Crate iri_string[][src]

Expand description

String types for RFC 3987 Internationalized Resource Identifiers (IRIs) and RFC 3986 Uniform Resource Identifiers (URIs).

Note that this crate does not have any extra knowledge about protocols. Comparisons between IRI strings by PartialEq and Eq is implemented as simple string comparison. You should implement by yourself or use another crate to use such extra knowledge to compare IRIs / URIs.

Capability

This crate provides three features: string types, resolvers, and validators.

String types

types module module provides various string types for IRIs and URIs.

Resolvers

resolve module provides IRI / URI references resolver. However, you are recommended to use methods of string types such as RiReferenceStr::resolve_against() or RiRelativeStr::resolve_against(), rather than the freestanding resolver function.

Validators

Validator functions are provided from validate module.

Feature flags

std and alloc support

This crate supports no_std usage.

  • alloc feature: + Std library or alloc crate is required. + This feature enables types and functions which require memory allocation, e.g. types::IriString and types::IriRelativeStr::resolve_against().
  • std feature (enabled by default): + Std library is required. + This automatically enables alloc feature. + The feature let the crate utilize std-specific stuff, such as std::error::Error trait.
  • Without neither of them: + The crate can be used in no_std environment.

Other features

  • serde + Enables serde support. + Implement Serailize and Deserialize traits for IRI / URI types.
  • nom-std + Enabled by default. + Enables optimization for the internal parsers using std capability.

Rationale

foo:, foo:/, foo://, foo:///, foo:////, … are valid IRIs

All of these are valid IRIs. (On the other hand, all of them are invalid as relative IRI reference, because they don’t match relative-part rule, especially path-noscheme, as the first path component of the relative path contains a colon.)

  • foo: + Decomposed to <scheme="foo">:<path-empty="">.
  • foo:/ + Decomposed to <scheme="foo">:<path-absolute="/">.
  • foo:// + Decomposed to <scheme="foo">://<authority=""><path-absolute="">.
  • foo:/// + Decomposed to <scheme="foo">://<authority=""><path-absolute="/">.
  • foo://// + Decomposed to <scheme="foo">://<authority=""><path-absolute="//">.
  • foo:///// + Decomposed to <scheme="foo">://<authority=""><path-absolute="///">.

RFC 3986 says that “if authority is absent, path cannot start with //”.

When authority is present, the path must either be empty or begin with a slash (“/”) character. When authority is not present, the path cannot begin with two slash characters (“//”).

RFC 3986, section 3. Syntax Components.

If a URI contains an authority component, then the path component must either be empty or begin with a slash (“/”) character. If a URI does not contain an authority component, then the path cannot begin with two slash characters (“//”).

RFC 3986, section 3.3. Path

We should interpret them as “if authority rule is completely unused (i.e. does not match any strings including empty string), path cannot start with //”. In other words, we should consider this as explaining the ABNF of hier-part rule (especially why it does not use path rule), but not adding extra restriction to the rule written in ABNF.

This restriction is necessary to remove ambiguity in decomposition of some strings. For example, it is natural to decompose foo:// to <scheme="foo">:<path="//"> or <scheme="foo">://<authority=""><path="">. The restriction, which is already encoded to the ABNF rule, tells us to always decompose to the latter form, rather than the former one.

Readers of the spec might be confused by “when authority is present” and “if a URI contains an authority component, which is unclear. However, based on the interpretation above, we should consider authority part with empty string as satisfying the condition “authority is present”.

Modules

URI and IRI resolvers.

IRI specs.

URI and IRI types.

Validators.