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(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
parse_url — Parse a URL and return its components
This function parses a URL and returns an associative array containing any of the various components of the URL that are present. The values of the array elements are not URL decoded.
This function is not meant to validate the given URL, it only breaks it up into the parts listed below. Partial and invalid URLs are also accepted, parse_url() tries its best to parse them correctly.
This function does not follow any established URI or URL standard. It will return incorrect or non-sense results for relative or malformed URLs. Even for valid URLs the result may differ from that of a different URL parser, since there are multiple different URL-related standards that target different use cases and that differ in their requirements.
Processing an URL with parsers following different URL standards is a common source of security vulnerabilities. As an example, validating an URL against an allow-list of acceptable hostnames with parser A might be ineffective when the actual retrieval of the resource uses parser B that extracts hostnames differently.
The Uri\Rfc3986\Uri and Uri\WhatWg\Url classes strictly follow the RFC 3986 and WHATWG URL Standards respectively. It is strongly recommended to use these classes for all newly written code and to migrate existing uses of the parse_url() function to these classes, unless the parse_url() behavior needs to be preserved for compatibility reasons.
urlThe URL to parse.
component
Specify one of PHP_URL_SCHEME,
PHP_URL_HOST, PHP_URL_PORT,
PHP_URL_USER, PHP_URL_PASS,
PHP_URL_PATH, PHP_URL_QUERY
or PHP_URL_FRAGMENT to retrieve just a specific
URL component as a string (except when
PHP_URL_PORT is given, in which case the return
value will be an int).
On seriously malformed URLs, parse_url() may return
false.
If the component parameter is omitted, an
associative array is returned. At least one element will be
present within the array. Potential keys within this array are:
http
?
#
If the component parameter is specified,
parse_url() returns a string (or an
int, in the case of PHP_URL_PORT)
instead of an array. If the requested component doesn't exist
within the given URL, null will be returned.
As of PHP 8.0.0, parse_url() distinguishes absent and empty
queries and fragments:
http://example.com/foo → query = null, fragment = null http://example.com/foo? → query = "", fragment = null http://example.com/foo# → query = null, fragment = "" http://example.com/foo?# → query = "", fragment = ""
Previously all cases resulted in query and fragment being null.
Note that control characters (cf. ctype_cntrl()) in the
components are replaced with underscores (_).
| Version | Description |
|---|---|
| 8.0.0 | parse_url() will now distinguish absent and empty queries and fragments. |
Example #1 A parse_url() example
<?php
$url = 'http://username:password@hostname:9090/path?arg=value#anchor';
var_dump(parse_url($url));
var_dump(parse_url($url, PHP_URL_SCHEME));
var_dump(parse_url($url, PHP_URL_USER));
var_dump(parse_url($url, PHP_URL_PASS));
var_dump(parse_url($url, PHP_URL_HOST));
var_dump(parse_url($url, PHP_URL_PORT));
var_dump(parse_url($url, PHP_URL_PATH));
var_dump(parse_url($url, PHP_URL_QUERY));
var_dump(parse_url($url, PHP_URL_FRAGMENT));
?>The above example will output:
array(8) {
["scheme"]=>
string(4) "http"
["host"]=>
string(8) "hostname"
["port"]=>
int(9090)
["user"]=>
string(8) "username"
["pass"]=>
string(8) "password"
["path"]=>
string(5) "/path"
["query"]=>
string(9) "arg=value"
["fragment"]=>
string(6) "anchor"
}
string(4) "http"
string(8) "username"
string(8) "password"
string(8) "hostname"
int(9090)
string(5) "/path"
string(9) "arg=value"
string(6) "anchor"
Example #2 A parse_url() example with missing scheme
<?php
$url = '//www.example.com/path?googleguy=googley';
// Prior to 5.4.7 this would show the path as "//www.example.com/path"
var_dump(parse_url($url));
?>The above example will output:
array(3) {
["host"]=>
string(15) "www.example.com"
["path"]=>
string(5) "/path"
["query"]=>
string(17) "googleguy=googley"
}
Note:
This function is intended specifically for the purpose of parsing URLs and not URIs. However, to comply with PHP's backwards compatibility requirements it makes an exception for the
file://scheme where triple slashes (file:///...) are allowed. For any other scheme this is invalid.
