1 // Copyright 2013 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved.
2 // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
3 // found in the LICENSE file.
4
5 #ifndef THIRD_PARTY_MOZILLA_URL_PARSE_H_
6 #define THIRD_PARTY_MOZILLA_URL_PARSE_H_
7
8 namespace openscreen {
9
10 // Component ------------------------------------------------------------------
11
12 // Represents a substring for URL parsing.
13 struct Component {
ComponentComponent14 Component() : begin(0), len(-1) {}
15
16 // Normal constructor: takes an offset and a length.
ComponentComponent17 Component(int b, int l) : begin(b), len(l) {}
18
endComponent19 int end() const { return begin + len; }
20
21 // Returns true if this component is valid, meaning the length is given. Even
22 // valid components may be empty to record the fact that they exist.
is_validComponent23 bool is_valid() const { return (len != -1); }
24
25 // Returns true if the given component is specified on false, the component
26 // is either empty or invalid.
is_nonemptyComponent27 bool is_nonempty() const { return (len > 0); }
28
resetComponent29 void reset() {
30 begin = 0;
31 len = -1;
32 }
33
34 bool operator==(const Component& other) const {
35 return begin == other.begin && len == other.len;
36 }
37
38 int begin; // Byte offset in the string of this component.
39 int len; // Will be -1 if the component is unspecified.
40 };
41
42 // Helper that returns a component created with the given begin and ending
43 // points. The ending point is non-inclusive.
MakeRange(int begin,int end)44 inline Component MakeRange(int begin, int end) {
45 return Component(begin, end - begin);
46 }
47
48 // Parsed ---------------------------------------------------------------------
49
50 // A structure that holds the identified parts of an input URL. This structure
51 // does NOT store the URL itself. The caller will have to store the URL text
52 // and its corresponding Parsed structure separately.
53 //
54 // Typical usage would be:
55 //
56 // Parsed parsed;
57 // Component scheme;
58 // if (!ExtractScheme(url, url_len, &scheme))
59 // return I_CAN_NOT_FIND_THE_SCHEME_DUDE;
60 //
61 // if (IsStandardScheme(url, scheme)) // Not provided by this component
62 // ParseStandardURL(url, url_len, &parsed);
63 // else if (IsFileURL(url, scheme)) // Not provided by this component
64 // ParseFileURL(url, url_len, &parsed);
65 // else
66 // ParsePathURL(url, url_len, &parsed);
67 //
68 struct Parsed {
69 // Identifies different components.
70 enum ComponentType {
71 SCHEME,
72 USERNAME,
73 PASSWORD,
74 HOST,
75 PORT,
76 PATH,
77 QUERY,
78 REF,
79 };
80
81 // The default constructor is sufficient for the components, but inner_parsed_
82 // requires special handling.
83 Parsed();
84 Parsed(const Parsed&);
85 Parsed& operator=(const Parsed&);
86 ~Parsed();
87
88 // Returns the length of the URL (the end of the last component).
89 //
90 // Note that for some invalid, non-canonical URLs, this may not be the length
91 // of the string. For example "http://": the parsed structure will only
92 // contain an entry for the four-character scheme, and it doesn't know about
93 // the "://". For all other last-components, it will return the real length.
94 int Length() const;
95
96 // Returns the number of characters before the given component if it exists,
97 // or where the component would be if it did exist. This will return the
98 // string length if the component would be appended to the end.
99 //
100 // Note that this can get a little funny for the port, query, and ref
101 // components which have a delimiter that is not counted as part of the
102 // component. The |include_delimiter| flag controls if you want this counted
103 // as part of the component or not when the component exists.
104 //
105 // This example shows the difference between the two flags for two of these
106 // delimited components that is present (the port and query) and one that
107 // isn't (the reference). The components that this flag affects are marked
108 // with a *.
109 // 0 1 2
110 // 012345678901234567890
111 // Example input: http://foo:80/?query
112 // include_delim=true, ...=false ("<-" indicates different)
113 // SCHEME: 0 0
114 // USERNAME: 5 5
115 // PASSWORD: 5 5
116 // HOST: 7 7
117 // *PORT: 10 11 <-
118 // PATH: 13 13
119 // *QUERY: 14 15 <-
120 // *REF: 20 20
121 //
122 int CountCharactersBefore(ComponentType type, bool include_delimiter) const;
123
124 // Scheme without the colon: "http://foo"/ would have a scheme of "http".
