Boost C++ Libraries

...one of the most highly regarded and expertly designed C++ library projects in the world. Herb Sutter and Andrei Alexandrescu, C++ Coding Standards

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Overview

Boost.URL is a portable C++ library which provides containers and algorithms which model a "URL," more formally described using the Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) specification (henceforth referred to as rfc3986). A URL is a compact sequence of characters that identifies an abstract or physical resource. For example, this is a valid URL:

https://www.example.com/path/to/file.txt?userid=1001&pages=3&results=full#page1

This library understands the grammars related to URLs and provides functionality to validate, parse, examine, and modify urls, and apply normalization or resolution algorithms.

Features

While the library is general purpose, special care has been taken to ensure that the implementation and data representation are friendly to network programs which need to handle URLs efficiently and securely, including the case where the inputs come from untrusted sources. Interfaces are provided for using error codes instead of exceptions as needed, and most algorithms have the means to opt-out of dynamic memory allocation. Another feature of the library is that all modifications leave the URL in a valid state. Code which uses this library is easy to read, flexible, and performant.

Boost.URL offers these features:

[Note] Note

Currently the library does not handle Internationalized Resource Identifiers (IRIs). These are different from URLs, come from Unicode strings instead of low-ASCII strings, and are covered by a separate specification.

The library requires a compiler supporting at least C++11.

Aliases for standard types, such as error_code or string_view, use their Boost equivalents.

Header-Only

To use the library as header-only; that is, to eliminate the requirement to link a program to a static or dynamic Boost.URL library, simply place the following line in exactly one source file in your project.

#include <boost/url/src.hpp>
Embedded

Boost.URL works great on embedded devices. It can be used in a way that avoids all dynamic memory allocations. Furthermore it offers alternative interfaces that work without exceptions if desired.

Tested Compilers

Boost.URL has been tested with the following compilers:

and these architectures: x86, x64, ARM64, S390x.

Quality Assurance

The development infrastructure for the library includes these per-commit analyses:

Various names have been used historically to refer to different flavors of resource identifiers, including URI, URL, URN, and even IRI. Over time, the distinction between URIs and URLs has disappeared when discussed in technical documents and informal works. In this library we use the term URL to refer to all strings which are valid according to the top-level grammar rules found in rfc3986.

ABNF

This documentation uses the Augmented Backus-Naur Form (ABNF) notation of rfc5234 to specify particular grammars used by algorithms and containers. While a complete understanding of the notation is not a requirement for using the library, it may help for an understanding of how valid components of URLs are defined. In particular, this is of interest to users who wish to compose parsing algorithms using the combinators provided by the library.

To be announced

Acknowledgments

This library wouldn't be where it is today without the help of Peter Dimov for design advice and general assistance.

This section is intended to give the reader a brief overview of the features and interface style of the library.

Integration

[Note] Note

Sample code and identifiers used throughout are written as if the following declarations are in effect:

#include <boost/url.hpp>
using namespace boost::urls;
Compiled library

We begin by including the library header file which brings all the symbols into scope.

#include <boost/url.hpp>

Alternatively, individual headers may be included to obtain the declarations for specific types.

You need to link your program with the Boost.URL built library. You must install binaries in a location that can be found by your linker.

If you followed the Boost Getting Started instructions, that's already been done for you.

Header-only

To use Boost.URL as header-only; that is, to eliminate the requirement to link a program to a static or dynamic Boost.URL library, place the following line in exactly one new or existing source file in your project.

// In exactly *one* source file
#include <boost/url/src.hpp>

Then define BOOST_URL_NO_LIB and include the library headers in any file that might uses Boost.URL.

// In any other source file
#define BOOST_URL_NO_LIB
#include <boost/url.hpp>

This "header-only" configuration needs BOOST_URL_NO_LIB defined when building with compilers supporting auto-linking, such as Microsoft Visual C++. The macro instructs Boost to deactivate auto-linking.

Parsing

Say you have the following URL that you want to parse:

string_view s = "https://user:pass@example.com:443/path/to/my%2dfile.txt?id=42&name=John%20Doe+Jingleheimer%2DSchmidt#page%20anchor";

In this example, string_view is an alias to boost::core::string_view, a string_view implementation that is implicitly convertible to std::string_view. The library namespace includes the aliases string_view, error_code, and result.