[If you haven't yet] been able to find a simple conversion back to string from a parsed url, here's an example:
<?php
$url = 'http://usr:pss@example.com:81/mypath/myfile.html?a=b&b[]=2&b[]=3#myfragment';
if ($url === unparse_url(parse_url($url))) {
print "YES, they match!\n";
}
function unparse_url($parsed_url) {
$scheme = isset($parsed_url['scheme']) ? $parsed_url['scheme'] . '://' : '';
$host = isset($parsed_url['host']) ? $parsed_url['host'] : '';
$port = isset($parsed_url['port']) ? ':' . $parsed_url['port'] : '';
$user = isset($parsed_url['user']) ? $parsed_url['user'] : '';
$pass = isset($parsed_url['pass']) ? ':' . $parsed_url['pass'] : '';
$pass = ($user || $pass) ? "$pass@" : '';
$path = isset($parsed_url['path']) ? $parsed_url['path'] : '';
$query = isset($parsed_url['query']) ? '?' . $parsed_url['query'] : '';
$fragment = isset($parsed_url['fragment']) ? '#' . $parsed_url['fragment'] : '';
return "$scheme$user$pass$host$port$path$query$fragment";
}
?>It may be worth reminding that the value of the #fragment never gets sent to the server. Anchors processing is exclusively client-side.Here is utf-8 compatible parse_url() replacement function based on "laszlo dot janszky at gmail dot com" work. Original incorrectly handled URLs with user:pass. Also made PHP 5.5 compatible (got rid of now deprecated regex /e modifier).
<?php
/**
* UTF-8 aware parse_url() replacement.
*
* @return array
*/
function mb_parse_url($url)
{
$enc_url = preg_replace_callback(
'%[^:/@?&=#]+%usD',
function ($matches)
{
return urlencode($matches[0]);
},
$url
);
$parts = parse_url($enc_url);
if($parts === false)
{
throw new \InvalidArgumentException('Malformed URL: ' . $url);
}
foreach($parts as $name => $value)
{
$parts[$name] = urldecode($value);
}
return $parts;
}
?>Here's a function which implements resolving a relative URL according to RFC 2396 section 5.2. No doubt there are more efficient implementations, but this one tries to remain close to the standard for clarity. It relies on a function called "unparse_url" to implement section 7, left as an exercise for the reader (or you can substitute the "glue_url" function posted earlier).
<?php
/**
* Resolve a URL relative to a base path. This happens to work with POSIX
* filenames as well. This is based on RFC 2396 section 5.2.
*/
function resolve_url($base, $url) {
if (!strlen($base)) return $url;
// Step 2
if (!strlen($url)) return $base;
// Step 3
if (preg_match('!^[a-z]+:!i', $url)) return $url;
$base = parse_url($base);
if ($url{0} == "#") {
// Step 2 (fragment)
$base['fragment'] = substr($url, 1);
return unparse_url($base);
}
unset($base['fragment']);
unset($base['query']);
if (substr($url, 0, 2) == "//") {
// Step 4
return unparse_url(array(
'scheme'=>$base['scheme'],
'path'=>$url,
));
} else if ($url{0} == "/") {
// Step 5
$base['path'] = $url;
} else {
// Step 6
$path = explode('/', $base['path']);
$url_path = explode('/', $url);
// Step 6a: drop file from base
array_pop($path);
// Step 6b, 6c, 6e: append url while removing "." and ".." from
// the directory portion
$end = array_pop($url_path);
foreach ($url_path as $segment) {
if ($segment == '.') {
// skip
} else if ($segment == '..' && $path && $path[sizeof($path)-1] != '..') {
array_pop($path);
} else {
$path[] = $segment;
}
}
// Step 6d, 6f: remove "." and ".." from file portion
if ($end == '.') {
$path[] = '';
} else if ($end == '..' && $path && $path[sizeof($path)-1] != '..') {
$path[sizeof($path)-1] = '';
} else {
$path[] = $end;
}
// Step 6h
$base['path'] = join('/', $path);
}
// Step 7
return unparse_url($base);
}
?>I was writing unit tests and needed to cause this function to kick out an error and return FALSE in order to test a specific execution path. If anyone else needs to force a failure, the following inputs will work:
<?php
parse_url("http:///example.com");
parse_url("http://:80");
parse_url("http://user@:80");
?>UTF-8 aware parse_url() replacement.