125 // The length will be -1 if no scheme is specified ("foo.com"), or 0 if there
126 // is a colon but no scheme (":foo"). Note that the scheme is not guaranteed
127 // to start at the beginning of the string if there are preceeding whitespace
128 // or control characters.
129 Component scheme;
130
131 // Username. Specified in URLs with an @ sign before the host. See |password|
132 Component username;
133
134 // Password. The length will be -1 if unspecified, 0 if specified but empty.
135 // Not all URLs with a username have a password, as in "http://me@host/".
136 // The password is separated form the username with a colon, as in
137 // "http://me:secret@host/"
138 Component password;
139
140 // Host name.
141 Component host;
142
143 // Port number.
144 Component port;
145
146 // Path, this is everything following the host name, stopping at the query of
147 // ref delimiter (if any). Length will be -1 if unspecified. This includes
148 // the preceeding slash, so the path on http://www.google.com/asdf" is
149 // "/asdf". As a result, it is impossible to have a 0 length path, it will
150 // be -1 in cases like "http://host?foo".
151 // Note that we treat backslashes the same as slashes.
152 Component path;
153
154 // Stuff between the ? and the # after the path. This does not include the
155 // preceeding ? character. Length will be -1 if unspecified, 0 if there is
156 // a question mark but no query string.
157 Component query;
158
159 // Indicated by a #, this is everything following the hash sign (not
160 // including it). If there are multiple hash signs, we'll use the last one.
161 // Length will be -1 if there is no hash sign, or 0 if there is one but
162 // nothing follows it.
163 Component ref;
164
165 // The URL spec from the character after the scheme: until the end of the
166 // URL, regardless of the scheme. This is mostly useful for 'opaque' non-
167 // hierarchical schemes like data: and javascript: as a convient way to get
168 // the string with the scheme stripped off.
169 Component GetContent() const;
170
171 // True if the URL's source contained a raw `<` character, and whitespace was
172 // removed from the URL during parsing
173 //
174 // TODO(mkwst): Link this to something in a spec if
175 // https://github.com/whatwg/url/pull/284 lands.
176 bool potentially_dangling_markup;
177
178 // This is used for nested URL types, currently only filesystem. If you
179 // parse a filesystem URL, the resulting Parsed will have a nested
180 // inner_parsed_ to hold the parsed inner URL's component information.
181 // For all other url types [including the inner URL], it will be NULL.
inner_parsedParsed182 Parsed* inner_parsed() const { return inner_parsed_; }
183
set_inner_parsedParsed184 void set_inner_parsed(const Parsed& inner_parsed) {
185 if (!inner_parsed_)
186 inner_parsed_ = new Parsed(inner_parsed);
187 else
188 *inner_parsed_ = inner_parsed;
189 }
190
clear_inner_parsedParsed191 void clear_inner_parsed() {
192 if (inner_parsed_) {
193 delete inner_parsed_;
194 inner_parsed_ = nullptr;
195 }
196 }
197
198 private:
199 Parsed* inner_parsed_; // This object is owned and managed by this struct.
200 };
201
202 // Initialization functions ---------------------------------------------------
203 //
204 // These functions parse the given URL, filling in all of the structure's
205 // components. These functions can not fail, they will always do their best
206 // at interpreting the input given.
207 //
208 // The string length of the URL MUST be specified, we do not check for NULLs
209 // at any point in the process, and will actually handle embedded NULLs.
210 //
211 // IMPORTANT: These functions do NOT hang on to the given pointer or copy it
212 // in any way. See the comment above the struct.
213 //
214 // The 8-bit versions require UTF-8 encoding.
215
216 // StandardURL is for when the scheme is known to be one that has an
217 // authority (host) like "http". This function will not handle weird ones
218 // like "about:" and "javascript:", or do the right thing for "file:" URLs.
