Metadata-Version: 1.0
Name: YURL
Version: 0.13
Summary: Yurl is alternative url manipulation library
Home-page: http://github.com/homm/yurl/
Author: Aleksadr Karpinsky
Author-email: homm86@gmail.com
License: UNKNOWN
Description: ====================================
        Alternative url manipulation library
        ====================================
        
        Yurl is the replacement of built in python urlparse module.
        Key features of yurl are:
        
        * pythonic api
        * better compliance with RFC 3986
        * nice performance
        * support for python 2.6, 2.7, 3.2, 3.3 and pypy 1.9 with single codebase
        
        Yurl inspired by purl — pythonic interface to urlparse.
        
        ===
        API
        ===
        
        
        Parsing
        -------
        
        To parse url into parts, pass string as first argument to URL() constructor:
        
            >>> from yurl import URL
            >>> URL('https://www.google.ru/search?q=yurl')
            URLBase(scheme='https', userinfo=u'', host='www.google.ru', port='',
             path='/search', query='q=yurl', fragment='', decoded=False)
        
        It also works with relative urls:
        
            >>> URL('search?rls=en&q=yurl&redir_esc=')
            URLBase(scheme=u'', userinfo=u'', host=u'', port='', path='search',
             query='rls=en&q=yurl&redir_esc=', fragment='', decoded=False)
        
        Url also can be constructed from known parts:
        
            >>> print URL(host='google.com', path='search', query='q=url')
            //google.com/search?q=url
        
        
        Validation
        ----------
        
        Url parsing is always successful, even if some parts have unescaped or
        not allowed chars. After parsing you can call validate() method:
        
            >>> URL('//google:com').validate()
            Traceback (most recent call last):
              File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
              File "yurl.py", line 201, in validate
                raise InvalidHost()
            yurl.InvalidHost
        
        Validate() returns object itself or modified version:
        
            >>> URL('//google.com:80').validate()
            URLBase(scheme=u'', userinfo=u'', host='google.com', port='80',
             path='', query='', fragment='', decoded=False)
        
        
        Get information
        ---------------
        
        URL() returns named tuple with some additional properties. All properties
        is strings, even if they does not exists in url.
        
        .scheme .authority .path .query .fragment
            Basic parts of url: *scheme://authority/path?query#fragment*
        
        .userinfo .host .port
            Parts of authority: *userinfo@host:port*
            Port is guaranteed to consist of digits.
        
        .full_path
            Path, query and fragment joined together: *path?query#fragment*
        
        .username .authorization
            Parts of userinfo: *username:authorization*
        
        Url object has method for checking authority existence:
        
            >>> URL('http://google.com:80').has_authority()
            True
        
        Also you can check is url relative:
        
            >>> URL('http://google.com:80').is_relative()
            False
            >>> URL('//google.com:80').is_relative()
            True
        
        Or have relative path:
        
            >>> URL('scheme:path').is_relative_path()
            False
            >>> URL('./path').is_relative_path()
            True
        
        You can also chech is url host is ip:
        
            >>> URL('//127-0-0-1/').is_host_ip()
            False
            >>> URL('//127.0.0.1/').is_host_ip()
            True
            >>> URL('//[::ae21:ad12]/').is_host_ip()
            True
            >>> URL('//[::ae21:ad12]/').is_host_ipv4()
            False
        
        Ip does not validated, so it is recommended to use validate() method:
        
            >>> URL('//[+ae21:ad12]/').is_host_ip()
            True
            >>> URL('//[+ae21:ad12]/').validate().is_host_ip()
            Traceback (most recent call last):
              File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
              File "yurl.py", line 197, in validate
                raise InvalidHost()
            yurl.InvalidHost
        
        
        Modify urls
        -----------
        
        After parsing url can be modified in different ways.
        
        replace() method
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
        
        You can use replace() method to change whole parts of url:
        
            >>> print URL('http://ya.ru/').replace(scheme='https')
            https://ya.ru/
            >>> print URL('http://ya.ru/?q=yurl').replace(query='')
            http://ya.ru/
        
        In addition to the usual attributes it takes shortcuts authority and full_path:
        
            >>> print URL('http://user@ya.ru:80/?q=yurl')\
            ... .replace(authority='google.com', full_path='two')
            http://google.com/two
        
        setdefault() method
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
        
        setdefault() replace parts with given if they don't exists in original url:
        
            >>> print URL('https://google.com').setdefault(scheme='http', path='q')
            https://google.com/q
        
        Url join
        ~~~~~~~~
        
        Join is analogue of urljoin() function from urlparse module. You can join two
        urls by adding one to another.
        