I've realized that even though UTF-8 characters are not allowed in URL's, I have to work with a lot of them and parse_url() will break.
Based largely on the work of "mallluhuct at gmail dot com", I added parse_url() compatible "named values" which makes the array values a lot easier to work with (instead of just numbers). I also implemented detection of port, username/password and a back-reference to better detect URL's like this: //en.wikipedia.com
... which, although is technically an invalid URL, it's used extensively on sites like wikipedia in the href of anchor tags where it's valid in browsers (one of the types of URL's you have to support when crawling pages). This will be accurately detected as the host name instead of "path" as in all other examples.
I will submit my complete function (instead of just the RegExp) which is an almost "drop-in" replacement for parse_url(). It returns a cleaned up array (or false) with values compatible with parse_url(). I could have told the preg_match() not to store the unused extra values, but it would complicate the RegExp and make it more difficult to read, understand and extend. The key to detecting UTF-8 characters is the use of the "u" parameter in preg_match().
<?php
function parse_utf8_url($url)
{
static $keys = array('scheme'=>0,'user'=>0,'pass'=>0,'host'=>0,'port'=>0,'path'=>0,'query'=>0,'fragment'=>0);
if (is_string($url) && preg_match(
'~^((?P<scheme>[^:/?#]+):(//))?((\\3|//)?(?:(?P<user>[^:]+):(?P<pass>[^@]+)@)?(?P<host>[^/?:#]*))(:(?P<port>\\d+))?' .
'(?P<path>[^?#]*)(\\?(?P<query>[^#]*))?(#(?P<fragment>.*))?~u', $url, $matches))
{
foreach ($matches as $key => $value)
if (!isset($keys[$key]) || empty($value))
unset($matches[$key]);
return $matches;
}
return false;
}
?>
UTF-8 URL's can/should be "normalized" after extraction with this function.Based on the idea of "jbr at ya-right dot com" have I been working on a new function to parse the url:
<?php
function parseUrl($url) {
$r = "^(?:(?P<scheme>\w+)://)?";
$r .= "(?:(?P<login>\w+):(?P<pass>\w+)@)?";
$r .= "(?P<host>(?:(?P<subdomain>[\w\.]+)\.)?" . "(?P<domain>\w+\.(?P<extension>\w+)))";
$r .= "(?::(?P<port>\d+))?";
$r .= "(?P<path>[\w/]*/(?P<file>\w+(?:\.\w+)?)?)?";
$r .= "(?:\?(?P<arg>[\w=&]+))?";
$r .= "(?:#(?P<anchor>\w+))?";
$r = "!$r!"; // Delimiters
preg_match ( $r, $url, $out );
return $out;
}
print_r ( parseUrl ( 'me:you@sub.site.org:29000/pear/validate.html?happy=me&sad=you#url' ) );
?>
This returns:
Array
(
[0] => me:you@sub.site.org:29000/pear/validate.html?happy=me&sad=you#url
[scheme] =>
[1] =>
[login] => me
[2] => me
[pass] => you
[3] => you
[host] => sub.site.org
[4] => sub.site.org
[subdomain] => sub
[5] => sub
[domain] => site.org
[6] => site.org
[extension] => org
[7] => org
[port] => 29000
[8] => 29000
[path] => /pear/validate.html
[9] => /pear/validate.html
[file] => validate.html
[10] => validate.html
[arg] => happy=me&sad=you
[11] => happy=me&sad=you
[anchor] => url
[12] => url
)
So both named and numbered array keys are possible.
