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What is the best way to test if a url & querystring is valid? For example, after a login redirect I want to make sure the target url is valid. If not, go to a default page.

We seem to have a problem with the querystring, starting with "ReturnUrl=", being duplicated and that throws an exception. We'd rather have it go to a default page.

2 Answers 2

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Here is a workaround for too long ReturnUrl querystring parameter. The fact is if there was something in the querystring before appending new RedirectUrl parameter (e.g. by using FormsAuthentication.RedirectToLoginPage method), this would be encoded and assigned to the new RedirectUrl parameter.

The idea is to remove unnecessary(old ReturnUrl parameters from the querystring). For this I use Application_EndRequest in global.asax and Response.RedirectLocation property.

So if the response is being redirected and current url contains ReturnUrl parameter, it should be removed from redirected location (because it doesn't make sense).

// parameter key
private static readonly string ReturnUrlParameter = "ReturnUrl";

protected void Application_EndRequest(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    if (Response.IsRequestBeingRedirected)
    {
        Uri redirectUrl;
        if (Uri.TryCreate(Response.RedirectLocation, UriKind.RelativeOrAbsolute, out redirectUrl))
        {
            redirectUrl = MakeAbsoluteUriIfNecessary(redirectUrl);
            Uri currentUrl = Request.Url;
            var currentQueryParameters = 
                    HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(HttpUtility.UrlDecode(currentUrl.Query));
            // the parameter is present in the current url already
            if (currentQueryParameters[ReturnUrlParameter] != null)
            {
                UriBuilder builder = new UriBuilder(redirectUrl);
                builder.Query = 
                        HttpUtility.UrlDecode(builder.Query)
                            .Replace(Request.Url.Query, string.Empty).TrimStart('?');

                Response.RedirectLocation = 
                        Request.Url.MakeRelativeUri(builder.Uri).ToString();
            }
        }
    }
}

private Uri MakeAbsoluteUriIfNecessary(Uri url)
{
    if (url.IsAbsoluteUri)
    {
        return url;
    }
    else 
    {
        Uri currentUrl = Request.Url;
        UriBuilder builder = new UriBuilder(
                currentUrl.Scheme, 
                currentUrl.Host, 
                currentUrl.Port
            );

        return new Uri(builder.Uri, url);
    }
}

For URL parsing and building System.Uri will be the best choice.

A URI is a compact representation of a resource available to your application on the intranet or Internet. The Uri class defines the properties and methods for handling URIs, including parsing, comparing, and combining. The Uri class properties are read-only; to create a modifiable object, use the UriBuilder class.

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  • I looked into System.Uri. Unfortunately, even though a portion of the querystring is duplicated, the uri is still well-formed. May 14, 2010 at 1:59
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I suppose you could extract the URL, Decode it, and then load it into a "Uri" Type. This would tell you if it is structurally sound.

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