Struct hyper::Url
[−]
[src]
pub struct Url { /* fields omitted */ }
A parsed URL record.
Methods
impl Url
fn parse(input: &str) -> Result<Url, ParseError>
Parse an absolute URL from a string.
Examples
use url::Url; let url = Url::parse("https://example.net").unwrap();
fn join(&self, input: &str) -> Result<Url, ParseError>
Parse a string as an URL, with this URL as the base URL.
Examples
use url::Url; let url = Url::parse("https://example.net").unwrap(); let url = url.join("foo").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.as_str(), "https://example.net/foo");
Trailing slashes are not preserved:
use url::Url; let url = Url::parse("https://example.net/foo/").unwrap(); let url = url.join("bar").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.as_str(), "https://example.net/foo/bar");
fn options() -> ParseOptions<'a>
Return a default ParseOptions
that can fully configure the URL parser.
fn as_str(&self) -> &str
Return the serialization of this URL.
This is fast since that serialization is already stored in the Url
struct.
Examples
use url::Url; let url_str = "https://example.net/"; let url = Url::parse(url_str).unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.as_str(), url_str);
fn into_string(self) -> String
Return the serialization of this URL.
This consumes the Url
and takes ownership of the String
stored in it.
Examples
use url::Url; let url_str = "https://example.net/"; let url = Url::parse(url_str).unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.into_string(), url_str);
fn origin(&self) -> Origin
Return the origin of this URL (https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#origin)
Note: this returns an opaque origin for file:
URLs, which causes
url.origin() != url.origin()
.
Examples
URL with ftp
scheme:
use url::{Host, Origin, Url}; let url = Url::parse("ftp://example.com/foo").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.origin(), Origin::Tuple("ftp".into(), Host::Domain("example.com".into()), 21));
URL with blob
scheme:
use url::{Host, Origin, Url}; let url = Url::parse("blob:https://example.com/foo").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.origin(), Origin::Tuple("https".into(), Host::Domain("example.com".into()), 443));
URL with file
scheme:
use url::{Host, Origin, Url}; let url = Url::parse("file:///tmp/foo").unwrap(); assert!(!url.origin().is_tuple()); let other_url = Url::parse("file:///tmp/foo").unwrap(); assert!(url.origin() != other_url.origin());
URL with other scheme:
use url::{Host, Origin, Url}; let url = Url::parse("foo:bar").unwrap(); assert!(!url.origin().is_tuple());
fn scheme(&self) -> &str
Return the scheme of this URL, lower-cased, as an ASCII string without the ':' delimiter.
Examples
use url::Url; let url = Url::parse("file:///tmp/foo").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.scheme(), "file");
Return whether the URL has an 'authority', which can contain a username, password, host, and port number.
URLs that do not are either path-only like unix:/run/foo.socket
or cannot-be-a-base like data:text/plain,Stuff
.
Examples
use url::Url; let url = Url::parse("ftp://rms@example.com").unwrap(); assert!(url.has_authority()); let url = Url::parse("unix:/run/foo.socket").unwrap(); assert!(!url.has_authority()); let url = Url::parse("data:text/plain,Stuff").unwrap(); assert!(!url.has_authority());
fn cannot_be_a_base(&self) -> bool
Return whether this URL is a cannot-be-a-base URL, meaning that parsing a relative URL string with this URL as the base will return an error.
This is the case if the scheme and :
delimiter are not followed by a /
slash,
as is typically the case of data:
and mailto:
URLs.
Examples
use url::Url; let url = Url::parse("ftp://rms@example.com").unwrap(); assert!(!url.cannot_be_a_base()); let url = Url::parse("unix:/run/foo.socket").unwrap(); assert!(!url.cannot_be_a_base()); let url = Url::parse("data:text/plain,Stuff").unwrap(); assert!(url.cannot_be_a_base());
fn username(&self) -> &str
Return the username for this URL (typically the empty string) as a percent-encoded ASCII string.
Examples
use url::Url; let url = Url::parse("ftp://rms@example.com").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.username(), "rms"); let url = Url::parse("ftp://:secret123@example.com").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.username(), ""); let url = Url::parse("https://example.com").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.username(), "");
fn password(&self) -> Option<&str>
Return the password for this URL, if any, as a percent-encoded ASCII string.