            >>> print URL('http://ya.ru/path#chap2') + URL('seqrch?q=some')
            http://ya.ru/seqrch?q=some
        
        Join for relative urls is also supported:
        
            >>> print URL('path/to/object#chap2') + URL('../from/object')
            path/from/object
        
        Join is not commutative operation:
        
            >>> print URL('../from/object') + URL('path/to/object#chap2')
            from/path/to/object#chap2
        
        And not associative in general:
        
            >>> print (URL('//google/path/to') + URL('../../object')) + URL('path')
            //google/path
            >>> print URL('//google/path/to') + (URL('../../object') + URL('path'))
            //google/path/path
        
        
        Decode url
        ----------
        
        All chars in url is divided to three groups: delimeters, subdelimeters and
        unreserved chars. Unreserved chars do not affect the parsing and can be encoded
        or decoded at any time. To decode unreserved chars you can call decode()
        method. Defaul encoding is utf-8.
        
            >>> url = '%D1%81%D1%85%D0%B5%D0%BC%D0%B0%3A%D0%BF%D1%83%D1%82%D1%8C'
            >>> print URL(url).decode()
            схема%3Aпуть
        
        If you want decode all chars, you should apply decode_url_component()
        function to url component:
        
            >>> from yurl import decode_url_component
            >>> print decode_url_component(URL(url).decode().path)
            схема:путь
        
        You can also omit decode method if you pass encoding in decode_url_component():
        
            >>> print decode_url_component(url, 'utf-8')
            схема:путь
        
        If you do not pass encoding, only reserved chars will be decoded:
        
            >>> print decode_url_component(url)
            %D1%81%D1%85%D0%B5%D0%BC%D0%B0:%D0%BF%D1%83%D1%82%D1%8C
        
        Cache url parsing
        -----------------
        
        Original urlparse() cache every parsed url. In most cases this is unnecessary.
        But if you parse the same link again and again you can use CachedURL:
        
            >>> CachedURL('http://host') is CachedURL('http://host')
            True
        
        =============
        About library
        =============
        
        
        Decisions
        ---------
        
        Rfc define format of valid url and ways to interact with it. But sometimes we
        need to interact invalid urls. And RFC's not much help with it. So this library
        has lots of decisions.
        
        *   Many libraries do not allow scheme or authority with invalid chars. Rfc
            unambiguously define format of this parts. So we can say 'sche_me:path'
            can not be scheme because of underscore and should be parsed as path:
        
            >>> urlsplit('sche_me:path')[:]
            ('', '', 'sche_me:path', '', '')
        
            The problem is rfc also defines that the first segment of the path can not
            contain colon. I believe the right way is to split url as is and then
            validate if necessary.
        
            >>> urlsplit('sche_me:path')[:]
            ('sche_me', '', 'path', '', '')
        
        *   Rfc define two operations against url: parse and join. As long as we can
            construct url from parts and replace parts we should sometimes fix
            this parts. For example url with authority can not be relative.
            And relative url can not starts with // or contain : in first path segment.
            These fixes can be done while url constructing or while recomposition.
            First way may be wrong because we can apply unnecessary in future fix:
        
            >>> # This is example of wrong behavior.
            >>> print URL("//host") + URL(path="//path")
            //host////path  # now path have four slashes
        
            Second way is wrong when we replace some parts:
        
            >>> # This is example of wrong behavior.
            >>> print URL("rel/path").replace(host='host').path
            rel/path  # path is relative even if host there
        
            So I divide all fixes to real fixes:
        
            >>> # path can not be relative when host present
            >>> print URL("rel/path").replace(host='host').path
            /rel/path
        
            And escapes which should be applied on recomposition:
        
            >>> # url starts with path can not contain ':' in first path segment
            >>> print URL(path="rel:path")
            ./rel:path
            >>> print URL(path="rel:path").path
            rel:path
        
        
        Why you might want to use yurl instead of urlparse
        --------------------------------------------------
        
        The short answer is urlparse is broken. If you're interested, here's detailed
        response.
        
