54

Im looking for a method (or function) to strip out the domain.ext part of any URL thats fed into the function. The domain extension can be anything (.com, .co.uk, .nl, .whatever), and the URL thats fed into it can be anything from http://www.domain.com to www.domain.com/path/script.php?=whatever

Whats the best way to go about doing this?

1

9 Answers 9

114

parse_url turns a URL into an associative array:

php > $foo = "http://www.example.com/foo/bar?hat=bowler&accessory=cane";
php > $blah = parse_url($foo);
php > print_r($blah);
Array
(
    [scheme] => http
    [host] => www.example.com
    [path] => /foo/bar
    [query] => hat=bowler&accessory=cane
)
7
  • What would be the best way to strip out the www. portion if its present in the domain. IM not good with regex. The messy way I can think of is $www_check = substr($domain,0,4); if ($www_check == "www.") { echo substr($domain, 4); } else { echo $domain; }
    – user15063
    Oct 6, 2008 at 22:08
  • @Yegor: $domain = preg_replace('/^www./','',$domain); Oct 6, 2008 at 23:37
  • I like explode on "www." and then use the first instance in the array myself. It generally works just fine. Oct 7, 2008 at 2:12
  • Careful Robert as a lot of URls don't have www in front of them. ie images.google.com
    – gradbot
    Oct 7, 2008 at 2:22
  • Yeah, generally for my purposes, that's the goal, as a non-www subdomain is pretty informative about the content being displayed in that part of the site. Oct 7, 2008 at 18:07
14

You can also write a regular expression to get exactly what you want.

Here is my attempt at it:

$pattern = '/\w+\..{2,3}(?:\..{2,3})?(?:$|(?=\/))/i';
$url = 'http://www.example.com/foo/bar?hat=bowler&accessory=cane';
if (preg_match($pattern, $url, $matches) === 1) {
    echo $matches[0];
}

The output is:

example.com

This pattern also takes into consideration domains such as 'example.com.au'.

Note: I have not consulted the relevant RFC.

2
  • 4
    This is the best solution to cover all cases. Thanks Feb 27, 2013 at 15:08
  • 1
    Can I use this regex pattern in another language?
    – User
    Mar 28, 2014 at 19:26
14

You can use parse_url() to do this:

$url = 'http://www.example.com';
$domain = parse_url($url, PHP_URL_HOST);
$domain = str_replace('www.','',$domain);

In this example, $domain should contain example.com, irrespective of it having www or not. It also works for a domain such as .co.uk

4
  • Shouldn't that be parse_url() instead of url_parse() Oct 6, 2008 at 21:39
  • 1
    Note: the second argument for parse_url is a PHP5 invention. Anyone on PHP4 (upgrade, please, for the love of God...) will need to use Robert Elwell's way.
    – ceejayoz
    Oct 6, 2008 at 22:36
  • Anyone on PHP4 ... will have to upgrade. Oct 6, 2008 at 23:38
  • 7
    $domain contains www.example.com.
    – Gary
    Mar 10, 2012 at 0:23
7

Following code will trim protocol, domain and port from absolute URL:

$urlWithoutDomain = preg_replace('#^.+://[^/]+#', '', $url);
2

Here are a couple simple functions to get the root domain (example.com) from a normal or long domain (test.sub.domain.com) or url (http://www.example.com).

/**
 * Get root domain from full domain
 * @param string $domain
 */
public function getRootDomain($domain)
{
    $domain = explode('.', $domain);

    $tld = array_pop($domain);
    $name = array_pop($domain);

    $domain = "$name.$tld";

    return $domain;
}

/**
 * Get domain name from url
 * @param string $url
 */
public function getDomainFromUrl($url)
{
    $domain = parse_url($url, PHP_URL_HOST);
    $domain = $this->getRootDomain($domain);

    return $domain;
}
1

Solved this...

Say we're calling dev.mysite.com and we want to extract 'mysite.com'

$requestedServerName = $_SERVER['SERVER_NAME']; // = dev.mysite.com

$thisSite = explode('.', $requestedServerName); // site name now an array

array_shift($thisSite); //chop off the first array entry eg 'dev'

$thisSite = join('.', $thisSite); //join it back together with dots ;)

echo $thisSite; //outputs 'mysite.com'

Works with mysite.co.uk too so should work everywhere :)

1
  • 1
    Does not work with with 2 part TLDs unless you have a subdomain as well. www.mydomain.co.uk // outputs 'mydomain.co.uk' mydomain.co.uk // outputs co.uk Apr 24, 2013 at 21:31
0

I spent some time thinking about whether it makes sense to use a regular expression for this, but in the end I think not.

firstresponder's regexp came close to convincing me it was the best way, but it didn't work on anything missing a trailing slash (so http://example.com, for instance). I fixed that with the following: '/\w+\..{2,3}(?:\..{2,3})?(?=[\/\W])/i', but then I realized that matches twice for urls like 'http://example.com/index.htm'. Oops. That wouldn't be so bad (just use the first one), but it also matches twice on something like this: 'http://abc.ed.fg.hij.kl.mn/', and the first match isn't the right one. :(

A co-worker suggested just getting the host (via parse_url()), and then just taking the last two or three array bits (split() on '.') The two or three would be based on a list of domains, like 'co.uk', etc. Making up that list becomes the hard part.

0

There is only one correct way to extract domain parts, it's use Public Suffix List (database of TLDs). I recomend TLDExtract package, here is sample code:

$extract = new LayerShifter\TLDExtract\Extract();

$result = $extract->parse('www.domain.com/path/script.php?=whatever');
$result->getSubdomain(); // will return (string) 'www'
$result->getHostname(); // will return (string) 'domain'
$result->getSuffix(); // will return (string) 'com'
0

This function should work:

function Delete_Domain_From_Url($Url = false)
{
    if($Url)
    {
        $Url_Parts = parse_url($Url);
        $Url = isset($Url_Parts['path']) ? $Url_Parts['path'] : '';
        $Url .= isset($Url_Parts['query']) ? "?".$Url_Parts['query'] : '';
    }

    return $Url;
}

To use it:

$Url = "https://stackoverflow.com/questions/176284/how-do-you-strip-out-the-domain-name-from-a-url-in-php";
echo Delete_Domain_From_Url($Url);

# Output: 
#/questions/176284/how-do-you-strip-out-the-domain-name-from-a-url-in-php