Examples
use url::Url; let url = Url::parse("ftp://rms:secret123@example.com").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.password(), Some("secret123")); let url = Url::parse("ftp://:secret123@example.com").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.password(), Some("secret123")); let url = Url::parse("ftp://rms@example.com").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.password(), None); let url = Url::parse("https://example.com").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.password(), None);
fn has_host(&self) -> bool
Equivalent to url.host().is_some()
.
Examples
use url::Url; let url = Url::parse("ftp://rms@example.com").unwrap(); assert!(url.has_host()); let url = Url::parse("unix:/run/foo.socket").unwrap(); assert!(!url.has_host()); let url = Url::parse("data:text/plain,Stuff").unwrap(); assert!(!url.has_host());
fn host_str(&self) -> Option<&str>
Return the string representation of the host (domain or IP address) for this URL, if any.
Non-ASCII domains are punycode-encoded per IDNA.
IPv6 addresses are given between [
and ]
brackets.
Cannot-be-a-base URLs (typical of data:
and mailto:
) and some file:
URLs
don’t have a host.
See also the host
method.
Examples
use url::Url; let url = Url::parse("https://127.0.0.1/index.html").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.host_str(), Some("127.0.0.1")); let url = Url::parse("ftp://rms@example.com").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.host_str(), Some("example.com")); let url = Url::parse("unix:/run/foo.socket").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.host_str(), None); let url = Url::parse("data:text/plain,Stuff").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.host_str(), None);
fn host(&self) -> Option<Host<&str>>
Return the parsed representation of the host for this URL. Non-ASCII domain labels are punycode-encoded per IDNA.
Cannot-be-a-base URLs (typical of data:
and mailto:
) and some file:
URLs
don’t have a host.
See also the host_str
method.
Examples
use url::Url; let url = Url::parse("https://127.0.0.1/index.html").unwrap(); assert!(url.host().is_some()); let url = Url::parse("ftp://rms@example.com").unwrap(); assert!(url.host().is_some()); let url = Url::parse("unix:/run/foo.socket").unwrap(); assert!(url.host().is_none()); let url = Url::parse("data:text/plain,Stuff").unwrap(); assert!(url.host().is_none());
fn domain(&self) -> Option<&str>
If this URL has a host and it is a domain name (not an IP address), return it.
Examples
use url::Url; let url = Url::parse("https://127.0.0.1/").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.domain(), None); let url = Url::parse("https://example.com/").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.domain(), Some("example.com"));
fn port(&self) -> Option<u16>
Return the port number for this URL, if any.
Examples
use url::Url; let url = Url::parse("https://example.com").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.port(), None); let url = Url::parse("ssh://example.com:22").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.port(), Some(22));
fn port_or_known_default(&self) -> Option<u16>
Return the port number for this URL, or the default port number if it is known.
This method only knows the default port number
of the http
, https
, ws
, wss
, ftp
, and gopher
schemes.
For URLs in these schemes, this method always returns Some(_)
.
For other schemes, it is the same as Url::port()
.
Examples
use url::Url; let url = Url::parse("foo://example.com").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.port_or_known_default(), None); let url = Url::parse("foo://example.com:1456").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.port_or_known_default(), Some(1456)); let url = Url::parse("https://example.com").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.port_or_known_default(), Some(443));
fn with_default_port<F>(&self, f: F) -> Result<HostAndPort<&str>, Error> where F: FnOnce(&Url) -> Result<u16, ()>
If the URL has a host, return something that implements ToSocketAddrs
.
If the URL has no port number and the scheme’s default port number is not known
(see Url::port_or_known_default
),
the closure is called to obtain a port number.
Typically, this closure can match on the result Url::scheme
to have per-scheme default port numbers,
and panic for schemes it’s not prepared to handle.
For example:
fn connect(url: &Url) -> io::Result<TcpStream> { TcpStream::connect(try!(url.with_default_port(default_port))) } fn default_port(url: &Url) -> Result<u16, ()> { match url.scheme() { "git" => Ok(9418), "git+ssh" => Ok(22), "git+https" => Ok(443), "git+http" => Ok(80), _ => Err(()), } }
fn path(&self) -> &str
Return the path for this URL, as a percent-encoded ASCII string. For cannot-be-a-base URLs, this is an arbitrary string that doesn’t start with '/'. For other URLs, this starts with a '/' slash and continues with slash-separated path segments.
fn path_segments(&self) -> Option<Split<char>>
Unless this URL is cannot-be-a-base, return an iterator of '/' slash-separated path segments, each as a percent-encoded ASCII string.
Return None
for cannot-be-a-base URLs.