219 void ParseStandardURL(const char* url, int url_len, Parsed* parsed);
220
221 // PathURL is for when the scheme is known not to have an authority (host)
222 // section but that aren't file URLs either. The scheme is parsed, and
223 // everything after the scheme is considered as the path. This is used for
224 // things like "about:" and "javascript:"
225 void ParsePathURL(const char* url,
226 int url_len,
227 bool trim_path_end,
228 Parsed* parsed);
229
230 // FileURL is for file URLs. There are some special rules for interpreting
231 // these.
232 void ParseFileURL(const char* url, int url_len, Parsed* parsed);
233
234 // Filesystem URLs are structured differently than other URLs.
235 void ParseFileSystemURL(const char* url, int url_len, Parsed* parsed);
236
237 // MailtoURL is for mailto: urls. They are made up scheme,path,query
238 void ParseMailtoURL(const char* url, int url_len, Parsed* parsed);
239
240 // Helper functions -----------------------------------------------------------
241
242 // Locates the scheme according to the URL parser's rules. This function is
243 // designed so the caller can find the scheme and call the correct Init*
244 // function according to their known scheme types.
245 //
246 // It also does not perform any validation on the scheme.
247 //
248 // This function will return true if the scheme is found and will put the
249 // scheme's range into *scheme. False means no scheme could be found. Note
250 // that a URL beginning with a colon has a scheme, but it is empty, so this
251 // function will return true but *scheme will = (0,0).
252 //
253 // The scheme is found by skipping spaces and control characters at the
254 // beginning, and taking everything from there to the first colon to be the
255 // scheme. The character at scheme.end() will be the colon (we may enhance
256 // this to handle full width colons or something, so don't count on the
257 // actual character value). The character at scheme.end()+1 will be the
258 // beginning of the rest of the URL, be it the authority or the path (or the
259 // end of the string).
260 //
261 // The 8-bit version requires UTF-8 encoding.
262 bool ExtractScheme(const char* url, int url_len, Component* scheme);
263
264 // Returns true if ch is a character that terminates the authority segment
265 // of a URL.
266 bool IsAuthorityTerminator(char ch);
267
268 // Does a best effort parse of input |spec|, in range |auth|. If a particular
269 // component is not found, it will be set to invalid.
270 void ParseAuthority(const char* spec,
271 const Component& auth,
272 Component* username,
273 Component* password,
274 Component* hostname,
275 Component* port_num);
276
277 // Computes the integer port value from the given port component. The port
278 // component should have been identified by one of the init functions on
279 // |Parsed| for the given input url.
280 //
281 // The return value will be a positive integer between 0 and 64K, or one of
282 // the two special values below.
283 enum SpecialPort { PORT_UNSPECIFIED = -1, PORT_INVALID = -2 };
284 int ParsePort(const char* url, const Component& port);
285
286 // Extracts the range of the file name in the given url. The path must
287 // already have been computed by the parse function, and the matching URL
288 // and extracted path are provided to this function. The filename is
289 // defined as being everything from the last slash/backslash of the path
290 // to the end of the path.
291 //
292 // The file name will be empty if the path is empty or there is nothing
293 // following the last slash.
294 //
295 // The 8-bit version requires UTF-8 encoding.
296 void ExtractFileName(const char* url,
297 const Component& path,
298 Component* file_name);
299
300 // Extract the first key/value from the range defined by |*query|. Updates
301 // |*query| to start at the end of the extracted key/value pair. This is
302 // designed for use in a loop: you can keep calling it with the same query
303 // object and it will iterate over all items in the query.
304 //
305 // Some key/value pairs may have the key, the value, or both be empty (for
306 // example, the query string "?&"). These will be returned. Note that an empty
307 // last parameter "foo.com?" or foo.com?a&" will not be returned, this case
308 // is the same as "done."
309 //
310 // The initial query component should not include the '?' (this is the default
311 // for parsed URLs).
312 //
313 // If no key/value are found |*key| and |*value| will be unchanged and it will
314 // return false.
315 bool ExtractQueryKeyValue(const char* url,
316 Component* query,
317 Component* key,
318 Component* value);
319
320 } // namespace openscreen
321
322 #endif // THIRD_PARTY_MOZILLA_URL_PARSE_H_
323