# coding: utf-8 # frozen_string_literal: true # This file includes code from the Nokogumbo project, whose license follows. # # Copyright 2013-2021 Sam Ruby, Stephen Checkoway # # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); # you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. # You may obtain a copy of the License at # # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 # # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software # distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, # WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. # See the License for the specific language governing permissions and # limitations under the License. # require_relative "html5/document" require_relative "html5/document_fragment" require_relative "html5/node" require_relative "html5/builder" module Nokogiri # Convenience method for Nokogiri::HTML5::Document.parse def self.HTML5(...) Nokogiri::HTML5::Document.parse(...) end # == Usage # # Parse an HTML5 document: # # doc = Nokogiri.HTML5(input) # # Parse an HTML5 fragment: # # fragment = Nokogiri::HTML5.fragment(input) # # ⚠ HTML5 functionality is not available when running JRuby. # # == Parsing options # # The document and fragment parsing methods support options that are different from # Nokogiri::HTML4::Document or Nokogiri::XML::Document. # # - Nokogiri.HTML5(input, url:, encoding:, **parse_options) # - Nokogiri::HTML5.parse(input, url:, encoding:, **parse_options) # - Nokogiri::HTML5::Document.parse(input, url:, encoding:, **parse_options) # - Nokogiri::HTML5.fragment(input, encoding:, **parse_options) # - Nokogiri::HTML5::DocumentFragment.parse(input, encoding:, **parse_options) # # The four currently supported parse options are # # - +max_errors:+ (Integer, default 0) Maximum number of parse errors to report in HTML5::Document#errors. # - +max_tree_depth:+ (Integer, default +Nokogiri::Gumbo::DEFAULT_MAX_TREE_DEPTH+) Maximum tree depth to parse. # - +max_attributes:+ (Integer, default +Nokogiri::Gumbo::DEFAULT_MAX_ATTRIBUTES+) Maximum number of attributes to parse per element. # - +parse_noscript_content_as_text:+ (Boolean, default false) When enabled, parse +noscript+ tag content as text, mimicking the behavior of web browsers. # # These options are explained in the following sections. # # === Error reporting: +max_errors:+ # # Nokogiri contains an experimental HTML5 parse error reporting facility. By default, no parse # errors are reported but this can be configured by passing the +:max_errors+ option to # HTML5.parse or HTML5.fragment. # # For example, this script: # # doc = Nokogiri::HTML5.parse('Hi there!', max_errors: 10) # doc.errors.each do |err| # puts(err) # end # # Emits: # # 1:1: ERROR: Expected a doctype token # Hi there! # ^ # 1:1: ERROR: Start tag of nonvoid HTML element ends with '/>', use '>'. # Hi there! # ^ # 1:17: ERROR: End tag ends with '/>', use '>'. # Hi there! # ^ # 1:17: ERROR: End tag contains attributes. # Hi there! # ^ # # Using max_errors: -1 results in an unlimited number of errors being returned. # # The errors returned by HTML5::Document#errors are instances of Nokogiri::XML::SyntaxError. # # The {HTML standard}[https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/parsing.html#parse-errors] defines a # number of standard parse error codes. These error codes only cover the "tokenization" stage of # parsing HTML. The parse errors in the "tree construction" stage do not have standardized error # codes (yet). # # As a convenience to Nokogiri users, the defined error codes are available # via Nokogiri::XML::SyntaxError#str1 method. # # doc = Nokogiri::HTML5.parse('Hi there!', max_errors: 10) # doc.errors.each do |err| # puts("#{err.line}:#{err.column}: #{err.str1}") # end # doc = Nokogiri::HTML5.parse('Hi there!', # # => 1:1: generic-parser # # 1:1: non-void-html-element-start-tag-with-trailing-solidus # # 1:17: end-tag-with-trailing-solidus # # 1:17: end-tag-with-attributes # # Note that the first error is +generic-parser+ because it's an error from the tree construction # stage and doesn't have a standardized error code. # # For the purposes of semantic versioning, the error messages, error locations, and error codes # are not part of Nokogiri's public API. That is, these are subject to change without