Is there a simple way in .NET to quickly get the current protocol, host, and port? For example, if I'm on the following URL:

http://www.mywebsite.com:80/pages/page1.aspx

I need to return:

http://www.mywebsite.com:80

I know I can use Request.Url.AbsoluteUri to get the complete URL, and I know I can use Request.Url.Authority to get the host and port, but I'm not sure of the best way to get the protocol without parsing out the URL string.

Any suggestions?

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5 Answers

up vote 20 down vote accepted

The following (C#) code should do the trick

Uri uri = new Uri("http://www.mywebsite.com:80/pages/page1.aspx");
string requested = uri.Scheme + Uri.SchemeDelimiter + uri.Host + ":" + uri.Port;
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Or string requested = uri.Scheme + Uri.SchemeDelimiter + uri.Authority; – mqbt Mar 1 at 22:51
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Even though @Rick has the accepted answer for this question, there's actually a shorter way to do this, using the poorly named Uri.GetLeftPart() method.

Uri url = new Uri("http://www.mywebsite.com:80/pages/page1.aspx");
string output = url.GetLeftPart(UriPartial.Authority);

There is one catch to GetLeftPart(), however. If the port is the default port for the scheme, it will strip it out. Since port 80 is the default port for http, the output of GetLeftPart() in my example above will be http://www.mywebsite.com.

If the port number had been something other than 80, it would be included in the result.

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1  
Just what I needed! – Tom Winter Mar 8 '11 at 21:44
This is the best example in my opinion. It works for localhost:port and live instances. – Nick Oct 11 '11 at 19:13
Agree +1 because it works off localhost:port – Peter H. Oct 14 '11 at 5:09
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Request.Url will return you the Uri of the request. Once you have that, you can retrieve pretty much anything you want. To get the protocol, call the Scheme property.

Sample:

Uri url = Request.Url;
string protocol = url.Scheme;

Hope this helps.

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Well if you are doing this in Asp.Net or have access to HttpContext.Current.Request I'd say these are easier and more general ways of getting them:

var scheme = Request.Url.Scheme; // will get http, https, etc.
var host = Request.Url.Host; // will get www.mywebsite.com
var port = Request.Url.Port; // will get the port
var path = Request.Url.AbsolutePath; // should get the /pages/page1.aspx part, can't remember if it only get pages/page1.aspx

I hope this helps. :)

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I prefer this method, I can get just the peice I want and don't have to worry about whether or not the string is well formed enough to get the port. +1 – Jrud Nov 2 '11 at 14:37
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A more structured way to get this is to use UriBuilder. This avoids direct string manipulation.

var builder = new UriBuilder(Request.Url.Scheme, Request.Url.Host, Request.Url.Port);
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