Gathering detailed insights and metrics for toad-uri-js
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for toad-uri-js
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for toad-uri-js
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for toad-uri-js
A modern RFC 3986/3987 compliant, scheme extendable URI/IRI parsing/normalizing/resolving/serializing library for JavaScript.
npm install toad-uri-js
Module System
Min. Node Version
Typescript Support
Node Version
NPM Version
2 Stars
15 Commits
1 Forks
2 Watching
1 Branches
2 Contributors
Updated on 15 Feb 2024
TypeScript (100%)
Cumulative downloads
Total Downloads
Last day
12%
2,254
Compared to previous day
Last week
-1.7%
10,603
Compared to previous week
Last month
197.9%
33,252
Compared to previous month
Last year
0%
46,092
Compared to previous year
1
6
toad-uri.js is an RFC 3986 compliant, scheme extendable URI parsing/normalizing/resolving/serializing library for all JavaScript environments (browsers, Node.js, etc). It is also compliant with the IRI (RFC 3987), IDNA (RFC 5890), IPv6 Address (RFC 5952), IPv6 Zone Identifier (RFC 6874) specifications.
toad-uri.js weighs 6.4kb (gzipped, 17kb deflated)
It has an extensive test suite.
uri-js
This is a fork of uri-js, aiming to provide a consistently maintained modern version of the library. If your project has a dependency on the unmaintained uri-js
, you can replace it (using the alias) with toad-uri-js
in package.json
:
"overrides": {
"uri-js": "npm:toad-uri-js@^5.0.1"
}
URI.parse("uri://user:pass@example.com:123/one/two.three?q1=a1&q2=a2#body");
//returns:
//{
// scheme : "uri",
// userinfo : "user:pass",
// host : "example.com",
// port : 123,
// path : "/one/two.three",
// query : "q1=a1&q2=a2",
// fragment : "body"
//}
URI.serialize({scheme : "http", host : "example.com", fragment : "footer"}) === "http://example.com/#footer"
URI.resolve("uri://a/b/c/d?q", "../../g") === "uri://a/g"
URI.normalize("HTTP://ABC.com:80/%7Esmith/home.html") === "http://abc.com/~smith/home.html"
URI.equal("example://a/b/c/%7Bfoo%7D", "eXAMPLE://a/./b/../b/%63/%7bfoo%7d") === true
//IPv4 normalization
URI.normalize("//192.068.001.000") === "//192.68.1.0"
//IPv6 normalization
URI.normalize("//[2001:0:0DB8::0:0001]") === "//[2001:0:db8::1]"
//IPv6 zone identifier support
URI.parse("//[2001:db8::7%25en1]");
//returns:
//{
// host : "2001:db8::7%en1"
//}
//convert IRI to URI
URI.serialize(URI.parse("http://examplé.org/rosé")) === "http://xn--exampl-gva.org/ros%C3%A9"
//convert URI to IRI
URI.serialize(URI.parse("http://xn--exampl-gva.org/ros%C3%A9"), {iri:true}) === "http://examplé.org/rosé"
All of the above functions can accept an additional options argument that is an object that can contain one or more of the following properties:
scheme
(string)
Indicates the scheme that the URI should be treated as, overriding the URI's normal scheme parsing behavior.
reference
(string)
If set to "suffix"
, it indicates that the URI is in the suffix format and the parser will use the option's scheme
property to determine the URI's scheme.
tolerant
(boolean, false)
If set to true
, the parser will relax URI resolving rules.
absolutePath
(boolean, false)
If set to true
, the serializer will not resolve a relative path
component.
iri
(boolean, false)
If set to true
, the serializer will unescape non-ASCII characters as per RFC 3987.
unicodeSupport
(boolean, false)
If set to true
, the parser will unescape non-ASCII characters in the parsed output as per RFC 3987.
domainHost
(boolean, false)
If set to true
, the library will treat the host
component as a domain name, and convert IDNs (International Domain Names) as per RFC 5891.
toad-uri.js supports inserting custom scheme dependent processing rules. Currently, toad-uri.js has built in support for the following schemes:
URI.equal("HTTP://ABC.COM:80", "http://abc.com/") === true
URI.equal("https://abc.com", "HTTPS://ABC.COM:443/") === true
URI.parse("wss://example.com/foo?bar=baz");
//returns:
//{
// scheme : "wss",
// host: "example.com",
// resourceName: "/foo?bar=baz",
// secure: true,
//}
URI.equal("WS://ABC.COM:80/chat#one", "ws://abc.com/chat") === true
URI.parse("mailto:alpha@example.com,bravo@example.com?subject=SUBSCRIBE&body=Sign%20me%20up!");
//returns:
//{
// scheme : "mailto",
// to : ["alpha@example.com", "bravo@example.com"],
// subject : "SUBSCRIBE",
// body : "Sign me up!"
//}
URI.serialize({
scheme : "mailto",
to : ["alpha@example.com"],
subject : "REMOVE",
body : "Please remove me",
headers : {
cc : "charlie@example.com"
}
}) === "mailto:alpha@example.com?cc=charlie@example.com&subject=REMOVE&body=Please%20remove%20me"
URI.parse("urn:example:foo");
//returns:
//{
// scheme : "urn",
// nid : "example",
// nss : "foo",
//}
URI.parse("urn:uuid:f81d4fae-7dec-11d0-a765-00a0c91e6bf6");
//returns:
//{
// scheme : "urn",
// nid : "uuid",
// uuid : "f81d4fae-7dec-11d0-a765-00a0c91e6bf6",
//}
To load in a browser, use the following tag:
<script type="text/javascript" src="toad-uri-js/dist/index.mjs"></script>
To load in a CommonJS/Module environment, first install with npm/yarn by running on the command line:
npm install toad-uri-js
# OR
yarn add toad-uri-js
Then, in your code, load it using:
const URI = require("toad-uri-js");
If you are writing your code in ES6+ (ESNEXT) or TypeScript, you would load it using:
import * as URI from "toad-uri-js";
Or you can load just what you need using named exports:
import { parse, serialize, resolve, resolveComponents, normalize, equal, removeDotSegments, pctEncChar, pctDecChars, escapeComponent, unescapeComponent } from "toad-uri-js";
This is the first version that was forked from the original uri-js. Library no longer officially supports Node < 16.x (although it may still work - please test on your own use-cases if necessary), and a different solution for CJS/ESM publishing is used now.
URN parsing has been completely changed to better align with the specification. Scheme is now always urn
, but has two new properties: nid
which contains the Namspace Identifier, and nss
which contains the Namespace Specific String. The nss
property will be removed by higher order scheme handlers, such as the UUID URN scheme handler.
The UUID of a URN can now be found in the uuid
property.
URI validation has been removed as it was slow, exposed a vulnerabilty, and was generally not useful.
The errors
array on parsed components is now an error
string.
No vulnerabilities found.
No security vulnerabilities found.