Nokogiri's # major version number changing. These may be stabilized in the future. # # === Maximum tree depth: +max_tree_depth:+ # # The maximum depth of the DOM tree parsed by the various parsing methods is configurable by the # +:max_tree_depth+ option. If the depth of the tree would exceed this limit, then an # +ArgumentError+ is thrown. # # This limit (which defaults to +Nokogiri::Gumbo::DEFAULT_MAX_TREE_DEPTH+) can be removed by # giving the option max_tree_depth: -1. # # html = '' + '
' * 1000 # doc = Nokogiri.HTML5(html) # # raises ArgumentError: Document tree depth limit exceeded # doc = Nokogiri.HTML5(html, max_tree_depth: -1) # # === Attribute limit per element: +max_attributes:+ # # The maximum number of attributes per DOM element is configurable by the +:max_attributes+ # option. If a given element would exceed this limit, then an +ArgumentError+ is thrown. # # This limit (which defaults to +Nokogiri::Gumbo::DEFAULT_MAX_ATTRIBUTES+) can be removed by # giving the option max_attributes: -1. # # html = '
' # # "
" # doc = Nokogiri.HTML5(html) # # raises ArgumentError: Attributes per element limit exceeded # # doc = Nokogiri.HTML5(html, max_attributes: -1) # # parses successfully # # === Parse +noscript+ elements' content as text: +parse_noscript_content_as_text:+ # # By default, the content of +noscript+ elements is parsed as HTML elements. Browsers that # support scripting parse the content of +noscript+ elements as raw text. # # The +:parse_noscript_content_as_text+ option causes Nokogiri to parse the content of +noscript+ # elements as a single text node. # # html = "" # doc = Nokogiri::HTML5.parse(html, parse_noscript_content_as_text: true) # pp doc.at_xpath("/html/head/noscript") # # => #(Element:0x878c { # # name = "noscript", # # children = [ #(Text "")] # # }) # # In contrast, parse_noscript_content_as_text: false (the default) causes the +noscript+ # element in the previous example to have two children, a +meta+ element and a +link+ element. # # doc = Nokogiri::HTML5.parse(html) # puts doc.at_xpath("/html/head/noscript") # # => #(Element:0x96b4 { # # name = "noscript", # # children = [ # # #(Element:0x97e0 { name = "meta", attribute_nodes = [ #(Attr:0x990c { name = "charset", value = "UTF-8" })] }), # # #(Element:0x9b00 { # # name = "link", # # attribute_nodes = [ # # #(Attr:0x9c2c { name = "rel", value = "stylesheet" }), # # #(Attr:0x9dd0 { name = "href", value = "!" })] # # })] # # }) # # == HTML Serialization # # After parsing HTML, it may be serialized using any of the Nokogiri::XML::Node serialization # methods. In particular, XML::Node#serialize, XML::Node#to_html, and XML::Node#to_s will # serialize a given node and its children. (This is the equivalent of JavaScript's # +Element.outerHTML+.) Similarly, XML::Node#inner_html will serialize the children of a given # node. (This is the equivalent of JavaScript's +Element.innerHTML+.) # # doc = Nokogiri::HTML5("Hello world!") # puts doc.serialize # # => Hello world! # # Due to quirks in how HTML is parsed and serialized, it's possible for a DOM tree to be # serialized and then re-parsed, resulting in a different DOM. Mostly, this happens with DOMs # produced from invalid HTML. Unfortunately, even valid HTML may not survive serialization and # re-parsing. # # In particular, a newline at the start of +pre+, +listing+, and +textarea+ # elements is ignored by the parser. # # doc = Nokogiri::HTML5(<<-EOF) # #
  #   Content
# EOF # puts doc.at('/html/body/pre').serialize # # =>
Content
# # In this case, the original HTML is semantically equivalent to the serialized version. If the # +pre+, +listing+, or +textarea+ content starts with two newlines, the first newline will be # stripped on the first parse and the second newline will be stripped on the second, leading to # semantically different DOMs. Passing the parameter preserve_newline: true will cause # two or more newlines to be preserved. (A single leading newline will still be removed.) # # doc = Nokogiri::HTML5(<<-EOF) # # # # Content # EOF # puts doc.at('/html/body/listing').serialize(preserve_newline: true) # # => # # # # Content # # == Encodings # # Nokogiri always parses HTML5 using {UTF-8}[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTF-8]; however, the # encoding of the input can be