Is a colon `:` safe for friendly-URL use?

こ雲淡風輕ζ 提交于 2019-11-26 21:38:01
McDowell

I recently wrote a URL encoder, so this is pretty fresh in my mind.

http://site/gwturl#user:45/comments

All the characters in the fragment part (user:45/comments) are perfectly legal for RFC 3986 URIs.

The relevant parts of the ABNF:

fragment      = *( pchar / "/" / "?" )
pchar         = unreserved / pct-encoded / sub-delims / ":" / "@"
unreserved    = ALPHA / DIGIT / "-" / "." / "_" / "~"
pct-encoded   = "%" HEXDIG HEXDIG
sub-delims    = "!" / "$" / "&" / "'" / "(" / ")"
                 / "*" / "+" / "," / ";" / "="

Apart from these restrictions, the fragment part has no defined structure beyond the one your application gives it. The scheme, http, only says that you don't send this part to the server.


EDIT:

D'oh!

Despite my assertions about the URI spec, irreputable provides the correct answer when he points out that the HTML 4 spec restricts element names/identifiers.

Note that identifier rules are changing in HTML 5. URI restrictions will still apply (at time of writing, there are some unresolved issues around HTML 5's use of URIs).

In addition to McDowell's analysis on URI standard, remember also that the fragment must be valid HTML anchor name. According to http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/types.html#type-name

ID and NAME tokens must begin with a letter ([A-Za-z]) and may be followed by any number of letters, digits ([0-9]), hyphens ("-"), underscores ("_"), colons (":"), and periods (".").

So you are in luck. ":" is explicitly allowed. And nobody should "%"-escape it, not only because "%" is illegal char there, but also because fragment much match anchor name char-by-char, therefore no agent should try to temper with them in anyway.

However you have to test it. Web standards are not strictly followed, sometimes the standards are conflicting. For example HTTP/1.1 RFC 2616 does not allow query string in the request URL, while HTML constructs one when submitting a form with GET method. Whichever implemented in the real world wins at the end of the day.

MediaWiki and other wiki engines use colons in their URLs to designate namespaces, with apparently no major problems.

eg http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Welcome

I wouldn't count on it. It'll likely get url encoded as %3A by many user-agents.

From URLEncoder javadoc:

For more information about HTML form encoding, consult the HTML specification.

When encoding a String, the following rules apply:

  • The alphanumeric characters "a" through "z", "A" through "Z" and "0" through "9" remain the same.
  • The special characters ".", "-", "*", and "_" remain the same.
  • The space character " " is converted into a plus sign "+".
  • All other characters are unsafe and are first converted into one or more bytes using some encoding scheme. Then each byte is represented by the 3-character string "%xy", where xy is the two-digit hexadecimal representation of the byte. The recommended encoding scheme to use is UTF-8. However, for compatibility reasons, if an encoding is not specified, then the default encoding of the platform is used.

That is, : is not safe.

I don't see Firefox or IE8 encoding some of the Wikipedia URLs that include the character.

Colons are used as the split between username and password if a protocol requires authentication.

Colon isn't safe. See here

It is not a safe character and is used to distinguish what port you connect to when it is right after your domain name

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