65

How do I extract the domain name from a url using bash? like: http://example.com/ to example.com must work for any tld, not just .com

4
  • That is Perl, not Bash, though.
    – user181548
    Apr 22, 2010 at 0:34
  • Basically all of the answers here are broken, except bewilderingly the Ruby one. You need to know the subdomain policy of the top-level domain before you can decide which is the root domain. Look for the Public Suffic database. In very brief, you want to handle cases like www.surrey.bbc.co.uk, www.nic.ad.jp, www.city.nagoya.jp, etc.
    – tripleee
    Nov 14, 2022 at 13:20
  • @tripleee: Posted today a pure bash answer with a chapter addressing your comment! Dec 29, 2022 at 10:33

17 Answers 17

101

You can use simple AWK way to extract the domain name as follows:

echo http://example.com/index.php | awk -F[/:] '{print $4}'

OUTPUT: example.com

:-)

11
  • Nicee, this is so much better then the answers provided in stackoverflow.com/questions/6174220/parse-url-in-shell-script !
    – bk138
    Dec 6, 2014 at 1:19
  • 12
    echo http://example.com:3030/index.php | awk -F/ '{print $3}' example.com:3030 :-(
    – Ben Burns
    Mar 24, 2015 at 9:16
  • you could split on : again to get it, but its not flexible enough to accept both with and without port.
    – chovy
    Dec 29, 2015 at 3:30
  • 3
    I got it by using this - echo http://www.example.com/somedir/someotherdir/index.html | cut -d'/' -f1,2,3 gives http://www.example.com
    – 3AK
    Jun 16, 2016 at 5:44
  • 7
    To handle urls with and without ports: awk -F[/:] '{print $4}'
    – Michael
    Oct 6, 2017 at 14:35
38
$ URI="http://user:[email protected]:80/"
$ echo $URI | sed -e 's/[^/]*\/\/\([^@]*@\)\?\([^:/]*\).*/\2/'
example.com

see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/URI_scheme

6
  • 3
    This works with or without port, deep paths and is still using bash. although it doesn't work on mac.
    – chovy
    Dec 29, 2015 at 3:34
  • 7 years later, this is still my go-to answer.
    – mwoodman
    Oct 19, 2017 at 17:14
  • 2
    I use your suggestion with a little extra to strip out any subdomains that might be in the url ->> echo http://www.mail.example.com:3030/index.php | sed -e "s/[^/]*\/\/\([^@]*@\)\?\([^:/]*\).*/\2/" | awk -F. '{print $(NF-1) "." $NF}' so I basically cut your output at the dot and take the last & second to last column and patch them back with the dot.
    – sakumatto
    Nov 1, 2017 at 14:33
  • 1
    For those who want to get the port: sed -e "s/[^/]*\/\/\([^@]*@\)\?\([^:/]*\)\(:\([0-9]\{1,5\}\)\)\?.*/\4/"
    – wheeler
    Apr 26, 2018 at 23:38
  • 1
    @sakumatto works fine, but how would it be to support "example.com.uk" for example?
    – sanNeck
    Apr 15, 2021 at 17:11
31
basename "http://example.com"

Now of course, this won't work with a URI like this: http://www.example.com/index.html but you could do the following:

basename $(dirname "http://www.example.com/index.html")

Or for more complex URIs:

echo "http://www.example.com/somedir/someotherdir/index.html" | cut -d'/' -f3

-d means "delimiter" and -f means "field"; in the above example, the third field delimited by the forward slash '/' is www.example.com.

4
  • 5
    I like cut -d'/' -f3 for its simplicity. Mar 14, 2012 at 13:40
  • 1
    fails if you add a port: echo "http://www.example.com:8080/somedir/someotherdir/index.html" | cut -d'/' -f3
    – chovy
    Dec 29, 2015 at 3:31
  • got this - http://www.example.com by running - echo http://www.example.com/somedir/someotherdir/index.html | cut -d'/' -f1,2,3
    – 3AK
    Jun 16, 2016 at 5:49
  • basename $(dirname does not work, if the url ends with the domain like: basename $(dirname "http://www.example.com/") will show just: http:
    – rubo77
    Mar 8, 2018 at 10:37
20
echo $URL | cut -d'/' -f3 | cut -d':' -f1