When Some
is returned, the iterator always contains at least one string
(which may be empty).
fn query(&self) -> Option<&str>
Return this URL’s query string, if any, as a percent-encoded ASCII string.
fn query_pairs(&self) -> Parse
Parse the URL’s query string, if any, as application/x-www-form-urlencoded
and return an iterator of (key, value) pairs.
fn fragment(&self) -> Option<&str>
Return this URL’s fragment identifier, if any.
Note: the parser did not percent-encode this component, but the input may have been percent-encoded already.
fn set_fragment(&mut self, fragment: Option<&str>)
Change this URL’s fragment identifier.
fn set_query(&mut self, query: Option<&str>)
Change this URL’s query string.
fn query_pairs_mut(&mut self) -> Serializer<UrlQuery>
Manipulate this URL’s query string, viewed as a sequence of name/value pairs
in application/x-www-form-urlencoded
syntax.
The return value has a method-chaining API:
let mut url = Url::parse("https://example.net?lang=fr#nav").unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.query(), Some("lang=fr")); url.query_pairs_mut().append_pair("foo", "bar"); assert_eq!(url.query(), Some("lang=fr&foo=bar")); assert_eq!(url.as_str(), "https://example.net/?lang=fr&foo=bar#nav"); url.query_pairs_mut() .clear() .append_pair("foo", "bar & baz") .append_pair("saisons", "\u{00C9}t\u{00E9}+hiver"); assert_eq!(url.query(), Some("foo=bar+%26+baz&saisons=%C3%89t%C3%A9%2Bhiver")); assert_eq!(url.as_str(), "https://example.net/?foo=bar+%26+baz&saisons=%C3%89t%C3%A9%2Bhiver#nav");
Note: url.query_pairs_mut().clear();
is equivalent to url.set_query(Some(""))
,
not url.set_query(None)
.
The state of Url
is unspecified if this return value is leaked without being dropped.
fn set_path(&mut self, path: &str)
Change this URL’s path.
fn path_segments_mut(&mut self) -> Result<PathSegmentsMut, ()>
Return an object with methods to manipulate this URL’s path segments.
Return Err(())
if this URL is cannot-be-a-base.
fn set_port(&mut self, port: Option<u16>) -> Result<(), ()>
Change this URL’s port number.
If this URL is cannot-be-a-base, does not have a host, or has the file
scheme;
do nothing and return Err
.
Examples
use url::Url; let mut url = Url::parse("ssh://example.net:2048/").unwrap(); url.set_port(Some(4096)).unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.as_str(), "ssh://example.net:4096/"); url.set_port(None).unwrap(); assert_eq!(url.as_str(), "ssh://example.net/");
fn set_host(&mut self, host: Option<&str>) -> Result<(), ParseError>
Change this URL’s host.
If this URL is cannot-be-a-base or there is an error parsing the given host
,
do nothing and return Err
.
Removing the host (calling this with None
)
will also remove any username, password, and port number.
fn set_ip_host(&mut self, address: IpAddr) -> Result<(), ()>
Change this URL’s host to the given IP address.
If this URL is cannot-be-a-base, do nothing and return Err
.
Compared to Url::set_host
, this skips the host parser.
fn set_password(&mut self, password: Option<&str>) -> Result<(), ()>
Change this URL’s password.
If this URL is cannot-be-a-base or does not have a host, do nothing and return Err
.
fn set_username(&mut self, username: &str) -> Result<(), ()>
Change this URL’s username.
If this URL is cannot-be-a-base or does not have a host, do nothing and return Err
.
fn set_scheme(&mut self, scheme: &str) -> Result<(), ()>
Change this URL’s scheme.
Do nothing and return Err
if:
* The new scheme is not in [a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9+.-]+
* This URL is cannot-be-a-base and the new scheme is one of
http
, https
, ws
, wss
, ftp
, or gopher
fn from_file_path<P>(path: P) -> Result<Url, ()> where P: AsRef<Path>
Convert a file name as std::path::Path
into an URL in the file
scheme.
This returns Err
if the given path is not absolute or,
on Windows, if the prefix is not a disk prefix (e.g. C:
).
fn from_directory_path<P>(path: P) -> Result<Url, ()> where P: AsRef<Path>
Convert a directory name as std::path::Path
into an URL in the file
scheme.
This returns Err
if the given path is not absolute or,
on Windows, if the prefix is not a disk prefix (e.g. C:
).
Compared to from_file_path
, this ensure that URL’s the path has a trailing slash
so that the entire path is considered when using this URL as a base URL.
