1 // Copyright 2013 The Chromium Authors
2 // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
3 // found in the LICENSE file.
4
5 #ifndef URL_GURL_H_
6 #define URL_GURL_H_
7
8 #include <stddef.h>
9
10 #include <iosfwd>
11 #include <memory>
12 #include <string>
13 #include <string_view>
14
15 #include "base/component_export.h"
16 #include "base/debug/alias.h"
17 #include "base/debug/crash_logging.h"
18 #include "base/trace_event/base_tracing_forward.h"
19 #include "url/third_party/mozilla/url_parse.h"
20 #include "url/url_canon.h"
21 #include "url/url_canon_stdstring.h"
22 #include "url/url_constants.h"
23
24 // Represents a URL. GURL is Google's URL parsing library.
25 //
26 // A parsed canonicalized URL is guaranteed to be UTF-8. Any non-ASCII input
27 // characters are UTF-8 encoded and % escaped to ASCII.
28 //
29 // The string representation of a URL is called the spec(). Getting the
30 // spec will assert if the URL is invalid to help protect against malicious
31 // URLs. If you want the "best effort" canonicalization of an invalid URL, you
32 // can use possibly_invalid_spec(). Test validity with is_valid(). Data and
33 // javascript URLs use GetContent() to extract the data.
34 //
35 // This class has existence checkers and getters for the various components of
36 // a URL. Existence is different than being nonempty. "http://www.google.com/?"
37 // has a query that just happens to be empty, and has_query() will return true
38 // while the query getters will return the empty string.
39 //
40 // Prefer not to modify a URL using string operations (though sometimes this is
41 // unavoidable). Instead, use ReplaceComponents which can replace or delete
42 // multiple parts of a URL in one step, doesn't re-canonicalize unchanged
43 // sections, and avoids some screw-ups. An example is creating a URL with a
44 // path that contains a literal '#'. Using string concatenation will generate a
45 // URL with a truncated path and a reference fragment, while ReplaceComponents
46 // will know to escape this and produce the desired result.
47 //
48 // WARNING: While there is no length limit on GURLs, the Mojo serialization
49 // code will replace any very long URL with an invalid GURL.
50 // See url::mojom::kMaxURLChars for more details.
COMPONENT_EXPORT(URL)51 class COMPONENT_EXPORT(URL) GURL {
52 public:
53 using Replacements = url::StringViewReplacements<char>;
54 using ReplacementsW = url::StringViewReplacements<char16_t>;
55
56 // Creates an empty, invalid URL.
57 GURL();
58
59 // Copy construction is relatively inexpensive, with most of the time going
60 // to reallocating the string. It does not re-parse.
61 GURL(const GURL& other);
62 GURL(GURL&& other) noexcept;
63
64 // The strings to this constructor should be UTF-8 / UTF-16.
65 explicit GURL(std::string_view url_string);
66 explicit GURL(std::u16string_view url_string);
67
68 // Constructor for URLs that have already been parsed and canonicalized. This
69 // is used for conversions from KURL, for example. The caller must supply all
70 // information associated with the URL, which must be correct and consistent.
71 GURL(const char* canonical_spec,
72 size_t canonical_spec_len,
73 const url::Parsed& parsed,
74 bool is_valid);
75 // Notice that we take the canonical_spec by value so that we can convert
76 // from WebURL without copying the string. When we call this constructor
77 // we pass in a temporary std::string, which lets the compiler skip the
78 // copy and just move the std::string into the function argument. In the
79 // implementation, we use std::move to move the data into the GURL itself,
80 // which means we end up with zero copies.
81 GURL(std::string canonical_spec, const url::Parsed& parsed, bool is_valid);
82
83 ~GURL();
84
85 GURL& operator=(const GURL& other);
86 GURL& operator=(GURL&& other) noexcept;
87
88 // Returns true when this object represents a valid parsed URL. When not
89 // valid, other functions will still succeed, but you will not get canonical
90 // data out in the format you may be expecting. Instead, we keep something
91 // "reasonable looking" so that the user can see how it's busted if
92 // displayed to them.
