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Node.js v6.11.5 Documentation
Table of Contents
URL#
The url
module provides utilities for URL resolution and parsing. It can be
accessed using:
const url = require('url');
URL Strings and URL Objects#
A URL string is a structured string containing multiple meaningful components. When parsed, a URL object is returned containing properties for each of these components.
The following details each of the components of a parsed URL. The example
'http://user:pass@host.com:8080/p/a/t/h?query=string#hash'
is used to
illustrate each.
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ href │
├──────────┬┬───────────┬─────────────────┬───────────────────────────┬───────┤
│ protocol ││ auth │ host │ path │ hash │
│ ││ ├──────────┬──────┼──────────┬────────────────┤ │
│ ││ │ hostname │ port │ pathname │ search │ │
│ ││ │ │ │ ├─┬──────────────┤ │
│ ││ │ │ │ │ │ query │ │
" http: // user:pass @ host.com : 8080 /p/a/t/h ? query=string #hash "
│ ││ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
└──────────┴┴───────────┴──────────┴──────┴──────────┴─┴──────────────┴───────┘
(all spaces in the "" line should be ignored -- they are purely for formatting)
urlObject.href#
The href
property is the full URL string that was parsed with both the
protocol
and host
components converted to lower-case.
For example: 'http://user:pass@host.com:8080/p/a/t/h?query=string#hash'
urlObject.protocol#
The protocol
property identifies the URL's lower-cased protocol scheme.
For example: 'http:'
urlObject.slashes#
The slashes
property is a boolean
with a value of true
if two ASCII
forward-slash characters (/
) are required following the colon in the
protocol
.
urlObject.host#
The host
property is the full lower-cased host portion of the URL, including
the port
if specified.
For example: 'host.com:8080'
urlObject.auth#
The auth
property is the username and password portion of the URL, also
referred to as "userinfo". This string subset follows the protocol
and
double slashes (if present) and precedes the host
component, delimited by an
ASCII "at sign" (@
). The format of the string is {username}[:{password}]
,
with the [:{password}]
portion being optional.
For example: 'user:pass'
urlObject.hostname#
The hostname
property is the lower-cased host name portion of the host
component without the port
included.
For example: 'host.com'
urlObject.port#
The port
property is the numeric port portion of the host
component.
For example: '8080'
urlObject.pathname#
The pathname
property consists of the entire path section of the URL. This
is everything following the host
(including the port
) and before the start
of the query
or hash
components, delimited by either the ASCII question
mark (?
) or hash (#
) characters.
For example '/p/a/t/h'
No decoding of the path string is performed.
urlObject.search#
The search
property consists of the entire "query string" portion of the
URL, including the leading ASCII question mark (?
) character.
For example: '?query=string'
No decoding of the query string is performed.
urlObject.path#
The path
property is a concatenation of the pathname
and search
components.
For example: '/p/a/t/h?query=string'
No decoding of the path
is performed.
urlObject.query#
The query
property is either the query string without the leading ASCII
question mark (?
), or an object returned by the querystring
module's
parse()
method. Whether the query
property is a string or object is
determined by the parseQueryString
argument passed to url.parse()
.
For example: 'query=string'
or {'query': 'string'}
If returned as a string, no decoding of the query string is performed. If returned as an object, both keys and values are decoded.
urlObject.hash#
The hash
property consists of the "fragment" portion of the URL including
the leading ASCII hash (#
) character.
For example: '#hash'
url.format(urlObject)#
urlObject
<Object> | <string> A URL object (as returned byurl.parse()
or constructed otherwise). If a string, it is converted to an object by passing it tourl.parse()
.
The url.format()
method returns a formatted URL string derived from
urlObject
.
If urlObject
is not an object or a string, url.parse()
will throw a
TypeError
.