For example:
"index.html"
parsed withUrl::from_directory_path(Path::new("/var/www"))
as the base URL isfile:///var/www/index.html
"index.html"
parsed withUrl::from_file_path(Path::new("/var/www"))
as the base URL isfile:///var/index.html
, which might not be what was intended.
Note that std::path
does not consider trailing slashes significant
and usually does not include them (e.g. in Path::parent()
).
fn to_file_path(&self) -> Result<PathBuf, ()>
Assuming the URL is in the file
scheme or similar,
convert its path to an absolute std::path::Path
.
Note: This does not actually check the URL’s scheme
,
and may give nonsensical results for other schemes.
It is the user’s responsibility to check the URL’s scheme before calling this.
let path = url.to_file_path();
Returns Err
if the host is neither empty nor "localhost"
,
or if Path::new_opt()
returns None
.
(That is, if the percent-decoded path contains a NUL byte or,
for a Windows path, is not UTF-8.)
Trait Implementations
impl PartialOrd<Url> for Url
URLs compare like their serialization.
fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Url) -> Option<Ordering>
This method returns an ordering between self
and other
values if one exists. Read more
fn lt(&self, other: &Rhs) -> bool
1.0.0
This method tests less than (for self
and other
) and is used by the <
operator. Read more
fn le(&self, other: &Rhs) -> bool
1.0.0
This method tests less than or equal to (for self
and other
) and is used by the <=
operator. Read more
fn gt(&self, other: &Rhs) -> bool
1.0.0
This method tests greater than (for self
and other
) and is used by the >
operator. Read more
fn ge(&self, other: &Rhs) -> bool
1.0.0
This method tests greater than or equal to (for self
and other
) and is used by the >=
operator. Read more
impl FromStr for Url
Parse a string as an URL, without a base URL or encoding override.
type Err = ParseError
The associated error which can be returned from parsing.
fn from_str(input: &str) -> Result<Url, ParseError>
Parses a string s
to return a value of this type. Read more
impl Eq for Url
URLs compare like their serialization.
impl Index<RangeFull> for Url
type Output = str
The returned type after indexing
fn index(&self, RangeFull) -> &str
The method for the indexing (container[index]
) operation
impl Index<RangeFrom<Position>> for Url
type Output = str
The returned type after indexing
fn index(&self, range: RangeFrom<Position>) -> &str
The method for the indexing (container[index]
) operation
impl Index<RangeTo<Position>> for Url
type Output = str
The returned type after indexing
fn index(&self, range: RangeTo<Position>) -> &str
The method for the indexing (container[index]
) operation
impl Index<Range<Position>> for Url
type Output = str
The returned type after indexing
fn index(&self, range: Range<Position>) -> &str
The method for the indexing (container[index]
) operation
impl PartialEq<Url> for Url
URLs compare like their serialization.
fn eq(&self, other: &Url) -> bool
This method tests for self
and other
values to be equal, and is used by ==
. Read more
fn ne(&self, other: &Rhs) -> bool
1.0.0
This method tests for !=
.
impl Debug for Url
Debug the serialization of this URL.
fn fmt(&self, formatter: &mut Formatter) -> Result<(), Error>
Formats the value using the given formatter.
impl ToSocketAddrs for Url
Return an error if Url::host
or Url::port_or_known_default
return None
.
type Iter = SocketAddrs
Returned iterator over socket addresses which this type may correspond to. Read more
fn to_socket_addrs(&self) -> Result<Url::Iter, Error>
Converts this object to an iterator of resolved SocketAddr
s. Read more
impl Display for Url
Display the serialization of this URL.
fn fmt(&self, formatter: &mut Formatter) -> Result<(), Error>
Formats the value using the given formatter.
impl AsRef<str> for Url
Return the serialization of this URL.
impl Ord for Url
URLs compare like their serialization.
fn cmp(&self, other: &Url) -> Ordering
This method returns an Ordering
between self
and other
. Read more
impl Clone for Url
fn clone(&self) -> Url
Returns a copy of the value. Read more
fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
1.0.0
Performs copy-assignment from source
. Read more
impl Hash for Url
URLs hash like their serialization.
fn hash<H>(&self, state: &mut H) where H: Hasher
Feeds this value into the state given, updating the hasher as necessary.
fn hash_slice<H>(data: &[Self], state: &mut H) where H: Hasher
1.3.0
Feeds a slice of this type into the state provided.