You can parse the string by calling this function:

result<url_view> r = parse_uri( s );

The function parse_uri returns an object of type result<url_view> which is a container resembling a variant that holds either an error or an object. A number of functions are available to parse different types of URL.

We can immediately call result::value to obtain a url_view.

url_view u = r.value();

Or simply

url_view u = *r;

When there are no errors, result::value returns an instance of url_view, which holds the parsed result. result::value throws an exception on a parsing error.

Alternatively, the functions result::has_value and result::has_error could also be used to check if the string has been parsed without errors.

[Note] Note

It is worth noting that parse_uri does not allocate any memory dynamically. Like a string_view, a url_view does not retain ownership of the underlying string buffer.

As long as the contents of the original string are unmodified, constructed URL views always contain a valid URL in its correctly serialized form.

If the input does not match the URL grammar, an error code is reported through result rather than exceptions. Exceptions only thrown on excessive input length.

Accessing

Accessing the parts of the URL is easy:

url_view u( "https://user:pass@example.com:443/path/to/my%2dfile.txt?id=42&name=John%20Doe+Jingleheimer%2DSchmidt#page%20anchor" );
assert(u.scheme() == "https");
assert(u.authority().buffer() == "user:pass@example.com:443");
assert(u.userinfo() == "user:pass");
assert(u.user() == "user");
assert(u.password() == "pass");
assert(u.host() == "example.com");
assert(u.port() == "443");
assert(u.path() == "/path/to/my-file.txt");
assert(u.query() == "id=42&name=John Doe Jingleheimer-Schmidt");
assert(u.fragment() == "page anchor");

URL paths can be further divided into path segments with the function url_view::segments. Although URL query strings are often used to represent key/value pairs, this interpretation is not defined by rfc3986. Users can treat the query as a single entity. url_view provides the function url_view::params to extract this view of key/value pairs.

Code

Output

for (auto seg: u.segments())
    std::cout << seg << "\n";
std::cout << "\n";

for (auto param: u.params())
    std::cout << param.key << ": " << param.value << "\n";
std::cout << "\n";
path
to
my-file.txt

id: 42
name: John Doe Jingleheimer-Schmidt

These functions return decode_view, which are constant views referring to sub-ranges of the underlying URL string. By simply referencing the relevant portion of the URL string, its components can represent percent-decoded strings without any need to allocate memory.

These functions might also return empty strings

url_view u1 = parse_uri( "http://www.example.com" ).value();
assert(u1.fragment().empty());
assert(!u1.has_fragment());

for both empty and absent components

url_view u2 = parse_uri( "http://www.example.com/#" ).value();
assert(u2.fragment().empty());
assert(u2.has_fragment());

Many components do not have corresponding functions such as has_authority to check for their existence. This happens because some URL components are mandatory.

When applicable, the encoded components can also be directly accessed through a string_view:

Code

Output

std::cout <<
    "url       : " << u                     << "\n"
    "scheme    : " << u.scheme()            << "\n"
    "authority : " << u.encoded_authority() << "\n"
    "userinfo  : " << u.encoded_userinfo()  << "\n"
    "user      : " << u.encoded_user()      << "\n"
    "password  : " << u.encoded_password()  << "\n"
    "host      : " << u.encoded_host()      << "\n"
    "port      : " << u.port()              << "\n"
    "path      : " << u.encoded_path()      << "\n"
    "query     : " << u.encoded_query()     << "\n"
    "fragment  : " << u.encoded_fragment()  << "\n";
url       : https://user:pass@example.com:443/path/to/my%2dfile.txt?id=42&name=John%20Doe+Jingleheimer%2DSchmidt#page%20anchor
scheme    : https
authority : user:pass@example.com:443
userinfo  : user:pass
user      : user
password  : pass
host      : example.com
port      : 443
path      : /path/to/my%2dfile.txt
query     : id=42&name=John%20Doe+Jingleheimer%2DSchmidt
fragment  : page%20anchor
Percent-Encoding

An instance of decode_view provides a number of functions to persist a decoded string:

Code

Output

decode_view dv("id=42&name=John%20Doe%20Jingleheimer%2DSchmidt");
std::cout << dv << "\n";
id=42&name=John Doe Jingleheimer-Schmidt

decode_view and its decoding functions are designed to perform no memory allocations unless the algorithm where its being used needs the result to be in another container. The design also permits recycling objects to reuse their memory, and at least minimize the number of allocations by deferring them until the result is in fact needed by the application.

