\GuzzleHttp\Psr7UriNormalizer

Provides methods to normalize and compare URIs.

Summary

Methods
Properties
Constants
normalize()
isEquivalent()
No public properties found
PRESERVING_NORMALIZATIONS
CAPITALIZE_PERCENT_ENCODING
DECODE_UNRESERVED_CHARACTERS
CONVERT_EMPTY_PATH
REMOVE_DEFAULT_HOST
REMOVE_DEFAULT_PORT
REMOVE_DOT_SEGMENTS
REMOVE_DUPLICATE_SLASHES
SORT_QUERY_PARAMETERS
No protected methods found
No protected properties found
N/A
capitalizePercentEncoding()
decodeUnreservedCharacters()
__construct()
No private properties found
N/A

Constants

PRESERVING_NORMALIZATIONS

PRESERVING_NORMALIZATIONS = 63

Default normalizations which only include the ones that preserve semantics.

self::CAPITALIZE_PERCENT_ENCODING | self::DECODE_UNRESERVED_CHARACTERS | self::CONVERT_EMPTY_PATH | self::REMOVE_DEFAULT_HOST | self::REMOVE_DEFAULT_PORT | self::REMOVE_DOT_SEGMENTS

DECODE_UNRESERVED_CHARACTERS

DECODE_UNRESERVED_CHARACTERS = 2

Decodes percent-encoded octets of unreserved characters.

For consistency, percent-encoded octets in the ranges of ALPHA (%41–%5A and %61–%7A), DIGIT (%30–%39), hyphen (%2D), period (%2E), underscore (%5F), or tilde (%7E) should not be created by URI producers and, when found in a URI, should be decoded to their corresponding unreserved characters by URI normalizers.

Example: http://example.org/%7Eusern%61me/http://example.org/~username/

REMOVE_DEFAULT_HOST

REMOVE_DEFAULT_HOST = 8

Removes the default host of the given URI scheme from the URI.

Only the "file" scheme defines the default host "localhost". All of file:/myfile, file:///myfile, and file://localhost/myfile are equivalent according to RFC 3986. The first format is not accepted by PHPs stream functions and thus already normalized implicitly to the second format in the Uri class. See GuzzleHttp\Psr7\Uri::composeComponents.

Example: file://localhost/myfile → file:///myfile

REMOVE_DUPLICATE_SLASHES

REMOVE_DUPLICATE_SLASHES = 64

Paths which include two or more adjacent slashes are converted to one.

Webservers usually ignore duplicate slashes and treat those URIs equivalent. But in theory those URIs do not need to be equivalent. So this normalization may change the semantics. Encoded slashes (%2F) are not removed.

Example: http://example.org//foo///bar.htmlhttp://example.org/foo/bar.html

SORT_QUERY_PARAMETERS

SORT_QUERY_PARAMETERS = 128

Sort query parameters with their values in alphabetical order.

However, the order of parameters in a URI may be significant (this is not defined by the standard). So this normalization is not safe and may change the semantics of the URI.

Example: ?lang=en&article=fred → ?article=fred&lang=en

Note: The sorting is neither locale nor Unicode aware (the URI query does not get decoded at all) as the purpose is to be able to compare URIs in a reproducible way, not to have the params sorted perfectly.

Methods

normalize()

normalize(\Psr\Http\Message\UriInterface  $uri, integer  $flags = self::PRESERVING_NORMALIZATIONS) : \Psr\Http\Message\UriInterface

Returns a normalized URI.

The scheme and host component are already normalized to lowercase per PSR-7 UriInterface. This methods adds additional normalizations that can be configured with the $flags parameter.

PSR-7 UriInterface cannot distinguish between an empty component and a missing component as getQuery(), getFragment() etc. always return a string. This means the URIs "/?#" and "/" are treated equivalent which is not necessarily true according to RFC 3986. But that difference is highly uncommon in reality. So this potential normalization is implied in PSR-7 as well.

Parameters

\Psr\Http\Message\UriInterface $uri

The URI to normalize

integer $flags

A bitmask of normalizations to apply, see constants

Returns

\Psr\Http\Message\UriInterface

The normalized URI

isEquivalent()

isEquivalent(\Psr\Http\Message\UriInterface  $uri1, \Psr\Http\Message\UriInterface  $uri2, integer  $normalizations = self::PRESERVING_NORMALIZATIONS) : boolean

Whether two URIs can be considered equivalent.

Both URIs are normalized automatically before comparison with the given $normalizations bitmask. The method also accepts relative URI references and returns true when they are equivalent. This of course assumes they will be resolved against the same base URI. If this is not the case, determination of equivalence or difference of relative references does not mean anything.

Parameters

\Psr\Http\Message\UriInterface $uri1

An URI to compare

\Psr\Http\Message\UriInterface $uri2

An URI to compare

integer $normalizations

A bitmask of normalizations to apply, see constants

Returns

boolean

__construct()

__construct()