It's quite advanced, but I think it works in any case... Let me know if it doesn't...There's a quirk where this function will return the host as the "path" if there is a leading space.
<?php
$url = ' https://foobar.com:80/mypath/myfile.php';
print_r(parse_url($url));
/*
Array
(
[path] => https://foobar.com:80/mypath/myfile.php
)
*/
print_r(trim(parse_url($url)));
/*
Array
(
[scheme] => https
[host] => foobar.com
[port] => 80
[path] => /mypath/myfile.php
)
*/
?>Here's a good way to using parse_url () gets the youtube link.
This function I used in many works:
<?php
function youtube($url, $width=560, $height=315, $fullscreen=true)
{
parse_str( parse_url( $url, PHP_URL_QUERY ), $my_array_of_vars );
$youtube= '<iframe allowtransparency="true" scrolling="no" width="'.$width.'" height="'.$height.'" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/'.$my_array_of_vars['v'].'" frameborder="0"'.($fullscreen?' allowfullscreen':NULL).'></iframe>';
return $youtube;
}
// show youtube on my page
$url='http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yvTd6XxgCBE';
youtube($url, 560, 315, true);
?>
parse_url () allocates a unique youtube code and put into iframe link and displayed on your page. The size of the videos choose yourself.
Enjoy.There is a change in PHP 7 (I noticed it in 7.1 upgrading from 5.3) where if the password portion has an octothorpe (#) in it, parsing fails in 7.1, whereas it succeeds in 5.3.parse_url doesn't works if the protocol doesn't specified. This seems like sandard, even the youtube doesn't gives the protocol name when generates code for embedding which have a look like "//youtube.com/etc".
So, to avoid bug, you must always check, whether the provided url has the protocol, and if not (starts with 2 slashes) -- add the "http:" prefix.I have coded a function which converts relative URL to absolute URL for a project of mine. Considering I could not find it elsewhere, I figured I would post it here.
The following function takes in 2 parameters, the first parameter is the URL you want to convert from relative to absolute, and the second parameter is a sample of the absolute URL.
Currently it does not resolve '../' in the URL, only because I do not need it. Most webservers will resolve this for you. If you want it to resolve the '../' in the path, it just takes minor modifications.
<?php
function relativeToAbsolute($inurl, $absolute) {
// Get all parts so not getting them multiple times :)
$absolute_parts = parse_url($absolute);
// Test if URL is already absolute (contains host, or begins with '/')
if ( (strpos($inurl, $absolute_parts['host']) == false) ) {
// Define $tmpurlprefix to prevent errors below
$tmpurlprefix = "";
// Formulate URL prefix (SCHEME)
if (!(empty($absolute_parts['scheme']))) {
// Add scheme to tmpurlprefix
$tmpurlprefix .= $absolute_parts['scheme'] . "://";
}
// Formulate URL prefix (USER, PASS)
if ((!(empty($absolute_parts['user']))) and (!(empty($absolute_parts['pass'])))) {
// Add user:port to tmpurlprefix
$tmpurlprefix .= $absolute_parts['user'] . ":" . $absolute_parts['pass'] . "@";
}
// Formulate URL prefix (HOST, PORT)
if (!(empty($absolute_parts['host']))) {
// Add host to tmpurlprefix
$tmpurlprefix .= $absolute_parts['host'];
// Check for a port, add if exists
if (!(empty($absolute_parts['port']))) {
// Add port to tmpurlprefix
$tmpurlprefix .= ":" . $absolute_parts['port'];
}
}
// Formulate URL prefix (PATH) and only add it if the path to image does not include ./
if ( (!(empty($absolute_parts['path']))) and (substr($inurl, 0, 1) != '/') ) {
// Get path parts
$path_parts = pathinfo($absolute_parts['path']);
// Add path to tmpurlprefix
$tmpurlprefix .= $path_parts['dirname'];
$tmpurlprefix .= "/";
}
else {
$tmpurlprefix .= "/";
}
// Lets remove the '/'
if (substr($inurl, 0, 1) == '/') { $inurl = substr($inurl, 1); }
// Lets remove the './'
if (substr($inurl, 0, 2) == './') { $inurl = substr($inurl, 2); }
return $tmpurlprefix . $inurl;
}
else {
// Path is already absolute. Return it :)
return $inurl;
}
}
// Define a sample absolute URL
$absolute = "http://" . "user:pass@example.com:8080/path/to/index.html"; // Just evading php.net spam filter, not sure how example.com is spam...