        *   urlparse module have two functions: urlparse() and urlsplit(). In addition to
            urlsplit(), urlparse() separates params from path. Params is not part of
            most schemas and in last rfc is not part of url at all. Instead of this
            each path segment can have own params. The problem is that most programmers
            use urlparse() and ignore params when extract path:
        
            >>> import purl
            >>> print purl.URL('/path;with?semicolon')
            /path?semicolon
        
        *   urlsplit() has strange parameters. It takes default addressing scheme.
            But scheme is only can have default value in urlsplit().
        
        *   Another parameter allow_fragments can be used to prevent splitting
            #fragment from path. The problem is that we can't say «I do not want
            fragment in this url». If url contatin '#', it contatin frаgment. If scheme
            can not contatin fragment, '#' still can not be used in another parts.
            Caller has a choise: he can ignore fragment or raise. But url can not be
            parsed with ignoring '#':
        
            >>> urlparse('/path#frag:ment?query').query
            ''
            >>> urlparse('/path#frag:ment?query', allow_fragments=False).query
            'query'
        
        *   Module makes no difference between parsing and validating. For example
            urlsplit() check allowed chars in scheme and raise on invalid IP URL:
        
            >>> urlsplit('not_scheme://google.com').path
            'not_scheme://google.com'
            >>> urlsplit('//ho[st/')
            Traceback (most recent call last):
              File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
              File "/usr/lib/python2.7/urlparse.py", line 211, in urlsplit
                raise ValueError("Invalid IPv6 URL")
            ValueError: Invalid IPv6 URL
        
            But ignores other errors:
        
            >>> urlsplit('//host@with@butterflies').username
            'host@with'
            >>> urlsplit('//butterflies[]:80').port
            80
        
        *   It don't understend my favorite scheme:
        
            >>> urlsplit('lucky-number:33')[:]
            ('', '', 'lucky-number:33', '', '')
        
        *   It loses path with two slashes:
        
            >>> urlsplit('////path')[:]
            ('', '', '//path', '', '')
            >>> urlsplit(urlsplit('////path').geturl())[:]
            ('', 'path', '', '', '')
        
        *   Function urljoin() broken sometimes:
        
            >>> urljoin('http://host/', '../')
            'http://host/../'
            >>> print URL('http://host/') + URL('../')
            http://host
        
        I'm sure the list is not complete.
        
        
        Why you might want to use yurl instead of purl
        ----------------------------------------------
        
        Purl built on top of urlparse() and include almost all problems listed above.
        And some other:
        
        *   Purl parsing is about 2 times slower then urlparse(), while yurl parsing
            is about 2 times faster then urlparse().
        
        *   Purl manipulations is about 20 times slower then yurl:
        
            >>> timeit("url.scheme('https')", "import purl; url = purl.URL('http://google.com/')", number=10000)
            0.4427049160003662
            >>> timeit("url.replace(scheme='https')", "import yurl; url = yurl.URL('http://google.com/')", number=10000)
            0.020306110382080078
        
        *   Purl have ugly jquery-like api, when one method may return different
            objects depending on the arguments.
        