Works for URLs:

http://host.example.com
http://host.example.com/hi/there
http://host.example.com:2345/hi/there
http://host.example.com:2345
3
  • 1
    I found this more useful as it would return the url as it is when it doesn't contain 'http://' i.e. abc.com will be retained as abc.com Nov 5, 2018 at 8:16
  • This is in fact the most intuitive, concise and effective method of all the answers here!
    – Robert
    Aug 15, 2021 at 14:22
  • 1
    This extracts host.example.com rather than the domain name (example.com) asked for.
    – Lucas
    Apr 5, 2022 at 19:19
12
sed -E -e 's_.*://([^/@]*@)?([^/:]+).*_\2_'

e.g.

$ sed -E -e 's_.*://([^/@]*@)?([^/:]+).*_\2_' <<< 'http://example.com'
example.com

$ sed -E -e 's_.*://([^/@]*@)?([^/:]+).*_\2_' <<< 'https://example.com'
example.com

$ sed -E -e 's_.*://([^/@]*@)?([^/:]+).*_\2_' <<< 'http://example.com:1234/some/path'
example.com

$ sed -E -e 's_.*://([^/@]*@)?([^/:]+).*_\2_' <<< 'http://user:[email protected]:1234/some/path'
example.com

$ sed -E -e 's_.*://([^/@]*@)?([^/:]+).*_\2_' <<< 'http://user:[email protected]:1234/some/path#fragment'
example.com

$ sed -E -e 's_.*://([^/@]*@)?([^/:]+).*_\2_' <<< 'http://user:[email protected]:1234/some/path#fragment?params=true'
example.com
3
  • Boom! HOST=$(sed -E -e 's_.*://([^/@]*@)?([^/:]+).*_\2_' <<< "$MYURL") is fine in Bash
    – 4Z4T4R
    May 26, 2017 at 17:58
  • I would like to crop www from domain. In this case, how should I change the command properly?
    – Ceylan B.
    Apr 25, 2019 at 8:22
  • thanks for this, very handy, to capture path from URL I extend this slightly sed -E -e 's_.*://([^/@]*@)?([^/:]+)(.*)_\2_' <<< 'http://example.com' this allow you to grab path from url sed -E -e 's_.*://([^/@]*@)?([^/:]+)(.*)_\3_' <<< 'example.com/path/to/something' May 5, 2022 at 3:53
8

3 answers: short URL parsing (+) and full TLD extractor

Remark about question:

Question stand for , but the goal there is to split string on / character!! XY problem, using regex for this kind of job is overkill!

Posix shell first

Instead of using forks to another binaries, like awk, perl, cut or else, we could use parameter expansions which is quicker:

URL="http://example.com/some/path/to/page.html"
prot="${URL%%:*}"
link="${URL#$prot://}"
domain="${link%%/*}"
link="${link#$domain}"
printf '%-8s: %s\n' Protocol "${prot%:}" Domain "$domain" Link "$link"
Protocol: http
Domain  : example.com
Link    : /some/path/to/page.html

Note: This work even with file URL:

URL=file:///tmp/so/test.xml 
prot="${URL%%:*}"
link="${URL#$prot://}"
domain="${link%%/*}"
link="${link#$domain}"
printf '%-8s: %s\n' Protocol "${prot%:}" Domain "$domain" Link "$link"
Protocol: file
Domain  : 
Link    : /tmp/so/test.xml

read url parts using bash

As this question is tagged and no answer address read short, quick and reliable solution:

URL="http://example.com/some/path/to/page.html"

IFS=/ read -r prot _ domain link <<<"$URL"

That's all. As read is a builtin, this is the quickest way!! (** See comment)

From there you could

printf '%-8s: %s\n' Protocol "${prot%:}" Domain "$domain" Link "/$link"
Protocol: http
Domain  : example.com
Link    : /some/path/to/page.html

You could even check for port:

URL="http://example.com:8000/some/path/to/page.html"
IFS=/ read -r prot _ domain link <<<"$URL"
IFS=: read -r domain port <<<"$domain"

printf '%-8s: %s\n' Protocol "${prot%:}" Domain "$domain" Port "$port" Link "/$link"
Protocol: http
Domain  : example.com
Port    : 8000
Link    : /some/path/to/page.html