The formatting process operates as follows:
- A new empty string
result
is created. - If
urlObject.protocol
is a string, it is appended as-is toresult
. - Otherwise, if
urlObject.protocol
is notundefined
and is not a string, anError
is thrown. - For all string values of
urlObject.protocol
that do not end with an ASCII colon (:
) character, the literal string:
will be appended toresult
. - If either of the following conditions is true, then the literal string
//
will be appended toresult
:urlObject.slashes
property is true;urlObject.protocol
begins withhttp
,https
,ftp
,gopher
, orfile
;
- If the value of the
urlObject.auth
property is truthy, and eitherurlObject.host
orurlObject.hostname
are notundefined
, the value ofurlObject.auth
will be coerced into a string and appended toresult
followed by the literal string@
. - If the
urlObject.host
property isundefined
then:- If the
urlObject.hostname
is a string, it is appended toresult
. - Otherwise, if
urlObject.hostname
is notundefined
and is not a string, anError
is thrown. - If the
urlObject.port
property value is truthy, andurlObject.hostname
is notundefined
:- The literal string
:
is appended toresult
, and - The value of
urlObject.port
is coerced to a string and appended toresult
.
- The literal string
- If the
- Otherwise, if the
urlObject.host
property value is truthy, the value ofurlObject.host
is coerced to a string and appended toresult
. - If the
urlObject.pathname
property is a string that is not an empty string:- If the
urlObject.pathname
does not start with an ASCII forward slash (/
), then the literal string '/' is appended toresult
. - The value of
urlObject.pathname
is appended toresult
.
- If the
- Otherwise, if
urlObject.pathname
is notundefined
and is not a string, anError
is thrown. - If the
urlObject.search
property isundefined
and if theurlObject.query
property is anObject
, the literal string?
is appended toresult
followed by the output of calling thequerystring
module'sstringify()
method passing the value ofurlObject.query
. - Otherwise, if
urlObject.search
is a string:- If the value of
urlObject.search
does not start with the ASCII question mark (?
) character, the literal string?
is appended toresult
. - The value of
urlObject.search
is appended toresult
.
- If the value of
- Otherwise, if
urlObject.search
is notundefined
and is not a string, anError
is thrown. - If the
urlObject.hash
property is a string:- If the value of
urlObject.hash
does not start with the ASCII hash (#
) character, the literal string#
is appended toresult
. - The value of
urlObject.hash
is appended toresult
.
- If the value of
- Otherwise, if the
urlObject.hash
property is notundefined
and is not a string, anError
is thrown. result
is returned.
url.parse(urlString[, parseQueryString[, slashesDenoteHost]])#
urlString
<string> The URL string to parse.parseQueryString
<boolean> Iftrue
, thequery
property will always be set to an object returned by thequerystring
module'sparse()
method. Iffalse
, thequery
property on the returned URL object will be an unparsed, undecoded string. Defaults tofalse
.slashesDenoteHost
<boolean> Iftrue
, the first token after the literal string//
and preceding the next/
will be interpreted as thehost
. For instance, given//foo/bar
, the result would be{host: 'foo', pathname: '/bar'}
rather than{pathname: '//foo/bar'}
. Defaults tofalse
.
The url.parse()
method takes a URL string, parses it, and returns a URL
object.
url.resolve(from, to)#
The url.resolve()
method resolves a target URL relative to a base URL in a
manner similar to that of a Web browser resolving an anchor tag HREF.
For example:
url.resolve('/one/two/three', 'four'); // '/one/two/four'
url.resolve('http://example.com/', '/one'); // 'http://example.com/one'
url.resolve('http://example.com/one', '/two'); // 'http://example.com/two'
Escaped Characters#
URLs are only permitted to contain a certain range of characters. Spaces (' '
)
and the following characters will be automatically escaped in the
properties of URL objects:
< > " ` \r \n \t { } | \ ^ '
For example, the ASCII space character (' '
) is encoded as %20
. The ASCII
forward slash (/
) character is encoded as %3C
.