"use strict"; Object.defineProperty(exports, "__esModule", { value: true }); /* istanbul ignore next */ const Url = (typeof URL !== 'undefined' ? URL : require('url').URL); // Matches "..", which must be preceeded by "/" or the start of the string, and // must be followed by a "/". We do not eat the following "/", so that the next // iteration can match on it. const parentRegex = /(^|\/)\.\.(?=\/|$)/g; function isAbsoluteUrl(url) { try { return !!new Url(url); } catch (e) { return false; } } /** * Creates a directory name that is guaranteed to not be in `str`. */ function uniqInStr(str) { let uniq = String(Math.random()).slice(2); while (str.indexOf(uniq) > -1) { /* istanbul ignore next */ uniq += uniq; } return uniq; } /** * Removes the filename from the path (everything trailing the last "/"). This * is only safe to call on a path, never call with an absolute or protocol * relative URL. */ function stripPathFilename(path) { path = normalizePath(path); const index = path.lastIndexOf('/'); return path.slice(0, index + 1); } /** * Normalizes a protocol-relative URL, but keeps it protocol relative by * stripping out the protocl before returning it. */ function normalizeProtocolRelative(input, absoluteBase) { const { href, protocol } = new Url(input, absoluteBase); return href.slice(protocol.length); } /** * Normalizes a simple path (one that has no ".."s, or is absolute so ".."s can * be normalized absolutely). */ function normalizeSimplePath(input) { const { href } = new Url(input, 'https://foo.com/'); return href.slice('https://foo.com/'.length); } /** * Normalizes a path, ensuring that excess ".."s are preserved for relative * paths in the output. * * If the input is absolute, this will return an absolutey normalized path, but * it will not have a leading "/". * * If the input has a leading "..", the output will have a leading "..". * * If the input has a leading ".", the output will not have a leading "." * unless there are too many ".."s, in which case there will be a leading "..". */ function normalizePath(input) { // If there are no ".."s, we can treat this as if it were an absolute path. // The return won't be an absolute path, so it's easy. if (!parentRegex.test(input)) return normalizeSimplePath(input); // We already found one "..". Let's see how many there are. let total = 1; while (parentRegex.test(input)) total++; // If there are ".."s, we need to prefix the the path with the same number of // unique directories. This is to ensure that we "remember" how many parent // directories we are accessing. Eg, "../../.." must keep 3, and "foo/../.." // must keep 1. const uniqDirectory = `z${uniqInStr(input)}/`; // uniqDirectory is just a "z", followed by numbers, followed by a "/". So // generating a runtime regex from it is safe. We'll use this search regex to // strip out our uniq directory names and insert any needed ".."s. const search = new RegExp(`^(?:${uniqDirectory})*`); // Now we can resolve the total path. If there are excess ".."s, they will // eliminate one or more of the unique directories we prefix with. const relative = normalizeSimplePath(uniqDirectory.repeat(total) + input); // We can now count the number of unique directories that were eliminated. If // there were 3, and 1 was eliminated, we know we only need to add 1 "..". If // 2 were eliminated, we need to insert 2 ".."s. If all 3 were eliminated, // then we need 3, etc. This replace is guranteed to match (it may match 0 or // more times), and we can count the total match to see how many were eliminated. return relative.replace(search, (all) => { const leftover = all.length / uniqDirectory.length; return '../'.repeat(total - leftover); }); } /** * Attempts to resolve `input` URL relative to `base`. */ function resolve(input, base) { if (!base) base = ''; // Absolute URLs are very easy to resolve right. if (isAbsoluteUrl(input)) return new Url(input).href; if (base) { // Absolute URLs are easy... if (isAbsoluteUrl(base)) return new Url(input, base).href; // If base is protocol relative, we'll resolve with it but keep the result // protocol relative. if (base.startsWith('//')) return normalizeProtocolRelative(input, `https:${base}`); } // Normalize input, but keep it protocol relative. We know base doesn't supply // a protocol, because that would have been handled above. if (input.startsWith('//')) return normalizeProtocolRelative(input, 'https://foo.com/'); // We now know that base (if there is one) and input are paths. We've handled // both absolute and protocol-relative variations above. // Absolute paths don't need any special handling, because they cannot have // extra "." or ".."s. That'll all be stripped away. Input takes priority here, // because if input is an absolute path, base path won't affect it in any way. if (input.startsWith('/')) return '/' + normalizeSimplePath(input); // Since input and base are paths, we need to join them to do any further // processing. Paths are joined at the directory level, so we need to remove // the base's filename before joining. We also know that input does not have a // leading slash, and that the stripped base will have a trailing slash if // there are any directories (or it'll be empty). const joined = stripPathFilename(base) + input; // If base is an absolute path, then input will be relative to it. if (base.startsWith('/')) return '/' + normalizeSimplePath(joined); // We now know both base (if there is one) and input are relative paths. const relative = normalizePath(joined); // If base started with a leading ".", or there is no base and input started // with a ".", then we need to ensure that the relative path starts with a // ".". We don't know if relative starts with a "..", though, so check before // prepending. if ((base || input).startsWith('.') && !relative.startsWith('.')) { return './' + relative; } return relative; } exports.default = resolve; //# sourceMappingURL=resolve-uri.js.map