/* EXAMPLE 1 */
echo relativeToAbsolute($absolute, $absolute) . "\n";
/* EXAMPLE 2 */
echo relativeToAbsolute("img.gif", $absolute) . "\n";
/* EXAMPLE 3 */
echo relativeToAbsolute("/img.gif", $absolute) . "\n";
/* EXAMPLE 4 */
echo relativeToAbsolute("./img.gif", $absolute) . "\n";
/* EXAMPLE 5 */
echo relativeToAbsolute("../img.gif", $absolute) . "\n";
/* EXAMPLE 6 */
echo relativeToAbsolute("images/img.gif", $absolute) . "\n";
/* EXAMPLE 7 */
echo relativeToAbsolute("/images/img.gif", $absolute) . "\n";
/* EXAMPLE 8 */
echo relativeToAbsolute("./images/img.gif", $absolute) . "\n";
/* EXAMPLE 9 */
echo relativeToAbsolute("../images/img.gif", $absolute) . "\n";
?>
OUTPUTS:
http :// user:pass@example.com:8080/path/to/index.html
http :// user:pass@example.com:8080/path/to/img.gif
http :// user:pass@example.com:8080/img.gif
http :// user:pass@example.com:8080/path/to/img.gif
http :// user:pass@example.com:8080/path/to/../img.gif
http :// user:pass@example.com:8080/path/to/images/img.gif
http :// user:pass@example.com:8080/images/img.gif
http :// user:pass@example.com:8080/path/to/images/img.gif
http :// user:pass@example.com:8080/path/to/../images/img.gif
Sorry if the above code is not your style, or if you see it as "messy" or you think there is a better way to do it. I removed as much of the white space as possible.
Improvements are welcome :)Here's a simple class I made that makes use of this parse_url.
I needed a way for a page to retain get parameters but also edit or add onto them.
I also had some pages that needed the same GET paramaters so I also added a way to change the path.
<?php
class Paths{
private $url;
public function __construct($url){
$this->url = parse_url($url);
}
public function returnUrl(){
$return = $this->url['path'].'?'.$this->url['query'];
$return = (substr($return,-1) == "&")? substr($return,0,-1) : $return;
$this->resetQuery();
return $return;
}
public function changePath($path){
$this->url['path'] = $path;
}
public function editQuery($get,$value){
$parts = explode("&",$this->url['query']);
$return = "";
foreach($parts as $p){
$paramData = explode("=",$p);
if($paramData[0] == $get){
$paramData[1] = $value;
}
$return .= implode("=",$paramData).'&';
}
$this->url['query'] = $return;
}
public function addQuery($get,$value){
$part = $get."=".$value;
$and = ($this->url['query'] == "?") ? "" : "&";
$this->url['query'] .= $and.$part;
}
public function checkQuery($get){
$parts = explode("&",$this->url['query']);
foreach($parts as $p){
$paramData = explode("=",$p);
if($paramData[0] == $get)
return true;
}
return false;
}
public function buildQuery($get,$value){
if($this->checkQuery($get))
$this->editQuery($get,$value);
else
$this->addQuery($get,$value);
}
public function resetQuery(){
$this->url = parse_url($_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']);
}
}
?>
Useage:
Test.php?foo=1:
<?php
$path = new Paths($_SERVER['REQUEST_URI']);
$path->changePath("/baz.php");
$path->buildQuery("foo",2);
$path->buildQuery("bar",3);
echo $path->returnUrl();
?>
returns: /baz.php?foo=2&bar=3
Hope this is of some use to someone!Created another parse_url utf-8 compatible function.
