package url
import "net/url"
Package url parses URLs and implements query escaping.
Index ¶
- func JoinPath(base string, elem ...string) (result string, err error)
- func PathEscape(s string) string
- func PathUnescape(s string) (string, error)
- func QueryEscape(s string) string
- func QueryUnescape(s string) (string, error)
- type Error
- func (e *Error) Error() string
- func (e *Error) Temporary() bool
- func (e *Error) Timeout() bool
- func (e *Error) Unwrap() error
- type EscapeError
- type InvalidHostError
- type URL
- func Parse(rawURL string) (*URL, error)
- func ParseRequestURI(rawURL string) (*URL, error)
- func (u *URL) EscapedFragment() string
- func (u *URL) EscapedPath() string
- func (u *URL) Hostname() string
- func (u *URL) IsAbs() bool
- func (u *URL) JoinPath(elem ...string) *URL
- func (u *URL) MarshalBinary() (text []byte, err error)
- func (u *URL) Parse(ref string) (*URL, error)
- func (u *URL) Port() string
- func (u *URL) Query() Values
- func (u *URL) Redacted() string
- func (u *URL) RequestURI() string
- func (u *URL) ResolveReference(ref *URL) *URL
- func (u *URL) String() string
- func (u *URL) UnmarshalBinary(text []byte) error
- type Userinfo
- func User(username string) *Userinfo
- func UserPassword(username, password string) *Userinfo
- func (u *Userinfo) Password() (string, bool)
- func (u *Userinfo) String() string
- func (u *Userinfo) Username() string
- type Values
Examples ¶
- ParseQuery
- PathEscape
- PathUnescape
- QueryEscape
- QueryUnescape
- URL
- URL (Roundtrip)
- URL.EscapedFragment
- URL.EscapedPath
- URL.Hostname
- URL.IsAbs
- URL.MarshalBinary
- URL.Parse
- URL.Port
- URL.Query
- URL.Redacted
- URL.RequestURI
- URL.ResolveReference
- URL.String
- URL.UnmarshalBinary
- Values
- Values.Add
- Values.Del
- Values.Encode
- Values.Get
- Values.Has
- Values.Set
Functions ¶
func JoinPath ¶
JoinPath returns a URL string with the provided path elements joined to the existing path of base and the resulting path cleaned of any ./ or ../ elements.
func PathEscape ¶
PathEscape escapes the string so it can be safely placed inside a URL path segment, replacing special characters (including /) with %XX sequences as needed.
func PathUnescape ¶
PathUnescape does the inverse transformation of PathEscape, converting each 3-byte encoded substring of the form "%AB" into the hex-decoded byte 0xAB. It returns an error if any % is not followed by two hexadecimal digits.
PathUnescape is identical to QueryUnescape except that it does not unescape '+' to ' ' (space).
func QueryEscape ¶
QueryEscape escapes the string so it can be safely placed inside a URL query.
func QueryUnescape ¶
QueryUnescape does the inverse transformation of QueryEscape, converting each 3-byte encoded substring of the form "%AB" into the hex-decoded byte 0xAB. It returns an error if any % is not followed by two hexadecimal digits.
Types ¶
type Error ¶
Error reports an error and the operation and URL that caused it.
func (*Error) Error ¶
func (*Error) Temporary ¶
func (*Error) Timeout ¶
func (*Error) Unwrap ¶
type EscapeError ¶
type EscapeError string
func (EscapeError) Error ¶
func (e EscapeError) Error() string
type InvalidHostError ¶
type InvalidHostError string
func (InvalidHostError) Error ¶
func (e InvalidHostError) Error() string
type URL ¶
type URL struct { Scheme string Opaque string // encoded opaque data User *Userinfo // username and password information Host string // host or host:port (see Hostname and Port methods) Path string // path (relative paths may omit leading slash) RawPath string // encoded path hint (see EscapedPath method) OmitHost bool // do not emit empty host (authority) ForceQuery bool // append a query ('?') even if RawQuery is empty RawQuery string // encoded query values, without '?' Fragment string // fragment for references, without '#' RawFragment string // encoded fragment hint (see EscapedFragment method) }
A URL represents a parsed URL (technically, a URI reference).