explicitly selected via the optional +encoding+ parameter. This is # most useful when the input comes not from a string but from an IO object. # # When serializing a document or node, the encoding of the output string can be specified via the # +:encoding+ options. Characters that cannot be encoded in the selected encoding will be encoded # as {HTML numeric # entities}[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_XML_and_HTML_character_entity_references]. # # frag = Nokogiri::HTML5.fragment('아는 길도 물어가라') # html = frag.serialize(encoding: 'US-ASCII') # puts html # # => 아는 길도 물어가라 # # frag = Nokogiri::HTML5.fragment(html) # puts frag.serialize # # => 아는 길도 물어가라 # # (There's a {bug}[https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/15033] in all current versions of Ruby that # can cause the entity encoding to fail. Of the mandated supported encodings for HTML, the only # encoding I'm aware of that has this bug is 'ISO-2022-JP'. We recommend avoiding this # encoding.) # # == Notes # # * The Nokogiri::HTML5.fragment function takes a String or IO and parses it as a HTML5 document # in a +body+ context. As a result, the +html+, +head+, and +body+ elements are removed from # this document, and any children of these elements that remain are returned as a # Nokogiri::HTML5::DocumentFragment; but you can pass in a different context (e.g., "html" to # get +head+ and +body+ tags in the result). # # * The Nokogiri::HTML5.parse function takes a String or IO and passes it to the # gumbo_parse_with_options method, using the default options. The resulting Gumbo # parse tree is then walked. # # * Instead of uppercase element names, lowercase element names are produced. # # * Instead of returning +unknown+ as the element name for unknown tags, the original tag name is # returned verbatim. # # Since v1.12.0 module HTML5 class << self # Convenience method for Nokogiri::HTML5::Document.parse def parse(...) Document.parse(...) end # Convenience method for Nokogiri::HTML5::DocumentFragment.parse def fragment(...) DocumentFragment.parse(...) end # :nodoc: def read_and_encode(string, encoding) # Read the string with the given encoding. if string.respond_to?(:read) string = if encoding.nil? string.read else string.read(encoding: encoding) end else # Otherwise the string has the given encoding. string = string.to_s if encoding string = string.dup string.force_encoding(encoding) end end # convert to UTF-8 if string.encoding != Encoding::UTF_8 string = reencode(string) end string end private # Charset sniffing is a complex and controversial topic that understandably isn't done _by # default_ by the Ruby Net::HTTP library. This being said, it is a very real problem for # consumers of HTML as the default for HTML is iso-8859-1, most "good" producers use utf-8, and # the Gumbo parser *only* supports utf-8. # # Accordingly, Nokogiri::HTML4::Document.parse provides limited encoding detection. Following # this lead, Nokogiri::HTML5 attempts to do likewise, while attempting to more closely follow # the HTML5 standard. # # http://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/2567 # http://www.w3.org/TR/html5/syntax.html#determining-the-character-encoding # def reencode(body, content_type = nil) if body.encoding == Encoding::ASCII_8BIT encoding = nil # look for a Byte Order Mark (BOM) initial_bytes = body[0..2].bytes if initial_bytes[0..2] == [0xEF, 0xBB, 0xBF] encoding = Encoding::UTF_8 elsif initial_bytes[0..1] == [0xFE, 0xFF] encoding = Encoding::UTF_16BE elsif initial_bytes[0..1] == [0xFF, 0xFE] encoding = Encoding::UTF_16LE end # look for a charset in a content-encoding header if content_type encoding ||= content_type[/charset=["']?(.*?)($|["';\s])/i, 1] end # look for a charset in a meta tag in the first 1024 bytes unless encoding data = body[0..1023].gsub(/|\Z)/m, "") data.scan(//im).each do |meta| encoding ||= meta[/charset=["']?([^>]*?)($|["'\s>])/im, 1] end end # if all else fails, default to the official default encoding for HTML encoding ||= Encoding::ISO_8859_1 # change the encoding to match the detected or inferred encoding body = body.dup begin body.force_encoding(encoding) rescue ArgumentError body.force_encoding(Encoding::ISO_8859_1) end end body.encode(Encoding::UTF_8) end end end end require_relative "gumbo"