Thank you for all the comments and answers! I have done some digging myself after I posted the question and would like to write it down here as a reference. Please let me know if this answer is wrong.
Skip to the end to go directly to the conclusion.
From the JETTY Docs on International Characters and Character Encoding,
from the section "International characters in URLs", I found these
paragraphs:
Due to the lack of a standard, different browers took different approaches to the character encoding used. Some use the encoding of the page and some use UTF-8. Some drafts were prepared by various standards bodies suggesting that UTF-8 would become the standard encoding. Older versions of jetty (eg 4.0.x series) used UTF-8 as the default in anticipation of a standard being adopted. As a standard was not forthcoming, jetty-4.1.x reverted to a default encoding of ISO-8859-1.
The W3C organization's HTML standard now recommends the use of UTF-8: http://www.w3.org/TR/html40/appendix/notes.html#non-ascii-chars and accordingly jetty-6 series uses a default of UTF-8.
On the linked HTML 4.0 spec, there is indeed a recommendation
for clients to encode non-ASCII characters into UTF-8 first before
percent-encoding it, so we know it has been a recommendation from
W3C since HTML 4.0.
The example used on the page is this:
<A href="http://foo.org/Håkon">...</A>
While it later states that the same encoding should be applied to
the fragment part, it doesn't say that if it also applies to query
string.
Typing URLs into browsers
Firefox
As Pekka already mentioned, based on this link Firefox
sends ISO-8859-1 encoded URI as late as 2007. Reading the link,
this seems to be the default behavior for Firefox < 3.0. I'm
not sure if this also applies to Firefox < 3.0 in Mac OS X,
since default encoding in Mac is UTF-8.
I've tested Firefox 3.6.13 in Windows XP and Firefox 6 in both
Windows 7 and Mac OS X. The Mac version sends everything in
UTF-8, so it's nothing to worry about.
Firefox 3.6.13 and 6 in windows encodes query strings into ISO-8859-1
by default, but when you type characters that doesn't exist in
ISO-8859-1 to the query string (α, for example), Firefox 3
switches the encoding of the entire query string to UTF-8. I'm
pretty sure this is the same behavior in later versions too.
In Firefox 3.6.13 and 6 in Windows that I tested, the path part of
the URI is always encoded as UTF-8.
If you type this URL to Firefox 3.6/6 in Windows:
http://localhost/test/ü/ä/index.php?chär=ü
The query string gets encoded as ISO-8859-1, but the 'path' part
gets encoded as UTF-8:
http://localhost//test/%C3%BC/%C3%A4/index.php?ch%E4r=%FC
Also to be noted, according to this blog post, Firefox 3.0
converts katanaka character ア into ア
before percent-encoding
it. When I tried to do this in Firefox 3.6.13 in the query string
and the path, the katanaka character gets encoded in UTF-8 correctly.
Opera
Opera 10.10 on Mac encodes the query string part of the URI into
ISO-8859-1, even though the default encoding for Mac OS X is
UTF-8. The 'path' part gets encoded into UTF-8, just like Firefox.
If you try to type greek alphabet α to the query string it gets
sent as a question mark.
The same behavior is exhibited by Opera 11.51 in Windows XP.
Safari
Safari 5.1 on Mac always sends everything as UTF-8.
Safari 5.1 in Windows exhibit the same behavior.
Chrome
Version 13 on Windows encodes both query string and path as
UTF-8. I don't have Chrome on Mac, but it seems safe to assume
that Chrome always sends UTF-8, like Safari.
Internet Explorer
DISCLAIMER: I use IECollection to install multiple versions of IE
in one machine, so this may not be IE's natural behavior
(anyone can confirm on this?).
IE 6, 7, and 8 in Windows XP encodes 'path' part of the URI into
UTF-8 correctly. Umlauts and greek alphabet typed to the query
string does not get percent encoded though. The query string typed
to the address bar seems to be sent in ISO-8859-1, the greek alphabet
alpha 'α' in the query string gets transliterated into 'a'.
Conclusion
This is short and incomplete, and I cannot guarantee the
correctness of it, but it seems that the most common encodings
for URIs are either ISO-8859-1 and UTF-8 (I have no idea what east asians
use as their encoding, and it is too exhaustive for me to try
and find out).
Since it is already a recommendation from HTML 4.0, I guess it's
safe to assume the 'path' part of the URI is always encoded in
UTF-8. Firefox 2.0 might still be around, so you must check if
the encoding is ISO-8859-1 too. If it's not UTF-8 or ISO-8859-1,
most likely it's a bad request.
It's theoretically impossible to correctly detect the encoding of
of a string (see here, and here). You can guess, but
you can get the wrong result. So don't rely on encoding detection.
Safe Multibyte Routing
The safest way is just to choose one encoding (UTF-8 is the
safest bet) for your entire application. Then you have to:
- Make sure that all your strings are encoded in UTF-8 before
using it to build your URI. Properly percent encode your URI
after that.
- Make sure all your URL encoded (GET) forms sends their data in
the proper encoding. See this FAQ by Kore Nordmann for
more information about making sure your forms send the correct
encoding.
Also see this great answer from bobince.
After this, you shouldn't have any problems parsing the URI. If
the encoding is not in UTF-8, then it's a bad request, and you
can respond with 404 or 400 page.