The general form represented is:
[scheme:][//[userinfo@]host][/]path[?query][#fragment]
URLs that do not start with a slash after the scheme are interpreted as:
scheme:opaque[?query][#fragment]
The Host field contains the host and port subcomponents of the URL. When the port is present, it is separated from the host with a colon. When the host is an IPv6 address, it must be enclosed in square brackets: "[fe80::1]:80". The net.JoinHostPort function combines a host and port into a string suitable for the Host field, adding square brackets to the host when necessary.
Note that the Path field is stored in decoded form: /%47%6f%2f becomes /Go/. A consequence is that it is impossible to tell which slashes in the Path were slashes in the raw URL and which were %2f. This distinction is rarely important, but when it is, the code should use the URL.EscapedPath method, which preserves the original encoding of Path.
The RawPath field is an optional field which is only set when the default encoding of Path is different from the escaped path. See the EscapedPath method for more details.
URL's String method uses the EscapedPath method to obtain the path.
Code:play
Output: Code:play
Output:Example¶
package main
import (
"fmt"
"log"
"net/url"
)
func main() {
u, err := url.Parse("http://bing.com/search?q=dotnet")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
u.Scheme = "https"
u.Host = "google.com"
q := u.Query()
q.Set("q", "golang")
u.RawQuery = q.Encode()
fmt.Println(u)
}
https://google.com/search?q=golang
Example (Roundtrip)¶
package main
import (
"fmt"
"log"
"net/url"
)
func main() {
// Parse + String preserve the original encoding.
u, err := url.Parse("https://example.com/foo%2fbar")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
fmt.Println(u.Path)
fmt.Println(u.RawPath)
fmt.Println(u.String())
}
/foo/bar
/foo%2fbar
https://example.com/foo%2fbar
func Parse ¶
Parse parses a raw url into a URL structure.
The url may be relative (a path, without a host) or absolute (starting with a scheme). Trying to parse a hostname and path without a scheme is invalid but may not necessarily return an error, due to parsing ambiguities.
func ParseRequestURI ¶
ParseRequestURI parses a raw url into a URL structure. It assumes that url was received in an HTTP request, so the url is interpreted only as an absolute URI or an absolute path. The string url is assumed not to have a #fragment suffix. (Web browsers strip #fragment before sending the URL to a web server.)
func (*URL) EscapedFragment ¶
EscapedFragment returns the escaped form of u.Fragment.
In general there are multiple possible escaped forms of any fragment.
EscapedFragment returns u.RawFragment when it is a valid escaping of u.Fragment.
Otherwise EscapedFragment ignores u.RawFragment and computes an escaped
form on its own.
The URL.String method uses EscapedFragment to construct its result.
In general, code should call EscapedFragment instead of
reading u.RawFragment directly.
Code:play
Output:Example¶
package main
import (
"fmt"
"log"
"net/url"
)
func main() {
u, err := url.Parse("http://example.com/#x/y%2Fz")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
fmt.Println("Fragment:", u.Fragment)
fmt.Println("RawFragment:", u.RawFragment)
fmt.Println("EscapedFragment:", u.EscapedFragment())
}
Fragment: x/y/z
RawFragment: x/y%2Fz
EscapedFragment: x/y%2Fz
func (*URL) EscapedPath ¶
EscapedPath returns the escaped form of u.Path.
In general there are multiple possible escaped forms of any path.
EscapedPath returns u.RawPath when it is a valid escaping of u.Path.
Otherwise EscapedPath ignores u.RawPath and computes an escaped
form on its own.
The URL.String and URL.RequestURI methods use EscapedPath to construct
their results.
In general, code should call EscapedPath instead of
reading u.RawPath directly.
Code:play
Output:Example¶
package main
import (
"fmt"
"log"
"net/url"
)
func main() {
u, err := url.Parse("http://example.com/x/y%2Fz")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
fmt.Println("Path:", u.Path)
fmt.Println("RawPath:", u.RawPath)
fmt.Println("EscapedPath:", u.EscapedPath())
}
Path: /x/y/z
RawPath: /x/y%2Fz
EscapedPath: /x/y%2Fz
func (*URL) Hostname ¶
Hostname returns u.Host, stripping any valid port number if present.