<?php
function mb_parse_url($url) {
$encodedUrl = preg_replace('%[^:/?#&=\.]+%usDe', 'urlencode(\'$0\')', $url);
$components = parse_url($encodedUrl);
foreach ($components as &$component)
$component = urldecode($component);
return $components;
}
?>Hello, for some odd reason, parse_url returns the host (ex. example.com) as the path when no scheme is provided in the input url. So I've written a quick function to get the real host:
<?php
function getHost($Address) {
$parseUrl = parse_url(trim($Address));
return trim($parseUrl[host] ? $parseUrl[host] : array_shift(explode('/', $parseUrl[path], 2)));
}
getHost("example.com"); // Gives example.com
getHost("http://example.com"); // Gives example.com
getHost("www.example.com"); // Gives www.example.com
getHost("http://example.com/xyz"); // Gives example.com
?>
You could try anything! It gives the host (including the subdomain if exists).
Hope it helped you.Unfortunately parse_url() DO NOT parse correctly urls without scheme or '//'. For example 'www.xyz.com' is consider as path not host:
Code:
<?php
var_dump(parse_url('www.xyz.com'));
?>
Output:
array(1) {
["path"]=>
string(10) "www.xyz.com"
}
To get better output change url to:
'//www.xyz.com' or 'http://www.xyz.com'URL's in the query string of a relative URL will cause a problem
fails:
/page.php?foo=bar&url=http://www.example.com
parses:
http://www.foo.com/page.php?foo=bar&url=http://www.example.comPlease consider these tips and cases:
1. Handling Fragment Identifiers:
parse_url() handles fragment identifiers (#section), but the fragment is not sent to the server and is used client-side only. Be cautious when relying on fragment data, as it might not be available in server-side processing.
2. URL Encoding and Decoding Issues:
parse_url() does not decode URL-encoded characters in the path. Ensure that encoding and decoding are handled correctly if special characters are involved.
For example:
$url = 'https://www.primeogroup.com/es/servicios-de-configuraci%C3%B3n-instalaci%C3%B3n-y-an%C3%A1lisis-de-google-analytics/';
// /es/servicios-de-configuraci%C3%B3n-instalaci%C3%B3n-y-an%C3%A1lisis-de-google-analytics/
$path = parse_url($url, PHP_URL_PATH);
// /es/servicios-de-configuración-instalación-y-análisis-de-google-analytics/
$decoded_path = urldecode($path);
3. Unusual Port Numbers:
parse_url() does not handle ports outside the valid range (1-65535) correctly.
parse_url will return: bool(false)While not directly related to the above, I found this page seeking how to access REST style domain.com?key1=value1&key2=value2 type parameters. After reading the page and comments, want to add this to help others who might find themselves here seeking the same solution.
Given: domain.com?key1=value1&key2=value2
echo $_GET['key2']; // output: 'value2'
PHP makes this easier than just about any other language IMO.Using a double slash ('//') in a url will be regarded as unparseble string and will return NULL
<?php
$result = parse_url('http://api.example.com//resource');
// $result = null
?>
Tested with PHP 8.1.27I need to parse out the query string from the referrer, so I created this function.
<?php
function parse_query($val)
{
/**
* Use this function to parse out the query array element from
* the output of parse_url().
*/
$var = html_entity_decode($var);
$var = explode('&', $var);
$arr = array();
foreach($var as $val)
{
$x = explode('=', $val);
$arr[$x[0]] = $x[1];
}
unset($val, $x, $var);
return $arr;
}
?>