93 bool is_valid() const {
94 return is_valid_;
95 }
96
97 // Returns true if the URL is zero-length. Note that empty URLs are also
98 // invalid, and is_valid() will return false for them. This is provided
99 // because some users may want to treat the empty case differently.
100 bool is_empty() const {
101 return spec_.empty();
102 }
103
104 // Returns the raw spec, i.e., the full text of the URL, in canonical UTF-8,
105 // if the URL is valid. If the URL is not valid, this will assert and return
106 // the empty string (for safety in release builds, to keep them from being
107 // misused which might be a security problem).
108 //
109 // The URL will be ASCII (non-ASCII characters will be %-escaped UTF-8).
110 //
111 // The exception is for empty() URLs (which are !is_valid()) but this will
112 // return the empty string without asserting.
113 //
114 // Use invalid_spec() below to get the unusable spec of an invalid URL. This
115 // separation is designed to prevent errors that may cause security problems
116 // that could result from the mistaken use of an invalid URL.
117 const std::string& spec() const;
118
119 // Returns the potentially invalid spec for a the URL. This spec MUST NOT be
120 // modified or sent over the network. It is designed to be displayed in error
121 // messages to the user, as the appearance of the spec may explain the error.
122 // If the spec is valid, the valid spec will be returned.
123 //
124 // The returned string is guaranteed to be valid UTF-8.
125 const std::string& possibly_invalid_spec() const {
126 return spec_;
127 }
128
129 // Getter for the raw parsed structure. This allows callers to locate parts
130 // of the URL within the spec themselves. Most callers should consider using
131 // the individual component getters below.
132 //
133 // The returned parsed structure will reference into the raw spec, which may
134 // or may not be valid. If you are using this to index into the spec, BE
135 // SURE YOU ARE USING possibly_invalid_spec() to get the spec, and that you
136 // don't do anything "important" with invalid specs.
137 const url::Parsed& parsed_for_possibly_invalid_spec() const {
138 return parsed_;
139 }
140
141 // Allows GURL to used as a key in STL (for example, a std::set or std::map).
142 bool operator<(const GURL& other) const;
143 bool operator>(const GURL& other) const;
144
145 // Resolves a URL that's possibly relative to this object's URL, and returns
146 // it. Absolute URLs are also handled according to the rules of URLs on web
147 // pages.
148 //
149 // It may be impossible to resolve the URLs properly. If the input is not
150 // "standard" (IsStandard() == false) and the input looks relative, we can't
151 // resolve it. In these cases, the result will be an empty, invalid GURL.
152 //
153 // The result may also be a nonempty, invalid URL if the input has some kind
154 // of encoding error. In these cases, we will try to construct a "good" URL
155 // that may have meaning to the user, but it will be marked invalid.
156 //
157 // It is an error to resolve a URL relative to an invalid URL. The result
158 // will be the empty URL.
159 GURL Resolve(std::string_view relative) const;
160 GURL Resolve(std::u16string_view relative) const;
161
162 // Creates a new GURL by replacing the current URL's components with the
163 // supplied versions. See the Replacements class in url_canon.h for more.
164 //
165 // These are not particularly quick, so avoid doing mutations when possible.
166 // Prefer the 8-bit version when possible.
167 //
168 // It is an error to replace components of an invalid URL. The result will
169 // be the empty URL.
170 //
171 // Note that this intentionally disallows direct use of url::Replacements,
172 // which is harder to use correctly.
173 GURL ReplaceComponents(const Replacements& replacements) const;
174 GURL ReplaceComponents(const ReplacementsW& replacements) const;
175
176 // A helper function that is equivalent to replacing the path with a slash
177 // and clearing out everything after that. We sometimes need to know just the
178 // scheme and the authority. If this URL is not a standard URL (it doesn't
179 // have the regular authority and path sections), then the result will be
180 // an empty, invalid GURL. Note that this *does* work for file: URLs, which
181 // some callers may want to filter out before calling this.
