(PHP 4, PHP 5)
parse_url — Parse a URL and return its components
This function parses a URL and returns an associative array containing any of the various components of the URL that are present.
This function is not meant to validate the given URL, it only breaks it up into the above listed parts. Partial URLs are also accepted, parse_url() tries its best to parse them correctly.
url
The URL to parse. Invalid characters are replaced by _.
On seriously malformed URLs, parse_url() may return
FALSE
.
If the component
parameter is omitted, an
associative array is returned. At least one element will be
present within the array. Potential keys within this array are:
If the component
parameter is specified,
parse_url() returns a string (or an
integer, in the case of PHP_URL_PORT
)
instead of an array. If the requested component doesn't exist
within the given URL, NULL
will be returned.
Version | Description |
---|---|
5.4.7 | Fixed host recognition when scheme is omitted and a leading component separator is present. |
5.3.3 |
Removed the E_WARNING that was emitted when URL
parsing failed.
|
5.1.2 | Added the component parameter. |
Example #1 A parse_url() example
<?php
$url = 'http://username:password@hostname/path?arg=value#anchor';
print_r(parse_url($url));
echo parse_url($url, PHP_URL_PATH);
?>
The above example will output:
Array ( [scheme] => http [host] => hostname [user] => username [pass] => password [path] => /path [query] => arg=value [fragment] => anchor ) /path
Example #2 A parse_url() example with missing scheme
<?php
$url = '//www.example.com/path?googleguy=googley';
// Prior to 5.4.7 this would show the path as "//www.example.com/path"
var_dump(parse_url($url));
?>
The above example will output:
array(3) { ["host"]=> string(15) "www.example.com" ["path"]=> string(5) "/path" ["query"]=> string(17) "googleguy=googley" }
Note:
This function doesn't work with relative URLs.
Note:
This function is intended specifically for the purpose of parsing URLs and not URIs. However, to comply with PHP's backwards compatibility requirements it makes an exception for the file:// scheme where triple slashes (file:///...) are allowed. For any other scheme this is invalid.