Full parsing with default ports:

URL="https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2497215/how-to-extract-domain-name-from-url"
declare -A DEFPORTS='([http]=80 [https]=443 [ipp]=631 [ftp]=21)'
IFS=/ read -r prot _ domain link <<<"$URL"
IFS=: read -r domain port <<<"$domain"

printf '%-8s: %s\n' Protocol "${prot%:}" Domain "$domain" \
    Port  "${port:-${DEFPORTS[${prot%:}]}}" Link "/$link"
Protocol: https
Domain  : stackoverflow.com
Port    : 443
Link    : /questions/2497215/how-to-extract-domain-name-from-url

Full Top Level Domain extractor (in pure bash):

Regarding public suffix and @tripleee' comment

There is one fork to wget which is done only once, at function initialization:

declare -A TLD='()'
initTld () { 
    local tld
    while read -r tld; do
        [[ -n ${tld//*[ \/;*]*} ]] && TLD["${tld#\!}"]=''
    done < <(
      wget -qO - https://publicsuffix.org/list/public_suffix_list.dat
    )
}
tldExtract () { 
    if [[ $1 == -v ]] ;then local _tld_out_var=$2;shift 2;fi
    local dom tld=$1 _tld_out_var
    while [[ ! -v TLD[${tld}] ]] && [[ -n $tld ]]; do
        IFS=. read -r dom tld <<< "$tld"
    done
    if [[ -v _tld_out_var ]] ;then
        printf -v $_tld_out_var '%s %s' "$dom" "$tld"
    else
        echo "$dom $tld"
    fi
}
initTld ; unset -f initTld

Then

tldExtract www.stackoverflow.com
stackoverflow com

tldExtract sub.www.test.co.uk
test co.uk

tldExtract -v myVar sub.www.test.co.uk
echo ${myVar% *}
test
echo ${myVar#* }
co.uk

tldExtract -v myVar www2.sub.city.nagoya.jp
echo $myVar 
sub city.nagoya.jp
1
  • Quicker function: parseUrl() { local IFS=/ arry;arry=($4);printf -v $1 ${arry%:};printf -v $2 ${arry[2]};printf -v $3 "/${arry[*]:3}";} to be used as read replacment: parseUrl prot domain link "$URL" for populating $prot $domain and $link variuables Mar 23, 2023 at 11:43
7
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;

my $url = $ARGV[0];

if($url =~ /([^:]*:\/\/)?([^\/]+\.[^\/]+)/g) {
  print $2;
}

Usage:

./test.pl 'https://example.com'
example.com

./test.pl 'https://www.example.com/'
www.example.com

./test.pl 'example.org/'
example.org

 ./test.pl 'example.org'
example.org

./test.pl 'example'  -> no output

And if you just want the domain and not the full host + domain use this instead:

#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;

my $url = $ARGV[0];
if($url =~ /([^:]*:\/\/)?([^\/]*\.)*([^\/\.]+\.[^\/]+)/g) {
  print $3;
}
2
6

Instead of using regex to do this you can use python's urlparse:

 URL=http://www.example.com

 python -c "from urlparse import urlparse
 url = urlparse('$URL')
 print url.netloc"

You could either use it like this or put it in a small script. However this still expects a valid scheme identifier, looking at your comment your input doesn't necessarily provide one. You can specify a default scheme, but urlparse expects the netloc to start with '//' :

url = urlparse('//www.example.com/index.html','http')

So you will have to prepend those manually, i.e:

 python -c "from urlparse import urlparse
 if '$URL'.find('://') == -1 then:
   url = urlparse('//$URL','http')
 else:
   url = urlparse('$URL')
 print url.netloc"
4

there is so little info on how you get those urls...please show more info next time. are there parameters in the url etc etc... Meanwhile, just simple string manipulation for your sample url

eg

$ s="http://example.com/index.php"
$ echo ${s/%/*}  #get rid of last "/" onwards
http://example.com
$ s=${s/%\//}  
$ echo ${s/#http:\/\//} # get rid of http://
example.com

other ways, using sed(GNU)