If the result is enclosed in square brackets, as literal IPv6 addresses are,
the square brackets are removed from the result.
Code:play
Output:Example¶
package main
import (
"fmt"
"log"
"net/url"
)
func main() {
u, err := url.Parse("https://example.org:8000/path")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
fmt.Println(u.Hostname())
u, err = url.Parse("https://[2001:0db8:85a3:0000:0000:8a2e:0370:7334]:17000")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
fmt.Println(u.Hostname())
}
example.org
2001:0db8:85a3:0000:0000:8a2e:0370:7334
func (*URL) IsAbs ¶
IsAbs reports whether the URL is absolute. Absolute means that it has a non-empty scheme.
func (*URL) JoinPath ¶
JoinPath returns a new URL with the provided path elements joined to any existing path and the resulting path cleaned of any ./ or ../ elements. Any sequences of multiple / characters will be reduced to a single /.
func (*URL) MarshalBinary ¶
Example¶
Code:play
package main import ( "fmt" "log" "net/url" ) func main() { u, _ := url.Parse("https://example.org") b, err := u.MarshalBinary() if err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } fmt.Printf("%s\n", b) }
Output:
https://example.org
func (*URL) Parse ¶
Parse parses a URL in the context of the receiver. The provided URL
may be relative or absolute. Parse returns nil, err on parse
failure, otherwise its return value is the same as URL.ResolveReference.
Code:play
Output:Example¶
package main
import (
"fmt"
"log"
"net/url"
)
func main() {
u, err := url.Parse("https://example.org")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
rel, err := u.Parse("/foo")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
fmt.Println(rel)
_, err = u.Parse(":foo")
if _, ok := err.(*url.Error); !ok {
log.Fatal(err)
}
}
https://example.org/foo
func (*URL) Port ¶
Port returns the port part of u.Host, without the leading colon.
If u.Host doesn't contain a valid numeric port, Port returns an empty string.
func (*URL) Query ¶
Query parses RawQuery and returns the corresponding values. It silently discards malformed value pairs. To check errors use ParseQuery.
func (*URL) Redacted ¶
Redacted is like URL.String but replaces any password with "xxxxx".
Only the password in u.User is redacted.
Code:play
Output:Example¶
package main
import (
"fmt"
"net/url"
)
func main() {
u := &url.URL{
Scheme: "https",
User: url.UserPassword("user", "password"),
Host: "example.com",
Path: "foo/bar",
}
fmt.Println(u.Redacted())
u.User = url.UserPassword("me", "newerPassword")
fmt.Println(u.Redacted())
}
https://user:xxxxx@example.com/foo/bar
https://me:xxxxx@example.com/foo/bar
func (*URL) RequestURI ¶
RequestURI returns the encoded path?query or opaque?query string that would be used in an HTTP request for u.
func (*URL) ResolveReference ¶
ResolveReference resolves a URI reference to an absolute URI from
an absolute base URI u, per RFC 3986 Section 5.2. The URI reference
may be relative or absolute. ResolveReference always returns a new
URL instance, even if the returned URL is identical to either the
base or reference. If ref is an absolute URL, then ResolveReference
ignores base and returns a copy of ref.
Code:play
Output:Example¶
package main
import (
"fmt"
"log"
"net/url"
)
func main() {
u, err := url.Parse("../../..//search?q=dotnet")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
base, err := url.Parse("http://example.com/directory/")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
fmt.Println(base.ResolveReference(u))
}
http://example.com/search?q=dotnet
func (*URL) String ¶
String reassembles the URL into a valid URL string. The general form of the result is one of:
scheme:opaque?query#fragment scheme://userinfo@host/path?query#fragment
If u.Opaque is non-empty, String uses the first form; otherwise it uses the second form. Any non-ASCII characters in host are escaped. To obtain the path, String uses u.EscapedPath().
In the second form, the following rules apply:
- if u.Scheme is empty, scheme: is omitted.
- if u.User is nil, userinfo@ is omitted.
- if u.Host is empty, host/ is omitted.
- if u.Scheme and u.Host are empty and u.User is nil, the entire scheme://userinfo@host/ is omitted.
- if u.Host is non-empty and u.Path begins with a /, the form host/path does not add its own /.
