2.2.0 • Published 6 years ago

tld2js v2.2.0

Weekly downloads
3
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
6 years ago

tld.js Build Status

tld.js is a Node.js module written in JavaScript to work against complex domain names, subdomains and well-known TLDs.

It answers with accuracy to questions like what is mail.google.com domain?, what is a.b.ide.kyoto.jp subdomain? and is https://big.data TLD a well-known one?.

tld.js runs fast, is fully tested and is safe to use in the browser (with browserify, webpack and others). Because it relies on Mozilla's public suffix list, now is a good time to say thank you Mozilla!

Install

# Regular install
npm install --save tldjs

# You can update the list of well-known TLD during the install
npm install --save tldjs --tldjs-update-rules

The latter is useful if you significantly rely on an up-to-date list of TLDs. You can list the recent changes (changes Atom Feed) to get a better idea of what is going on in the Public Suffix world.

Using It

const {parse, tldExists} = require('tldjs');

// Checking only if TLD exists in URL or hostname
// First TLD exists; the second does not.
console.log(tldExists('https://www.bbc'));
console.log(tldExists('tld.unknown'));

// Retrieving hostname related informations of a given URL
parse('http://www.writethedocs.org/conf/eu/2017/');

👋 Try it your browser to see how it works. ⬇️ Read the documentation below to find out the available functions.

tldjs.parse()

This methods returns handy properties about a URL or a hostname.

const tldjs = require('tldjs');

tldjs.parse('https://spark-public.s3.amazonaws.com/dataanalysis/loansData.csv');
// {
//   "hostname": "spark-public.s3.amazonaws.com",
//   "isValid": true,
//   "tldExists": true,
//   "publicSuffix": "s3.amazonaws.com",
//   "domain": "spark-public.s3.amazonaws.com",
//   "subdomain": ""
// }

tldjs.parse('gopher://domain.unknown/');
// {
//   "hostname": "domain.unknown",
//   "isValid": true,
//   "tldExists": false,
//   "publicSuffix": "unknown",
//   "domain": "domain.unknown",
//   "subdomain": ""
// }
Property NameType
hostnameString
isValidBooleanIs the hostname valid according to the RFC?
tldExistsBooleanIs the TLD well-known or not?
publicSuffixString
domainString
subdomainString

Single purpose methods

These methods are shorthands if you want to retrieve only a single value.

tldExists()

Checks if the TLD is well-known for a given hostname — parseable with require('url').parse.

const { tldExists } = tldjs;

tldExists('google.com');      // returns `true`
tldExists('google.local');    // returns `false` (not an explicit registered TLD)
tldExists('com');             // returns `true`
tldExists('uk');              // returns `true`
tldExists('co.uk');           // returns `true` (because `uk` is a valid TLD)
tldExists('amazon.fancy.uk'); // returns `true` (still because `uk` is a valid TLD)
tldExists('amazon.co.uk');    // returns `true` (still because `uk` is a valid TLD)
tldExists('https://user:password@example.co.uk:8080/some/path?and&query#hash'); // returns `true`

getDomain()

Returns the fully qualified domain from a given string — parseable with require('url').parse.

const { getDomain } = tldjs;

getDomain('google.com');        // returns `google.com`
getDomain('fr.google.com');     // returns `google.com`
getDomain('fr.google.google');  // returns `google.google`
getDomain('foo.google.co.uk');  // returns `google.co.uk`
getDomain('t.co');              // returns `t.co`
getDomain('fr.t.co');           // returns `t.co`
getDomain('https://user:password@example.co.uk:8080/some/path?and&query#hash'); // returns `example.co.uk`

getSubdomain()

Returns the complete subdomain for a given string — parseable with require('url').parse.

const { getSubdomain } = tldjs;

getSubdomain('google.com');             // returns ``
getSubdomain('fr.google.com');          // returns `fr`
getSubdomain('google.co.uk');           // returns ``
getSubdomain('foo.google.co.uk');       // returns `foo`
getSubdomain('moar.foo.google.co.uk');  // returns `moar.foo`
getSubdomain('t.co');                   // returns ``
getSubdomain('fr.t.co');                // returns `fr`
getSubdomain('https://user:password@secure.example.co.uk:443/some/path?and&query#hash'); // returns `secure`

getPublicSuffix()

Returns the public suffix for a given string — parseable with require('url').parse.

const { getPublicSuffix } = tldjs;

getPublicSuffix('google.com');       // returns `com`
getPublicSuffix('fr.google.com');    // returns `com`
getPublicSuffix('google.co.uk');     // returns `co.uk`
getPublicSuffix('s3.amazonaws.com'); // returns `s3.amazonaws.com`
getPublicSuffix('tld.is.unknown');   // returns `unknown`

isValid()

Checks the validity of a given string — parseable with require('url').parse. It does not check if the TLD is well-known.

const { isValid } = tldjs;

isValid('google.com');      // returns `true`
isValid('.google.com');     // returns `false`
isValid('my.fake.domain');  // returns `true`
isValid('localhost');       // returns `false`
isValid('https://user:password@example.co.uk:8080/some/path?and&query#hash'); // returns `true`

Troubleshooting

Retrieving subdomain of localhost and custom hostnames

tld.js methods getDomain and getSubdomain are designed to work only with known and valid TLDs. This way, you can trust what a domain is.

localhost is a valid hostname but not a TLD. Although you can instanciate your own flavour of tld.js with additional valid hosts:

const tldjs = require('tldjs');

tldjs.getDomain('localhost');           // returns null
tldjs.getSubdomain('vhost.localhost');  // returns null

const myTldjs = tldjs.fromUserSettings({
  validHosts: ['localhost']
});

myTldjs.getDomain('localhost');           // returns 'localhost'
myTldjs.getSubdomain('vhost.localhost');  // returns 'vhost'

Updating the TLDs List

Many libraries offer a list of TLDs. But, are they up-to-date? And how to update them?

tld.js bundles a list of known TLDs but this list can become outdated. This is especially true if the package have not been updated on npm for a while.

Hopefully for you, even if I'm flying over the world, if I've lost my Internet connection or even if you do manage your own list, you can update it by yourself, painlessly.

How? By passing the --tldjs-update-rules to your npm install command:

# anytime you reinstall your project
npm install --tldjs-update-rules

# or if you add the dependency to your project
npm install --save tldjs --tldjs-update-rules

Open an issue to request an update of the bundled TLDs.

Contributing

Provide a pull request (with tested code) to include your work in this main project. Issues may be awaiting for help so feel free to give a hand, with code or ideas.

Performances

While interpreting the results, keep in mind that each "op" reported by the benchmark is processing 24 domains
tldjs#isValid x 230,353 ops/sec ±10.99% (44 runs sampled)
tldjs#extractHostname x 42,333 ops/sec ±2.82% (85 runs sampled)
tldjs#tldExists x 15,083 ops/sec ±8.76% (54 runs sampled)
tldjs#getPublicSuffix x 14,334 ops/sec ±8.00% (80 runs sampled)
tldjs#getDomain x 15,092 ops/sec ±1.92% (84 runs sampled)
tldjs#getSubdomain x 13,202 ops/sec ±3.66% (72 runs sampled)
tldjs#parse x 8,561 ops/sec ±11.78% (55 runs sampled)

You can measure the performance of tld.js on your hardware by running the following command:

npx tldjs -c './bin/benchmark.js'

License

MIT License.