# frozen_string_literal: false # = uri/ws.rb # # Author:: Matt Muller # License:: You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same term as Ruby. # # See URI for general documentation # require_relative 'generic' module URI # # The syntax of WS URIs is defined in RFC6455 section 3. # # Note that the Ruby URI library allows WS URLs containing usernames and # passwords. This is not legal as per the RFC, but used to be # supported in Internet Explorer 5 and 6, before the MS04-004 security # update. See . # class WS < Generic # A Default port of 80 for URI::WS. DEFAULT_PORT = 80 # An Array of the available components for URI::WS. COMPONENT = %i[ scheme userinfo host port path query ].freeze # # == Description # # Creates a new URI::WS object from components, with syntax checking. # # The components accepted are userinfo, host, port, path, and query. # # The components should be provided either as an Array, or as a Hash # with keys formed by preceding the component names with a colon. # # If an Array is used, the components must be passed in the # order [userinfo, host, port, path, query]. # # Example: # # uri = URI::WS.build(host: 'www.example.com', path: '/foo/bar') # # uri = URI::WS.build([nil, "www.example.com", nil, "/path", "query"]) # # Currently, if passed userinfo components this method generates # invalid WS URIs as per RFC 1738. # def self.build(args) tmp = Util.make_components_hash(self, args) super(tmp) end # # == Description # # Returns the full path for a WS URI, as required by Net::HTTP::Get. # # If the URI contains a query, the full path is URI#path + '?' + URI#query. # Otherwise, the path is simply URI#path. # # Example: # # uri = URI::WS.build(path: '/foo/bar', query: 'test=true') # uri.request_uri # => "/foo/bar?test=true" # def request_uri return unless @path url = @query ? "#@path?#@query" : @path.dup url.start_with?(?/.freeze) ? url : ?/ + url end end @@schemes['WS'] = WS end