182 //
183 // It is an error to get an empty path on an invalid URL. The result
184 // will be the empty URL.
185 GURL GetWithEmptyPath() const;
186
187 // A helper function to return a GURL without the filename, query values, and
188 // fragment. For example,
189 // GURL("https://www.foo.com/index.html?q=test").GetWithoutFilename().spec()
190 // will return "https://www.foo.com/".
191 // GURL("https://www.foo.com/bar/").GetWithoutFilename().spec()
192 // will return "https://www.foo.com/bar/". If the GURL is invalid or missing a
193 // scheme, authority or path, it will return an empty, invalid GURL.
194 GURL GetWithoutFilename() const;
195
196 // A helper function to return a GURL without the Ref (also named Fragment
197 // Identifier). For example,
198 // GURL("https://www.foo.com/index.html#test").GetWithoutRef().spec()
199 // will return "https://www.foo.com/index.html".
200 // If the GURL is invalid or missing a
201 // scheme, authority or path, it will return an empty, invalid GURL.
202 GURL GetWithoutRef() const;
203
204 // A helper function to return a GURL containing just the scheme, host,
205 // and port from a URL. Equivalent to clearing any username and password,
206 // replacing the path with a slash, and clearing everything after that. If
207 // this URL is not a standard URL, then the result will be an empty,
208 // invalid GURL. If the URL has neither username nor password, this
209 // degenerates to GetWithEmptyPath().
210 //
211 // It is an error to get the origin of an invalid URL. The result
212 // will be the empty URL.
213 //
214 // WARNING: Please avoid converting urls into origins if at all possible!
215 // //docs/security/origin-vs-url.md is a list of gotchas that can result. Such
216 // conversions will likely return a wrong result for about:blank and/or
217 // in the presence of iframe.sandbox attribute. Prefer to get origins directly
218 // from the source (e.g. RenderFrameHost::GetLastCommittedOrigin).
219 GURL DeprecatedGetOriginAsURL() const;
220
221 // A helper function to return a GURL stripped from the elements that are not
222 // supposed to be sent as HTTP referrer: username, password and ref fragment.
223 // For invalid URLs or URLs that no valid referrers, an empty URL will be
224 // returned.
225 GURL GetAsReferrer() const;
226
227 // Returns true if the scheme for the current URL is a known "standard-format"
228 // scheme. A standard-format scheme adheres to what RFC 3986 calls "generic
229 // URI syntax" (https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986#section-3). This includes
230 // file: and filesystem:, which some callers may want to filter out explicitly
231 // by calling SchemeIsFile[System].
232 bool IsStandard() const;
233
234 // Returns true when the url is of the form about:blank, about:blank?foo or
235 // about:blank/#foo.
236 bool IsAboutBlank() const;
237
238 // Returns true when the url is of the form about:srcdoc, about:srcdoc?foo or
239 // about:srcdoc/#foo.
240 bool IsAboutSrcdoc() const;
241
242 // Returns true if the given parameter (should be lower-case ASCII to match
243 // the canonicalized scheme) is the scheme for this URL. Do not include a
244 // colon.
245 bool SchemeIs(std::string_view lower_ascii_scheme) const;
246
247 // Returns true if the scheme is "http" or "https".
248 bool SchemeIsHTTPOrHTTPS() const;
249
250 // Returns true is the scheme is "ws" or "wss".
251 bool SchemeIsWSOrWSS() const;
252
253 // We often need to know if this is a file URL. File URLs are "standard", but
254 // are often treated separately by some programs.
255 bool SchemeIsFile() const {
256 return SchemeIs(url::kFileScheme);
257 }
258
259 // FileSystem URLs need to be treated differently in some cases.
260 bool SchemeIsFileSystem() const {
261 return SchemeIs(url::kFileSystemScheme);
262 }
263
264 // Returns true if the scheme indicates a network connection that uses TLS or
265 // some other cryptographic protocol (e.g. QUIC) for security.
