bazarr/libs/urllib3/util/url.py

290 lines
9.6 KiB
Python

from __future__ import absolute_import
import re
from collections import namedtuple
from ..exceptions import LocationParseError
from ..packages import six, rfc3986
from ..packages.rfc3986.exceptions import RFC3986Exception, ValidationError
from ..packages.rfc3986.validators import Validator
from ..packages.rfc3986 import abnf_regexp, normalizers, compat, misc
url_attrs = ['scheme', 'auth', 'host', 'port', 'path', 'query', 'fragment']
# We only want to normalize urls with an HTTP(S) scheme.
# urllib3 infers URLs without a scheme (None) to be http.
NORMALIZABLE_SCHEMES = ('http', 'https', None)
# Regex for detecting URLs with schemes. RFC 3986 Section 3.1
SCHEME_REGEX = re.compile(r"^(?:[a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9+\-]*:|/)")
PATH_CHARS = abnf_regexp.UNRESERVED_CHARS_SET | abnf_regexp.SUB_DELIMITERS_SET | {':', '@', '/'}
QUERY_CHARS = FRAGMENT_CHARS = PATH_CHARS | {'?'}
class Url(namedtuple('Url', url_attrs)):
"""
Data structure for representing an HTTP URL. Used as a return value for
:func:`parse_url`. Both the scheme and host are normalized as they are
both case-insensitive according to RFC 3986.
"""
__slots__ = ()
def __new__(cls, scheme=None, auth=None, host=None, port=None, path=None,
query=None, fragment=None):
if path and not path.startswith('/'):
path = '/' + path
if scheme is not None:
scheme = scheme.lower()
return super(Url, cls).__new__(cls, scheme, auth, host, port, path,
query, fragment)
@property
def hostname(self):
"""For backwards-compatibility with urlparse. We're nice like that."""
return self.host
@property
def request_uri(self):
"""Absolute path including the query string."""
uri = self.path or '/'
if self.query is not None:
uri += '?' + self.query
return uri
@property
def netloc(self):
"""Network location including host and port"""
if self.port:
return '%s:%d' % (self.host, self.port)
return self.host
@property
def url(self):
"""
Convert self into a url
This function should more or less round-trip with :func:`.parse_url`. The
returned url may not be exactly the same as the url inputted to
:func:`.parse_url`, but it should be equivalent by the RFC (e.g., urls
with a blank port will have : removed).
Example: ::
>>> U = parse_url('http://google.com/mail/')
>>> U.url
'http://google.com/mail/'
>>> Url('http', 'username:password', 'host.com', 80,
... '/path', 'query', 'fragment').url
'http://username:password@host.com:80/path?query#fragment'
"""
scheme, auth, host, port, path, query, fragment = self
url = u''
# We use "is not None" we want things to happen with empty strings (or 0 port)
if scheme is not None:
url += scheme + u'://'
if auth is not None:
url += auth + u'@'
if host is not None:
url += host
if port is not None:
url += u':' + str(port)
if path is not None:
url += path
if query is not None:
url += u'?' + query
if fragment is not None:
url += u'#' + fragment
return url
def __str__(self):
return self.url
def split_first(s, delims):
"""
.. deprecated:: 1.25
Given a string and an iterable of delimiters, split on the first found
delimiter. Return two split parts and the matched delimiter.
If not found, then the first part is the full input string.
Example::
>>> split_first('foo/bar?baz', '?/=')
('foo', 'bar?baz', '/')
>>> split_first('foo/bar?baz', '123')
('foo/bar?baz', '', None)
Scales linearly with number of delims. Not ideal for large number of delims.
"""
min_idx = None
min_delim = None
for d in delims:
idx = s.find(d)
if idx < 0:
continue
if min_idx is None or idx < min_idx:
min_idx = idx
min_delim = d
if min_idx is None or min_idx < 0:
return s, '', None
return s[:min_idx], s[min_idx + 1:], min_delim
def _encode_invalid_chars(component, allowed_chars, encoding='utf-8'):
"""Percent-encodes a URI component without reapplying
onto an already percent-encoded component. Based on
rfc3986.normalizers.encode_component()
"""
if component is None:
