30

how can I get the subdomain value in rails, is there a built-in way to do this?

e.g.

test123.example.com

I want the test123 part of the url.

2
  • you mind using a regular expression? Nov 30, 2010 at 4:35
  • I think this would be better answered by providing a solution to find the subdomain of a string as well as the current url. Considering this is the #1 result on google for the search "rails get the subdomain of a url"
    – Joshua
    Jan 14, 2016 at 3:54

10 Answers 10

31

Rails 3.0 has this capability built-in, you can access the subdomain from request.subdomain.

You can also route based on the subdomain:

class SupportSubdomain
  def self.matches?(request)
    request.subdomain == "support"
  end
end

Basecamp::Application.routes do
  constraints(SupportSubdomain) do
    match "/foo/bar", :to => "foo#bar"
  end
end

If you're using 2.3, you'll need to use a plugin such as subdomain-fu.

3
  • Is there a way to do this when using Rack Middleware? request.subdomain is not available only request.host
    – cman77
    Sep 8, 2012 at 22:24
  • @cman77 You could try something like this, or rack-subdomain for more complex situations. Sep 11, 2012 at 18:59
  • @CyleHunter sure, if you're using something like pow to do development name-resolution. Oct 23, 2012 at 20:05
13

Use the following method inside your controller

request.subdomains

This Returns an array of subdomains

1
  • 7
    request.subdomain does not return an array. request.subdomains does. Note the plural form of subdomain. Apr 20, 2016 at 21:11
8

In case you are working with a string, and assuming it can be a true URI, you can do this to extract the subdomain.

require 'uri'

uri = URI.parse('http://test123.example.com')
uri.host.split('.').first
=> "test123"

https://stackoverflow.com/a/13243810/3407381

4
  • Gave a -1 since Rails has a built in function that does this already, so this would reinvent the wheel and might be more prone to errors.
    – curveorzos
    Jul 11, 2016 at 23:59
  • +1 because I actually needed to parse a string. I was trying to parse request.referrer. Don't listen to @corvuszero. The question wasn't specific. Thanks!
    – Cruz Nunez
    Sep 19, 2016 at 18:38
  • 1
    I gave a +1 since you don't always have a request to work with
    – CommandZ
    Nov 7, 2019 at 15:36
  • 3
    this will fail for TLDs that contain a period, such as mysite.co.uk for example.
    – Julien
    May 13, 2020 at 0:50
7

account_location is also a good plugin. After using it, you can find the account based on different subdomains. And you can find out subdomain from url just by writing

request.subdomains(0).first
in your code.

2

Simple in your controller just do the following

unless request.subdomains.any?
   #No domains available redirect
   redirect_to subdomain: 'www'
end
1

You can use the SubdomainFu plugin. This plugin gives you a method current_subdomain which returns the current_subdomain of your app.

You can also have a look at this Railscast

UPDATE

You can also use request.subdomains this will give you an array of subdomains.

1

For anyone looking to get the subdomains on localhost using WEBrick:

Put config.action_dispatch.tld_length = 0 into config/environments/development.rb and everything should work.

Link to SO post here: Can I make Rails / WEBrick recognize entries in /etc/hosts as subdomains (instead of domains)?

Link to Github post: https://github.com/rails/rails/issues/12438

1
  • That is indeed a nice little gotcha there! Glad you mentioned this May 30, 2019 at 10:56
1

current domain with subdomains:

"#{request.subdomain}.#{request.domain}"
# or
"#{request.subdomains.join(".")}.#{request.domain}"
1
  • 1
    Conscious this would prepend a . if there's no subdomain; a more robust approach (if subdomain may be blank) is something like current_domain = (request.subdomains + [request.domain]).join('.') Oct 1, 2021 at 9:15
0

A bit late to the party but here's what I used in older versions of rails.

subdomain = request.subdomains.join('.')

It should be backwards compatible in newer versions

0

Recently worked on similar task - but the goal were to remove the subdomain from URL, ignoring the www and any combination of .co.uk or other top level domain. Maybe someone will find it useful:

def self.remove_subdomain_from_url(url)
  root_domain = 'example'

  uri = URI.parse(url)
  host = uri.host.sub(/^www\./, '')

  root_domain_index = host.split('.').find_index { |host_element| host_element.include?(root_domain) }

  return url if root_domain_index.zero?

  new_host = []
  new_host.push('www') if url.include?('www')
  new_host.concat(host.split('.')[root_domain_index..-1])

  uri.host = new_host.join('.')
  uri.to_s
end

And a bunch of tests that might help you to understand the code:

it 'does not remove www from url' do
  expect(remove_subdomain_from_url('https://www.pl.example.com/path/?originalSubdomain=pl')).to eq(
    "https://www.example.com/path/?originalSubdomain=de"
  )
end

it 'removes subdomain from url' do
  expect(remove_subdomain_from_url('https://www.de.example.com/path/?originalSubdomain=de')).to eq(
    "https://www.example.com/path/?originalSubdomain=de"
  )
end

it 'works properly with http' do
  expect(remove_subdomain_from_url('http://de.example.com/path/?originalSubdomain=de')).to eq(
    "http://example.com/path/?originalSubdomain=de"
  )
end

it 'works properly with nested subdomains' do
  expect(remove_subdomain_from_url('https://nested.subdomain.example.com/')).to eq('https://example.com/')
end

it 'works properly with nested top level domain(suffix)' do
  expect(remove_subdomain_from_url('https://www.de.example.co.uk/path/?originalSubdomain=de')).to eq(
    "https://www.example.co.uk/path/?originalSubdomain=de"
  )
end

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