38

I have a URL like this:

http://192.168.0.1:8080/servlet/rece

I want to parse the URL to get the values:

IP: 192.168.0.1
Port: 8080
page:  /servlet/rece

How do I do that?

1
  • for windows, use CoInternetParseUrl
    – Jichao
    Jun 13, 2015 at 9:07

10 Answers 10

29

Personally, I steal the HTParse.c module from the W3C (it is used in the lynx Web browser, for instance). Then, you can do things like:

 strncpy(hostname, HTParse(url, "", PARSE_HOST), size)

The important thing about using a well-established and debugged library is that you do not fall into the typical traps of URL parsing (many regexps fail when the host is an IP address, for instance, specially an IPv6 one).

4
  • 1
    In particular, be aware that with IPv6 there are ambiguous cases if you try to use the colon separator. e.g. 3ffe:0501::1:2, is that a port of 2, or a full address with your default port. The URL specs have dealt with this, as have the the prewritten libraries.
    – bitmusher
    Jan 18, 2013 at 21:53
  • 3
    Note there is no real ambiguity. The URI standard, RFC 3986, is clear and your example is illegal (you need square brackets).
    – bortzmeyer
    Jan 31, 2013 at 9:35
  • 3
    Thanks, this is comforting. I was under the mistaken impression that user facing code, like browser address bars, was accepting the addresses without square brackets. A quick tour of some popular browsers reveals this is not the case.
    – bitmusher
    Feb 2, 2013 at 18:03
  • 1
    HTParse.c has a number of dependencies, any chance you can explain how you can "steal" this from the project easily? Maybe back in 2009 it did not ;) Jan 30, 2019 at 18:38
15

I wrote a simple code using sscanf, which can parse very basic URLs.

#include <stdio.h>

int main(void)
{
    const char text[] = "http://192.168.0.2:8888/servlet/rece";
    char ip[100];
    int port = 80;
    char page[100];
    sscanf(text, "http://%99[^:]:%99d/%99[^\n]", ip, &port, page);
    printf("ip = \"%s\"\n", ip);
    printf("port = \"%d\"\n", port);
    printf("page = \"%s\"\n", page);
    return 0;
}

./urlparse
ip = "192.168.0.2"
port = "8888"
page = "servlet/rece"
5
  • What platform is this on? I did not know you could put regexp like [^:] in a sscanf format. Apr 7, 2009 at 15:44
  • My platform is: uname -a Linux ubuntu 2.6.24-21-generic #1 SMP Tue Oct 21 23:43:45 UTC 2008 i686 GNU/Linux
    – Jiang Bian
    Apr 8, 2009 at 1:35
  • 7
    [^:] is not a regexp in this context, it's merely a special format specifier for sscanf(). It is standard. See for instance this manual page: <linux.die.net/man/3/sscanf>.
    – unwind
    Apr 8, 2009 at 7:04
  • 3
    The parse had some mistakes when no port number, It con't work well. How can i fix it.
    – Jiang Bian
    Apr 9, 2009 at 0:06
  • What does %99 do here? How does it work? Please guide May 26, 2022 at 12:32
11

May be late,... what I have used, is - the http_parser_parse_url() function and the required macros separated out from Joyent/HTTP parser lib - that worked well, ~600LOC.

1
  • Yep. The node.js HTTP parser lib is great and very well tested for anything that has to do with HTTP requests / responses. Feb 15, 2017 at 11:35
11

With a regular expression if you want the easy way. Otherwise use FLEX/BISON.

You could also use a URI parsing library

2
  • 1
    Indeed, using a library seems the only reasonable thing, since there are many traps (http vs. https, explicit port, encoding in the path, etc).
    – bortzmeyer
    Apr 7, 2009 at 17:05
  • Hi, I wrote a BNF for url, like this. URL = "http://" {IP} {PORT}? {PAGE}? A flex generated a file which parsed the url. But how to fetch the individual parts like IP, PORT and PAGE. from the URL Jul 7, 2016 at 6:58
3

Libcurl now has curl_url_get() function that can extract host, path, etc.

Example code: https://curl.haxx.se/libcurl/c/parseurl.html

/* extract host name from the parsed URL */ 
uc = curl_url_get(h, CURLUPART_HOST, &host, 0);
if(!uc) {
  printf("Host name: %s\n", host);
  curl_free(host);
}
2

This one has reduced size and worked excellent for me http://draft.scyphus.co.jp/lang/c/url_parser.html . Just two files (*.c, *.h).
I had to adapt code [1].