return component
# Try to see if the component we're encoding is already percent-encoded
# so we can skip all '%' characters but still encode all others.
percent_encodings = len(normalizers.PERCENT_MATCHER.findall(
compat.to_str(component, encoding)))
uri_bytes = component.encode('utf-8', 'surrogatepass')
is_percent_encoded = percent_encodings == uri_bytes.count(b'%')
encoded_component = bytearray()
for i in range(0, len(uri_bytes)):
# Will return a single character bytestring on both Python 2 & 3
byte = uri_bytes[i:i+1]
byte_ord = ord(byte)
if ((is_percent_encoded and byte == b'%')
or (byte_ord < 128 and byte.decode() in allowed_chars)):
encoded_component.extend(byte)
continue
encoded_component.extend('%{0:02x}'.format(byte_ord).encode().upper())
return encoded_component.decode(encoding)
def parse_url(url):
"""
Given a url, return a parsed :class:`.Url` namedtuple. Best-effort is
performed to parse incomplete urls. Fields not provided will be None.
This parser is RFC 3986 compliant.
:param str url: URL to parse into a :class:`.Url` namedtuple.
Partly backwards-compatible with :mod:`urlparse`.
Example::
>>> parse_url('http://google.com/mail/')
Url(scheme='http', host='google.com', port=None, path='/mail/', ...)
>>> parse_url('google.com:80')
Url(scheme=None, host='google.com', port=80, path=None, ...)
>>> parse_url('/foo?bar')
Url(scheme=None, host=None, port=None, path='/foo', query='bar', ...)
"""
if not url:
# Empty
return Url()
is_string = not isinstance(url, six.binary_type)
# RFC 3986 doesn't like URLs that have a host but don't start
# with a scheme and we support URLs like that so we need to
# detect that problem and add an empty scheme indication.
# We don't get hurt on path-only URLs here as it's stripped
# off and given an empty scheme anyways.
if not SCHEME_REGEX.search(url):
url = "//" + url
def idna_encode(name):
if name and any([ord(x) > 128 for x in name]):
try:
import idna
except ImportError:
raise LocationParseError("Unable to parse URL without the 'idna' module")
try:
return idna.encode(name.lower(), strict=True, std3_rules=True)
except idna.IDNAError:
raise LocationParseError(u"Name '%s' is not a valid IDNA label" % name)
return name
try:
split_iri = misc.IRI_MATCHER.match(compat.to_str(url)).groupdict()
iri_ref = rfc3986.IRIReference(
split_iri['scheme'], split_iri['authority'],
_encode_invalid_chars(split_iri['path'], PATH_CHARS),
_encode_invalid_chars(split_iri['query'], QUERY_CHARS),
_encode_invalid_chars(split_iri['fragment'], FRAGMENT_CHARS)
)
has_authority = iri_ref.authority is not None
uri_ref = iri_ref.encode(idna_encoder=idna_encode)
except (ValueError, RFC3986Exception):
return six.raise_from(LocationParseError(url), None)
# rfc3986 strips the authority if it's invalid
if has_authority and uri_ref.authority is None:
raise LocationParseError(url)
# Only normalize schemes we understand to not break http+unix
# or other schemes that don't follow RFC 3986.
if uri_ref.scheme is None or uri_ref.scheme.lower() in NORMALIZABLE_SCHEMES:
uri_ref = uri_ref.normalize()
# Validate all URIReference components and ensure that all
# components that were set before are still set after
# normalization has completed.
validator = Validator()
try:
validator.check_validity_of(
*validator.COMPONENT_NAMES
).validate(uri_ref)
except ValidationError:
return six.raise_from(LocationParseError(url), None)
# For the sake of backwards compatibility we put empty
# string values for path if there are any defined values
# beyond the path in the URL.
# TODO: Remove this when we break backwards compatibility.
path = uri_ref.path
if not path:
if (uri_ref.query is not None
or uri_ref.fragment is not None):
path = ""
else:
path = None
# Ensure that each part of the URL is a `str` for
# backwards compatibility.
def to_input_type(x):
if x is None:
return None
elif not is_string and not isinstance(x, six.binary_type):
return x.encode('utf-8')
return x
return Url(
scheme=to_input_type(uri_ref.scheme),
auth=to_input_type(uri_ref.userinfo),
host=to_input_type(uri_ref.host),
port=int(uri_ref.port) if uri_ref.port is not None else None,
path=to_input_type(path),
query=to_input_type(uri_ref.query),
fragment=to_input_type(uri_ref.fragment)
)
def get_host(url):
"""
Deprecated. Use :func:`parse_url` instead.
"""
p = parse_url(url)
return p.scheme or 'http', p.hostname, p.port