In the example above, the memory owned by str can be reused to store other results. This is also useful when manipulating URLs:

u1.set_host(u2.host());

If u2.host() returned a value type, then two memory allocations would be necessary for this operation. Another common use case is converting URL path segments into filesystem paths:

Code

Output

boost::filesystem::path p;
for (auto seg: u.segments())
    p.append(seg.begin(), seg.end());
std::cout << "path: " << p << "\n";
path: "path/to/my-file.txt"

In this example, only the internal allocations of filesystem::path need to happen. In many common use cases, no allocations are necessary at all, such as finding the appropriate route for a URL in a web server:

auto match = [](
    std::vector<std::string> const& route,
    url_view u)
{
    auto segs = u.segments();
    if (route.size() != segs.size())
        return false;
    return std::equal(
        route.begin(),
        route.end(),
        segs.begin());
};

This allows us to easily match files in the document root directory of a web server:

std::vector<std::string> route =
    {"community", "reviews.html"};
if (match(route, u))
{
    handle_route(route, u);
}

For many simpler use cases, converting the view to a string might be sufficient:

auto function = [](string_view str)
{
    std::cout << str << "\n";
};

Compound elements

The path and query parts of the URL are treated specially by the library. While they can be accessed as individual encoded strings, they can also be accessed through special view types.

This code calls encoded_segments to obtain the path segments as a container that returns encoded strings:

Code

Output

segments_view segs = u.segments();
for( auto v : segs )
{
    std::cout << v << "\n";
}
path
to
my-file.txt

As with other url_view functions which return encoded strings, the encoded segments container does not allocate memory. Instead it returns views to the corresponding portions of the underlying encoded buffer referenced by the URL.

As with other library functions, decode_view permits accessing elements of composed elements while avoiding memory allocations entirely:

Code

Output

segments_view segs = u.segments();

for( auto v : segs )
{
    std::cout << v << "\n";
}
path
to
my-file.txt
params_view params_ref = u.params();

for( auto v : params_ref )
{
    std::cout <<
        "key = " << v.key <<
        ", value = " << v.value << "\n";
}
key = id, value = 42
key = name, value = John Doe

Modifying

The library provides the containers url and static_url which supporting modification of the URL contents. A url or static_url must be constructed from an existing url_view.

Unlike the url_view, which does not gain ownership of the underlying character buffer, the url container uses the default allocator to control a resizable character buffer which it owns.

url u = parse_uri( s ).value();

On the other hand, a static_url has fixed-capacity storage and does not require dynamic memory allocations.

static_url<1024> su = parse_uri( s ).value();

Objects of type url are std::regular. Similarly to built-in types, such as int, a url is copyable, movable, assignable, default constructible, and equality comparable. They support all of the inspection functions of url_view, and also provide functions to modify all components of the URL.

Changing the scheme is easy:

u.set_scheme( "https" );

Or we can use a predefined constant:

u.set_scheme_id( scheme::https ); // equivalent to u.set_scheme( "https" );

The scheme must be valid, however, or an exception is thrown. All modifying functions perform validation on their input. Attemping to set part of the URL to an invalid string results in an exception. It is not possible for a url to hold syntactically illegal text.

Modification functions return a reference to the object, so chaining is possible:

Code

Output

u.set_host_ipv4( ipv4_address( "192.168.0.1" ) )
    .set_port_number( 8080 )
    .remove_userinfo();
std::cout << u << "\n";
https://192.168.0.1:8080/path/to/my%2dfile.txt?id=42&name=John%20Doe#page%20anchor

All non-const operations offer the strong exception safety guarantee.

The path segment and query parameter containers returned by a url offer modifiable range functionality, using member functions of the container:

Code

Output

params_ref p = u.params();
p.replace(p.find("name"), {"name", "John Doe"});
std::cout << u << "\n";
https://192.168.0.1:8080/path/to/my%2dfile.txt?id=42&name=Vinnie%20Falco#page%20anchor

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