NAME
URI::Match - Match URLs By Parts
SYNOPSIS
use URI;
use URI::Match;
my $uri = URI->new("http://www.example.com");
# Match just a single part of the URL
if ( $uri->match_parts( host => qr/^(?!www).+\.cpan\.org$/ )) {
# matched
}
# Match using a subroutine
my $code = sub {
my ($host, $url) = @_;
return $host eq 'www.perl.org';
};
if ( $uri->match_parts( host => $code ) ) {
# matched
}
# Match using an object
my $object = My::Matcher->new(); # must implement "match"
if ( $uri->match_parts( host => $object ) ) {
# matched
}
# Match several parts
my $code = sub {
my ($path, $url) = @_;
return $path ne '/';
};
if ( $uri->match_parts(
host => qr/^(?!www).+\.cpan\.org$/,
path => $code
)) {
# matched
}
# Match the whole URL (just for completeness)
if ($uri->match_parts( qr{^http://search\.cpan\.org} )) {
# matched
}
DESCRIPTION
This is a simple utility that adds ability to match URL parts against regular expressions, subroutines, or objects that implement a match() method.
Since this module uses loops and method calls, writing up a clever regular expression and using it directly against the whole URL is probably faster. This module aims to solve the problem where readability matters, or when you need to assemble the match conditions at run time.
URI::Match adds the following methods to the URI namespace.
METHODS
match_parts(%cond)
Matches the URI object against the given conditions. The conditions can be given as a single scalar or a hash. If given a single scalar, it will match against the whole URI. Otherwise, the key value will be taken as the part to match the condition against.
For example,
$uri->match_parts( qr{^ftp://ftp.cpan.org$} )
Will only match if the entire URL matches the regular expression above. But If you want to match against several different schemes (say, http and ftp) and aother set of hosts, you could say:
$uri->match_parts(
scheme => qr{^(?:ftp|http)$},
host => qr{^.+\.example\.com$}
)
Conditions can be either a scalar, a regular expression, a subroutine, or an object which implements a match() method. Simple scalars are treated as regular expressions.
AUTHOR
Copyright (c) 2007 Daisuke Maki <daisuke@endeworks.jp>
LICENSE
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
See http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html