[1]Change all the function calls from http_parsed_url_free(purl) to parsed_url_free(purl)

   //Rename the function called
   //http_parsed_url_free(purl);
   parsed_url_free(purl);
2
  • 2
    @ tremendows : Excellent link. It works like a charm. Nov 14, 2013 at 12:15
  • 4
    Sadly that excellent code is copyrighted 'all rights reserved', so it should not be used in other than a personal project. Aug 28, 2014 at 15:34
2

Pure sscanf() based solution:

//Code
#include <stdio.h>

int
main (int argc, char *argv[])
{
    char *uri = "http://192.168.0.1:8080/servlet/rece"; 
    char ip_addr[12], path[100];
    int port;
    
    int uri_scan_status = sscanf(uri, "%*[^:]%*[:/]%[^:]:%d%s", ip_addr, &port, path);
    
    printf("[info] URI scan status : %d\n", uri_scan_status);
    if( uri_scan_status == 3 )
    {   
        printf("[info] IP Address : '%s'\n", ip_addr);
        printf("[info] Port: '%d'\n", port);
        printf("[info] Path : '%s'\n", path);
    }
    
    return 0;
}

However, keep in mind that this solution is tailor made for [protocol_name]://[ip_address]:[port][/path] type of URI's. For understanding more about the components present in the syntax of URI, you can head over to RFC 3986.

Now let's breakdown our tailor made format string : "%*[^:]%*[:/]%[^:]:%d%s"

  • %*[^:] helps to ignore the protocol/scheme (eg. http, https, ftp, etc.)

    It basically captures the string from the beginning until it encounters the : character for the first time. And since we have used * right after the % character, therefore the captured string will be ignored.

  • %*[:/] helps to ignore the separator that sits between the protocol and the IP address, i.e. ://

  • %[^:] helps to capture the string present after the separator, until it encounters :. And this captured string is nothing but the IP address.

  • :%d helps to capture the no. sitting right after the : character (the one which was encountered during the capturing of IP address). The no. captured over here is basically your port no.

  • %s as you may know, will help you to capture the remaining string which is nothing but the path of the resource you are looking for.

1

This C gist could be useful. It implements a pure C solution with sscanf.

https://github.com/luismartingil/per.scripts/tree/master/c_parse_http_url

It uses

// Parsing the tmp_source char*
if (sscanf(tmp_source, "http://%99[^:]:%i/%199[^\n]", ip, &port, page) == 3) { succ_parsing = 1;}
else if (sscanf(tmp_source, "http://%99[^/]/%199[^\n]", ip, page) == 2) { succ_parsing = 1;}
else if (sscanf(tmp_source, "http://%99[^:]:%i[^\n]", ip, &port) == 2) { succ_parsing = 1;}
else if (sscanf(tmp_source, "http://%99[^\n]", ip) == 1) { succ_parsing = 1;}
(...)
1
  • third if statement will never be tested, becouse second one has the same meaning, so this could make a problem with port/page
    – Risinek
    Apr 1, 2016 at 13:41
1

I wrote this

#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <ctype.h>
typedef struct
{
    const char* protocol = 0;
    const char* site = 0;
    const char* port = 0;
    const char* path = 0;
} URL_INFO;
URL_INFO* split_url(URL_INFO* info, const char* url)
{
    if (!info || !url)
        return NULL;
    info->protocol = strtok(strcpy((char*)malloc(strlen(url)+1), url), "://");
    info->site = strstr(url, "://");
    if (info->site)
    {
        info->site += 3;
        char* site_port_path = strcpy((char*)calloc(1, strlen(info->site) + 1), info->site);
        info->site = strtok(site_port_path, ":");
        info->site = strtok(site_port_path, "/");
    }
    else
    {
        char* site_port_path = strcpy((char*)calloc(1, strlen(url) + 1), url);
        info->site = strtok(site_port_path, ":");
        info->site = strtok(site_port_path, "/");
    }
    char* URL = strcpy((char*)malloc(strlen(url) + 1), url);
    info->port = strstr(URL + 6, ":");
    char* port_path = 0;
    char* port_path_copy = 0;
    if (info->port && isdigit(*(port_path = (char*)info->port + 1)))
    {
        port_path_copy = strcpy((char*)malloc(strlen(port_path) + 1), port_path);
        char * r = strtok(port_path, "/");
        if (r)
            info->port = r;
        else
            info->port = port_path;
    }
    else
        info->port = "80";
    if (port_path_copy)
        info->path = port_path_copy + strlen(info->port ? info->port : "");
    else 
    {
        char* path = strstr(URL + 8, "/");
        info->path = path ? path : "/";
    }
    int r = strcmp(info->protocol, info->site) == 0;
    if (r && info->port == "80")
        info->protocol = "http";
    else if (r)
        info->protocol = "tcp";
    return info;
}

Test

int main()
{
    URL_INFO info;
    split_url(&info, "ftp://192.168.0.1:8080/servlet/rece");
    printf("Protocol: %s\nSite: %s\nPort: %s\nPath: %s\n", info.protocol, info.site, info.port, info.path);
    return 0;
}

Out

Protocol: ftp
Site: 192.168.0.1
Port: 8080
Path: /servlet/rece
-3

Write a custom parser or use one of the string replace functions to replace the separator ':' and then use sscanf().

3
  • 22
    There are many traps to watch so a custom parser seems to me a bad idea.
    – bortzmeyer
    Apr 7, 2009 at 16:53
  • 1
    @bortzmeye: that doesn't make the suggestion invalid. It's vague reasoning. Also, a custom parser is the most powerful/efficient/dependency free. The sscanf is easier to get wrong.
    – dirkgently
    Apr 7, 2009 at 17:00
  • 30
    how is "write some code that does what you need" an accepted answer?
    – Spike0xff
    Aug 21, 2016 at 3:47

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