- if u.RawQuery is empty, ?query is omitted.
- if u.Fragment is empty, #fragment is omitted.
Example¶
Code:play
package main import ( "fmt" "net/url" ) func main() { u := &url.URL{ Scheme: "https", User: url.UserPassword("me", "pass"), Host: "example.com", Path: "foo/bar", RawQuery: "x=1&y=2", Fragment: "anchor", } fmt.Println(u.String()) u.Opaque = "opaque" fmt.Println(u.String()) }
Output:
https://me:pass@example.com/foo/bar?x=1&y=2#anchor https:opaque?x=1&y=2#anchor
func (*URL) UnmarshalBinary ¶
Example¶
Code:play
package main import ( "fmt" "log" "net/url" ) func main() { u := &url.URL{} err := u.UnmarshalBinary([]byte("https://example.org/foo")) if err != nil { log.Fatal(err) } fmt.Printf("%s\n", u) }
Output:
https://example.org/foo
type Userinfo ¶
type Userinfo struct {
// contains filtered or unexported fields
}
The Userinfo type is an immutable encapsulation of username and password details for a URL. An existing Userinfo value is guaranteed to have a username set (potentially empty, as allowed by RFC 2396), and optionally a password.
func User ¶
User returns a Userinfo containing the provided username and no password set.
func UserPassword ¶
UserPassword returns a Userinfo containing the provided username and password.
This functionality should only be used with legacy web sites. RFC 2396 warns that interpreting Userinfo this way “is NOT RECOMMENDED, because the passing of authentication information in clear text (such as URI) has proven to be a security risk in almost every case where it has been used.”
func (*Userinfo) Password ¶
Password returns the password in case it is set, and whether it is set.
func (*Userinfo) String ¶
String returns the encoded userinfo information in the standard form of "username[:password]".
func (*Userinfo) Username ¶
Username returns the username.
type Values ¶
Values maps a string key to a list of values.
It is typically used for query parameters and form values.
Unlike in the http.Header map, the keys in a Values map
are case-sensitive.
Code:play
Output:Example¶
package main
import (
"fmt"
"net/url"
)
func main() {
v := url.Values{}
v.Set("name", "Ava")
v.Add("friend", "Jess")
v.Add("friend", "Sarah")
v.Add("friend", "Zoe")
// v.Encode() == "name=Ava&friend=Jess&friend=Sarah&friend=Zoe"
fmt.Println(v.Get("name"))
fmt.Println(v.Get("friend"))
fmt.Println(v["friend"])
}
Ava
Jess
[Jess Sarah Zoe]
func ParseQuery ¶
ParseQuery parses the URL-encoded query string and returns a map listing the values specified for each key. ParseQuery always returns a non-nil map containing all the valid query parameters found; err describes the first decoding error encountered, if any.
Query is expected to be a list of key=value settings separated by ampersands.
A setting without an equals sign is interpreted as a key set to an empty
value.
Settings containing a non-URL-encoded semicolon are considered invalid.
Code:play
Output:Example¶
package main
import (
"encoding/json"
"fmt"
"log"
"net/url"
"strings"
)
func main() {
m, err := url.ParseQuery(`x=1&y=2&y=3`)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
fmt.Println(toJSON(m))
}
func toJSON(m any) string {
js, err := json.Marshal(m)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
return strings.ReplaceAll(string(js), ",", ", ")
}
{"x":["1"], "y":["2", "3"]}
func (Values) Add ¶
Add adds the value to key. It appends to any existing values associated with key.
func (Values) Del ¶
Del deletes the values associated with key.
func (Values) Encode ¶
Encode encodes the values into “URL encoded” form ("bar=baz&foo=quux") sorted by key.
func (Values) Get ¶
Get gets the first value associated with the given key. If there are no values associated with the key, Get returns the empty string. To access multiple values, use the map directly.
func (Values) Has ¶
Has checks whether a given key is set.
func (Values) Set ¶
Set sets the key to value. It replaces any existing values.
Source Files ¶
- Version
- v1.23.2 (latest)
- Published
- Sep 28, 2024
- Platform
- linux/amd64
- Imports
- 7 packages
- Last checked
- 6 minutes ago –
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