266 //
267 // This function is a not a complete test of whether or not an origin's code
268 // is minimally trustworthy. For that, see Chromium's |IsOriginSecure| for a
269 // higher-level and more complete semantics. See that function's documentation
270 // for more detail.
271 bool SchemeIsCryptographic() const;
272
273 // As above, but static. Parameter should be lower-case ASCII.
274 static bool SchemeIsCryptographic(std::string_view lower_ascii_scheme);
275
276 // Returns true if the scheme is "blob".
277 bool SchemeIsBlob() const {
278 return SchemeIs(url::kBlobScheme);
279 }
280
281 // Returns true if the scheme is a local scheme, as defined in Fetch:
282 // https://fetch.spec.whatwg.org/#local-scheme
283 bool SchemeIsLocal() const;
284
285 // For most URLs, the "content" is everything after the scheme (skipping the
286 // scheme delimiting colon) and before the fragment (skipping the fragment
287 // delimiting octothorpe). For javascript URLs the "content" also includes the
288 // fragment delimiter and fragment.
289 //
290 // It is an error to get the content of an invalid URL: the result will be an
291 // empty string.
292 //
293 // Important note: The feature flag,
294 // url::kStandardCompliantNonSpecialSchemeURLParsing, changes the behavior of
295 // GetContent() and GetContentPiece() for some non-special URLs. See
296 // GURLTest::ContentForNonStandardURLs for the differences.
297 //
298 // Until the flag becomes enabled by default, you'll need to manually check
299 // the flag when using GetContent() and GetContentPiece() for non-special
300 // URLs. See http://crbug.com/40063064 for more details.
301 std::string GetContent() const;
302 std::string_view GetContentPiece() const;
303
304 // Returns true if the hostname is an IP address. Note: this function isn't
305 // as cheap as a simple getter because it re-parses the hostname to verify.
306 bool HostIsIPAddress() const;
307
308 // Not including the colon. If you are comparing schemes, prefer SchemeIs.
309 bool has_scheme() const { return parsed_.scheme.is_valid(); }
310 std::string scheme() const {
311 return ComponentString(parsed_.scheme);
312 }
313 std::string_view scheme_piece() const {
314 return ComponentStringPiece(parsed_.scheme);
315 }
316
317 bool has_username() const { return parsed_.username.is_valid(); }
318 std::string username() const {
319 return ComponentString(parsed_.username);
320 }
321 std::string_view username_piece() const {
322 return ComponentStringPiece(parsed_.username);
323 }
324
325 bool has_password() const { return parsed_.password.is_valid(); }
326 std::string password() const {
327 return ComponentString(parsed_.password);
328 }
329 std::string_view password_piece() const {
330 return ComponentStringPiece(parsed_.password);
331 }
332
333 // The host may be a hostname, an IPv4 address, or an IPv6 literal surrounded
334 // by square brackets, like "[2001:db8::1]". To exclude these brackets, use
335 // HostNoBrackets() below.
336 bool has_host() const {
337 // Note that hosts are special, absence of host means length 0.
338 return parsed_.host.is_nonempty();
339 }
340 std::string host() const {
341 return ComponentString(parsed_.host);
342 }
343 std::string_view host_piece() const {
344 return ComponentStringPiece(parsed_.host);
345 }
346
347 // The port if one is explicitly specified. Most callers will want IntPort()
348 // or EffectiveIntPort() instead of these. The getters will not include the
349 // ':'.
350 bool has_port() const { return parsed_.port.is_valid(); }
351 std::string port() const {
352 return ComponentString(parsed_.port);
353 }
354 std::string_view port_piece() const {
355 return ComponentStringPiece(parsed_.port);
356 }
357
358 // Including first slash following host, up to the query. The URL
359 // "http://www.google.com/" has a path of "/".