        *   Purl parsing is dangerous:
        
            >>> purl.URL('//@host')
            ValueError: need more than 1 value to unpack
            >>> purl.URL('//host:/')
            ValueError: invalid literal for int() with base 10: ''
            >>> purl.URL('//user:pass:word@host')
            ValueError: too many values to unpack
        
        *   Purl loses path after ';'. While ';' is valid char in url:
        
            >>> print purl.URL('/path;with?semicolon')
            /path?semicolon
        
        *   Purl loses host in relative urls:
        
            >>> print purl.URL('//google.com/path?query')
            google.com/path?query
        
        *   Purl loses username with empty password and password with empty username:
        
            >>> print purl.URL('http://user:@google.com/')
            http://google.com/
        
        
        More about performance
        -----------------------
        
        Yurl comes with bunch of performance tests. Results may vary depending on the
        Python version and the CPU:
        
        ::
        
            $ python2.7 ./test.py -bench
        
            === Test as string ===
              yurl usplit uparse   purl
             12.01  9.783  11.94  27.08 !worse  https://user:info@yandex.ru:8080/path/to+the=ar?gum=ent#s
             8.533  21.89  23.82  18.88   scheme:8080/path/to;the=ar?gum=ent#s
             10.12  3.879  9.007  12.21 !worse  re/ative:path;with?query
             5.268   2.39  4.043  10.26 !worse  lucky-number:3456
             4.806  3.662  5.349  13.73 !worse  //host:80
             4.953  3.342  4.885   13.2 !worse  #frag
        
            === Manipulations speed ===
              noop   yurl
            0.0751  178.9   https://habrahabr.ru:80/a/b/c?d=f#h
        
            === Test join ===
        
              = result is string =
              yurl  ujoin
             111.6  127.2   u'http://ya.ru/user/photos/id12324/photo3' + u'../../../mikhail/photos/id6543/photo99?param'
             85.87  71.06 !worse  u'http://ya.ru/user/photos/id12324' + u'#fragment'
             82.12  100.8   u'http://ya.ru/' + u'https://google.com/?q=yurl'
        
              = result is parsed =
              yurl  ujoin
             102.6  181.3   u'http://ya.ru/user/photos/id12324/photo3' + u'../../../mikhail/photos/id6543/photo99?param'
             73.15  125.7   u'http://ya.ru/user/photos/id12324' + u'#fragment'
             76.26  184.3   u'http://ya.ru/' + u'https://google.com/?q=yurl'
        
            === Test parse ===
        
              = dupass cache =
              yurl usplit uparse   purl
             36.25  73.31  85.91  166.5   https://user:info@yandex.ru:8080/path/to+the=ar?gum=ent#s
             20.34  58.84  77.29  138.9   scheme:8080/path/to;the=ar?gum=ent#s
             18.25  33.21  48.72  109.3   re/ative:path;with?query
              19.3  66.77  76.16  135.5   lucky-number:3456
              24.0  35.57  43.36  119.2   //host:80
              18.0  25.57  37.78  114.4   #frag
        
              = with cache =
              yurl usplit uparse   purl
             9.902  14.43  24.04  95.92   https://user:info@yandex.ru:8080/path/to+the=ar?gum=ent#s
             5.726  7.211  23.14  79.94   scheme:8080/path/to;the=ar?gum=ent#s
             5.497  6.804  22.86  80.93   re/ative:path;with?query
             5.357  6.521  14.72   72.0   lucky-number:3456
             5.076  6.763  14.12  87.39   //host:80
             5.824  7.993  26.78  73.03   #frag
        
        In tests where any of the other libraries beats yurl you can see "!worse"
        marker.
        
        
        Changelog
        ---------
        
        v0.13
        ~~~~~
        
        * fixed installation on not utf-8 systems
        
        v0.12
        ~~~~~
        
        * added URLError exception on top of ValueError
        
        v0.11
        ~~~~~
        
        * decode() method
        * username and authorization properties
        * order of tuple members now same as url parts:
          scheme, userinfo, host, port, path, query, fragment
        * raw url parsing was moved to split_url() function of utils module
        
        v0.10
        ~~~~~
        
        * method replace_from() removed
        * concatenation with string no longer aliasd with join
        * join always remove dots segments (as defined in rfc)
        
        v0.9
        ~~~~
        
        First release.
        
Platform: UNKNOWN