$ echo $s | sed 's/http:\/\///;s|\/.*||'
example.com

use awk

$ echo $s| awk '{gsub("http://|/.*","")}1'
example.com
3
  • Your method doesn't work! echo example.com/index.php | sed -r 's/http:\/\/|\///g' gives output example.comindex.php and NOT example.com on cygwin. please post a method that works
    – Ben Smith
    Mar 23, 2010 at 3:11
  • 3
    my method doesn't work because your sample url is different !! and you did not provide more info on what type of urls you want to parse !!. you should write your question clearly providing input examples and describe what output you want next time!
    – ghostdog74
    Mar 23, 2010 at 3:31
  • 2nd line seems to be incorrect. I copypasted the 2 first lines to my ubuntu shell and got example.com/index.php* Jun 25, 2012 at 16:58
3

The following will output "example.com":

URI="http://[email protected]/foo/bar/baz/?lala=foo" 
ruby -ruri -e "p URI.parse('$URI').host"

For more info on what you can do with Ruby's URI class you'd have to consult the docs.

2

Please note that extracting domain-name only from a URL is a bit tricky because domain name place in the hostname depends on the country (or more generally on the TLD) being used.

eg. for Argentina: www.personal.com.ar Domain name is personal.com.ar, not com.ar because this TLD uses subzones to specify type of organization.

The tool that I've found to manage well these cases is tldextract

So based on the FQDN (host part of the URL), you would get the domain reliably this way:

tldextract personal.com.ar | cut -d " " -f 2,3 | sed 's/ /./'

(the other answers to get the FQDN out of the URL are good and should be used)

hope this helps :) and thanks to tripleee !

1
  • There is no "above" or "below"; your answer could be first or last or in the middle depending on each visitor's display preferences. This is not a "corner case" but rather a central case where some popular global TLDs are common but actually the corner case. Nevertheless, +1
    – tripleee
    Dec 29, 2022 at 11:05
1

One solution that would cover for more cases would be based on sed regexps:

echo http://example.com/index.php | sed -e 's#^https://\|^http://##' -e 's#:.*##' -e 's#/.*##'

That would work for URLs like: http://example.com/index.php, http://example.com:4040/index.php, https://example.com/index.php

0

With Ruby you can use the Domainatrix library / gem

http://www.pauldix.net/2009/12/parse-domains-from-urls-easily-with-domainatrix.html

require 'rubygems'
require 'domainatrix'
s = 'http://www.champa.kku.ac.th/dir1/dir2/file?option1&option2'
url = Domainatrix.parse(s)
url.domain
=> "kku"

great tool! :-)

0

Here's the node.js way, it works with or without ports and deep paths:

//get-hostname.js
'use strict';

const url = require('url');
const parts = url.parse(process.argv[2]);

console.log(parts.hostname);

Can be called like:

node get-hostname.js http://foo.example.com:8080/test/1/2/3.html
//foo.example.com

Docs: https://nodejs.org/api/url.html

0

Pure Bash implementation without any sub-shell or sub-process:

# Extract host from an URL
#   $1: URL
function extractHost {
    local s="$1"
    s="${s/#*:\/\/}" # Parameter Expansion & Pattern Matching
    echo -n "${s/%+(:*|\/*)}"
}

E.g. extractHost "docker://1.2.3.4:1234/a/v/c" will output 1.2.3.4

0

Using bash built-in regex (no external utilities needed):

#!/usr/bin/env bash

url=https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2497215/how-to-extract-domain-name-from-url

if [[ $url =~ ^(https?://[^/]+) ]]; then
  host="${BASH_REMATCH[1]}"
  echo "HOST: $host"
else
  echo "Invalid URL $url"
  exit 1
fi

# OUTPUT
# HOST: https://stackoverflow.com
See also:
0

Here is another variant using only basename and dirname:

get_domain() {
    left="$(dirname "$1")"
    case $left in
        http: | https: | .)
            basename "$1"
            ;;
        *)
            get_domain "$left"
            ;;
    esac
}

Here are some examples where this function works well:

$ get_domain http://example.com/
example.com

$ get_domain http://example.com
example.com

$ get_domain example.com
example.com

$ get_domain example.com/
example.com

$ get_domain http://example.com/e.g./
example.com

$ get_domain http://example.com/e.g./for_instance
example.com

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