360 bool has_path() const { return parsed_.path.is_valid(); }
361 std::string path() const {
362 return ComponentString(parsed_.path);
363 }
364 std::string_view path_piece() const {
365 return ComponentStringPiece(parsed_.path);
366 }
367
368 // Stuff following '?' up to the ref. The getters will not include the '?'.
369 bool has_query() const { return parsed_.query.is_valid(); }
370 std::string query() const {
371 return ComponentString(parsed_.query);
372 }
373 std::string_view query_piece() const {
374 return ComponentStringPiece(parsed_.query);
375 }
376
377 // Stuff following '#' to the end of the string. This will be %-escaped UTF-8.
378 // The getters will not include the '#'.
379 bool has_ref() const { return parsed_.ref.is_valid(); }
380 std::string ref() const {
381 return ComponentString(parsed_.ref);
382 }
383 std::string_view ref_piece() const {
384 return ComponentStringPiece(parsed_.ref);
385 }
386
387 // Returns a parsed version of the port. Can also be any of the special
388 // values defined in Parsed for ExtractPort.
389 int IntPort() const;
390
391 // Returns the port number of the URL, or the default port number.
392 // If the scheme has no concept of port (or unknown default) returns
393 // PORT_UNSPECIFIED.
394 int EffectiveIntPort() const;
395
396 // Extracts the filename portion of the path and returns it. The filename
397 // is everything after the last slash in the path. This may be empty.
398 std::string ExtractFileName() const;
399
400 // Returns the path that should be sent to the server. This is the path,
401 // parameter, and query portions of the URL. It is guaranteed to be ASCII.
402 std::string PathForRequest() const;
403
404 // Returns the same characters as PathForRequest(), avoiding a copy.
405 std::string_view PathForRequestPiece() const;
406
407 // Returns the host, excluding the square brackets surrounding IPv6 address
408 // literals. This can be useful for passing to getaddrinfo().
409 std::string HostNoBrackets() const;
410
411 // Returns the same characters as HostNoBrackets(), avoiding a copy.
412 std::string_view HostNoBracketsPiece() const;
413
414 // Returns true if this URL's host matches or is in the same domain as
415 // the given input string. For example, if the hostname of the URL is
416 // "www.google.com", this will return true for "com", "google.com", and
417 // "www.google.com".
418 //
419 // The input domain should match host canonicalization rules. i.e. the input
420 // should be lowercase except for escape chars.
421 //
422 // This call is more efficient than getting the host and checking whether the
423 // host has the specific domain or not because no copies or object
424 // constructions are done.
425 bool DomainIs(std::string_view canonical_domain) const;
426
427 // Checks whether or not two URLs differ only in the ref (the part after
428 // the # character).
429 bool EqualsIgnoringRef(const GURL& other) const;
430
431 // Swaps the contents of this GURL object with |other|, without doing
432 // any memory allocations.
433 void Swap(GURL* other);
434
435 // Returns a reference to a singleton empty GURL. This object is for callers
436 // who return references but don't have anything to return in some cases.
437 // If you just want an empty URL for normal use, prefer GURL(). This function
438 // may be called from any thread.
439 static const GURL& EmptyGURL();
440
441 // Returns the inner URL of a nested URL (currently only non-null for
442 // filesystem URLs).
443 //
444 // TODO(mmenke): inner_url().spec() currently returns the same value as
445 // caling spec() on the GURL itself. This should be fixed.
446 // See https://crbug.com/619596
447 const GURL* inner_url() const {
448 return inner_url_.get();
449 }
450
451 // Estimates dynamic memory usage.
452 // See base/trace_event/memory_usage_estimator.h for more info.
453 size_t EstimateMemoryUsage() const;
454
455 // Helper used by GURL::IsAboutUrl and KURL::IsAboutURL.
