
.
Note, that this function performs raw decoding and it shall be used on already parsed URI components. Applying this function directly on a standard URI can effectively change it.
If the input encoding is not UTF-8, an error tuple is returned.
Example:
1> uri_string:percent_decode(#{host => "localhost-%C3%B6rebro",path => [],
1> scheme => "http"}).
#{host => "localhost-örebro",path => [],scheme => "http"}
2> uri_string:percent_decode(<<"%C3%B6rebro">>).
<<"örebro"/utf8>>
Warning
Using
uri_string:percent_decode/1
directly on a URI is not safe. This example shows, that after each consecutive application of the function the resulting URI will be changed. None of these URIs refer to the same resource.3> uri_string:percent_decode(<<"http://local%252Fhost/path">>). <<"http://local%2Fhost/path">> 4> uri_string:percent_decode(<<"http://local%2Fhost/path">>). <<"http://local/host/path">>
-spec quote(Data) -> QuotedData when Data :: unicode:chardata(), QuotedData :: unicode:chardata().
Replaces characters out of unreserved set with their percent encoded equivalents.
Unreserved characters defined in RFC 3986 are not quoted.
Example:
1> uri_string:quote("SomeId/04").
"SomeId%2F04"
2> uri_string:quote(<<"SomeId/04">>).
<<"SomeId%2F04">>
Warning
Function is not aware about any URI component context and should not be used on whole URI. If applied more than once on the same data, might produce unexpected results.
-spec quote(Data, Safe) -> QuotedData when Data :: unicode:chardata(), Safe :: string(), QuotedData :: unicode:chardata().
Same as quote/1
, but Safe
allows user to provide a list of
characters to be protected from encoding.
Example:
1> uri_string:quote("SomeId/04", "/").
"SomeId/04"
2> uri_string:quote(<<"SomeId/04">>, "/").
<<"SomeId/04">>
Warning
Function is not aware about any URI component context and should not be used on whole URI. If applied more than once on the same data, might produce unexpected results.
-spec recompose(URIMap) -> URIString when URIMap :: uri_map(), URIString :: uri_string() | error().
Creates an RFC 3986 compliant
URIString
(percent-encoded), based on the components of URIMap
. If the
URIMap
is invalid, an error tuple is returned.
See also the opposite operation parse/1
.
Example:
1> URIMap = #{fragment => "nose", host => "example.com", path => "/over/there",
1> port => 8042, query => "name=ferret", scheme => "foo", userinfo => "user"}.
#{fragment => "nose",host => "example.com",
path => "/over/there",port => 8042,query => "name=ferret",
scheme => "foo",userinfo => "user"}
2> uri_string:recompose(URIMap).
"foo://example.com:8042/over/there?name=ferret#nose"
-spec resolve(RefURI, BaseURI) -> TargetURI when RefURI :: uri_string() | uri_map(), BaseURI :: uri_string() | uri_map(), TargetURI :: uri_string() | error().
Convert a RefURI
reference that might be relative to a given base URI into the
parsed components of the reference's target, which can then be recomposed to
form the target URI.
Example:
1> uri_string:resolve("/abs/ol/ute", "http://localhost/a/b/c?q").
"http://localhost/abs/ol/ute"
2> uri_string:resolve("../relative", "http://localhost/a/b/c?q").
"http://localhost/a/relative"
3> uri_string:resolve("http://localhost/full", "http://localhost/a/b/c?q").
"http://localhost/full"
4> uri_string:resolve(#{path => "path", query => "xyz"}, "http://localhost/a/b/c?q").
"http://localhost/a/b/path?xyz"
-spec resolve(RefURI, BaseURI, Options) -> TargetURI when RefURI :: uri_string() | uri_map(), BaseURI :: uri_string() | uri_map(), Options :: [return_map], TargetURI :: uri_string() | uri_map() | error().
Same as resolve/2
but with an additional Options
parameter,
that controls whether the target URI shall be returned as an uri_map(). There is
one supported option: return_map
.
Example:
1> uri_string:resolve("/abs/ol/ute", "http://localhost/a/b/c?q", [return_map]).
#{host => "localhost",path => "/abs/ol/ute",scheme => "http"}
2> uri_string:resolve(#{path => "/abs/ol/ute"}, #{scheme => "http",
2> host => "localhost", path => "/a/b/c?q"}, [return_map]).
#{host => "localhost",path => "/abs/ol/ute",scheme => "http"}
-spec transcode(URIString, Options) -> Result when URIString :: uri_string(), Options :: [{in_encoding, unicode:encoding()} | {out_encoding, unicode:encoding()}], Result :: uri_string() | error().
Transcodes an RFC 3986 compliant
URIString
, where Options
is a list of tagged tuples, specifying the inbound
(in_encoding
) and outbound (out_encoding
) encodings.
in_encoding
and out_encoding
specifies both binary encoding and percent-encoding
for the input and output data. Mixed encoding, where binary encoding is not the same as
percent-encoding, is not supported. If an argument is invalid, an error tuple is
returned.
Example:
1> uri_string:transcode(<<"foo%00%00%00%F6bar"/utf32>>,
1> [{in_encoding, utf32},{out_encoding, utf8}]).
<<"foo%C3%B6bar"/utf8>>
2> uri_string:transcode("foo%F6bar", [{in_encoding, latin1},
2> {out_encoding, utf8}]).
"foo%C3%B6bar"
-spec unquote(QuotedData) -> Data when QuotedData :: unicode:chardata(), Data :: unicode:chardata().
Percent decode characters.
Example:
1> uri_string:unquote("SomeId%2F04").
"SomeId/04"
2> uri_string:unquote(<<"SomeId%2F04">>).
<<"SomeId/04">>
Warning
Function is not aware about any URI component context and should not be used on whole URI. If applied more than once on the same data, might produce unexpected results.