456 static bool IsAboutPath(std::string_view actual_path,
457 std::string_view allowed_path);
458
459 void WriteIntoTrace(perfetto::TracedValue context) const;
460
461 private:
462 // Variant of the string parsing constructor that allows the caller to elect
463 // retain trailing whitespace, if any, on the passed URL spec, but only if
464 // the scheme is one that allows trailing whitespace. The primary use-case is
465 // for data: URLs. In most cases, you want to use the single parameter
466 // constructor above.
467 enum RetainWhiteSpaceSelector { RETAIN_TRAILING_PATH_WHITEPACE };
468 GURL(const std::string& url_string, RetainWhiteSpaceSelector);
469
470 template <typename T, typename CharT = typename T::value_type>
471 void InitCanonical(T input_spec, bool trim_path_end);
472
473 void InitializeFromCanonicalSpec();
474
475 // Helper used by IsAboutBlank and IsAboutSrcdoc.
476 bool IsAboutUrl(std::string_view allowed_path) const;
477
478 // Returns the substring of the input identified by the given component.
479 std::string ComponentString(const url::Component& comp) const {
480 return std::string(ComponentStringPiece(comp));
481 }
482 std::string_view ComponentStringPiece(const url::Component& comp) const {
483 if (comp.is_empty())
484 return std::string_view();
485 return std::string_view(spec_).substr(static_cast<size_t>(comp.begin),
486 static_cast<size_t>(comp.len));
487 }
488
489 void ProcessFileSystemURLAfterReplaceComponents();
490
491 // The actual text of the URL, in canonical ASCII form.
492 std::string spec_;
493
494 // Set when the given URL is valid. Otherwise, we may still have a spec and
495 // components, but they may not identify valid resources (for example, an
496 // invalid port number, invalid characters in the scheme, etc.).
497 bool is_valid_;
498
499 // Identified components of the canonical spec.
500 url::Parsed parsed_;
501
502 // Used for nested schemes [currently only filesystem:].
503 std::unique_ptr<GURL> inner_url_;
504 };
505
506 // Stream operator so GURL can be used in assertion statements.
507 COMPONENT_EXPORT(URL)
508 std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& out, const GURL& url);
509
510 COMPONENT_EXPORT(URL) bool operator==(const GURL& x, const GURL& y);
511 COMPONENT_EXPORT(URL) bool operator!=(const GURL& x, const GURL& y);
512
513 // Equality operator for comparing raw spec_. This should be used in place of
514 // url == GURL(spec) where |spec| is known (i.e. constants). This is to prevent
515 // needlessly re-parsing |spec| into a temporary GURL.
516 COMPONENT_EXPORT(URL)
517 bool operator==(const GURL& x, std::string_view spec);
518 COMPONENT_EXPORT(URL)
519 bool operator==(std::string_view spec, const GURL& x);
520 COMPONENT_EXPORT(URL)
521 bool operator!=(const GURL& x, std::string_view spec);
522 COMPONENT_EXPORT(URL)
523 bool operator!=(std::string_view spec, const GURL& x);
524
525 // DEBUG_ALIAS_FOR_GURL(var_name, url) copies |url| into a new stack-allocated
526 // variable named |<var_name>|. This helps ensure that the value of |url| gets
527 // preserved in crash dumps.
528 #define DEBUG_ALIAS_FOR_GURL(var_name, url) \
529 DEBUG_ALIAS_FOR_CSTR(var_name, (url).possibly_invalid_spec().c_str(), 128)
530
531 namespace url::debug {
532
COMPONENT_EXPORT(URL)533 class COMPONENT_EXPORT(URL) ScopedUrlCrashKey {
534 public:
535 ScopedUrlCrashKey(base::debug::CrashKeyString* crash_key, const GURL& value);
536 ~ScopedUrlCrashKey();
537
538 ScopedUrlCrashKey(const ScopedUrlCrashKey&) = delete;
539 ScopedUrlCrashKey& operator=(const ScopedUrlCrashKey&) = delete;
540
541 private:
542 base::debug::ScopedCrashKeyString scoped_string_value_;
543 };
544
545 } // namespace url::debug
546
547 #endif // URL_GURL_H_
548