I'm building an application to retrieve an image from internet. Even though it works fine, it is slow (on wrong given URL) when using try-catch statements in the application.
(1) Is this the best way to verify URL and handle wrong input - or should I use Regex (or some other method) instead?
(2) Why does the application try to find images locally if I don't specify http:// in the textBox?
private void btnGetImage_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
String url = tbxImageURL.Text;
byte[] imageData = new byte[1];
using (WebClient client = new WebClient())
{
try
{
imageData = client.DownloadData(url);
using (MemoryStream ms = new MemoryStream(imageData))
{
try
{
Image image = Image.FromStream(ms);
pbxUrlImage.Image = image;
}
catch (ArgumentException)
{
MessageBox.Show("Specified image URL had no match",
开发者_开发百科 "Image Not Found", MessageBoxButtons.OK,
MessageBoxIcon.Error);
}
}
}
catch (ArgumentException)
{
MessageBox.Show("Image URL can not be an empty string",
"Empty Field", MessageBoxButtons.OK,
MessageBoxIcon.Information);
}
catch (WebException)
{
MessageBox.Show("Image URL is invalid.\nStart with http:// " +
"and end with\na proper image extension", "Not a valid URL",
MessageBoxButtons.OK, MessageBoxIcon.Information);
}
} // end of outer using statement
} // end of btnGetImage_Click
EDIT:
I tried the suggested solution by Panagiotis Kanavos (thank you for your effort!), but it only gets caught in the if-else statement if the user enters http://
and nothing more. Changing to UriKind.Absolute catches empty strings as well! Getting closer :)
The code as of now:
private void btnGetImage_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
String url = tbxImageURL.Text;
byte[] imageData = new byte[1];
Uri myUri;
// changed to UriKind.Absolute to catch empty string
if (Uri.TryCreate(url, UriKind.Absolute, out myUri))
{
using (WebClient client = new WebClient())
{
try
{
imageData = client.DownloadData(myUri);
using (MemoryStream ms = new MemoryStream(imageData))
{
imageData = client.DownloadData(myUri);
Image image = Image.FromStream(ms);
pbxUrlImage.Image = image;
}
}
catch (ArgumentException)
{
MessageBox.Show("Specified image URL had no match",
"Image Not Found", MessageBoxButtons.OK,
MessageBoxIcon.Error);
}
catch (WebException)
{
MessageBox.Show("Image URL is invalid.\nStart with http:// " +
"and end with\na proper image extension",
"Not a valid URL",
MessageBoxButtons.OK, MessageBoxIcon.Information);
}
}
}
else
{
MessageBox.Show("The Image Uri is invalid.\nStart with http:// " +
"and end with\na proper image extension", "Uri was not created",
MessageBoxButtons.OK, MessageBoxIcon.Information);
}
I must be doing something wrong here. :(
Use Uri.TryCreate to create a new Uri object only if your url string is a valid URL. If the string is not a valid URL, TryCreate returns false.
string myString = "http://someUrl";
Uri myUri;
if (Uri.TryCreate(myString, UriKind.RelativeOrAbsolute, out myUri))
{
//use the uri here
}
UPDATE
TryCreate or the Uri constructor will happily accept strings that may appear invalid, eg "Host: www.stackoverflow.com","Host:%20www.stackoverflow.com" or "chrome:about". In fact, these are perfectly valid URIs that specify a custom scheme instead of "http".
The documentation of the Uri.Scheme property provides more examples like "gopher:" (anyone remember this?), "news", "mailto", "uuid".
An application can register itself as a custom protocol handler as described in MSDN or other SO questions, eg How do I register a custom URL protocol in Windows?
TryCreate doesn't provide a way to restrict itself to specific schemes. The code needs to check the Uri.Scheme property to ensure it contains an acceptable value
UPDATE 2
Passing a weird string like "></script><script>alert(9)</script>
will return true
and construct a relative Uri object. Calling Uri.IsWellFormedOriginalString will return false though. So you probably need to call IsWellFormedOriginalString
if you want to ensure that relative Uris are well formed.
On the other hand, calling TryCreate
with UriKind.Absolute
will return false in this case.
Interestingly, Uri.IsWellFormedUriString calls TryCreate internally and then returns the value of IsWellFormedOriginalString
if a relative Uri was created.
A shortcut would be to use Uri.IsWellFormedUriString:
if (Uri.IsWellFormedUriString(myURL, UriKind.RelativeOrAbsolute))
...
Some examples when using Uri to test a valid URL fails
Uri myUri = null;
if (Uri.TryCreate("Host: www.stackoverflow.com", UriKind.Absolute, out myUri))
{
}
myUri = null;
if (Uri.TryCreate("Accept: application/json, text/javascript, */*; q=0.01", UriKind.Absolute, out myUri))
{
}
myUri = null;
if (Uri.TryCreate("User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; rv:17.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/17.0", UriKind.Absolute, out myUri))
{
}
myUri = null;
if (Uri.TryCreate("DNT: 1", UriKind.Absolute, out myUri))
{
}
I Was surprised to have all this nonsense appear in my listview after validating with the above. But it all passes the validation test.
Now I add the following after the above validation
url = url.ToLower();
if (url.StartsWith("http://") || url.StartsWith("https://")) return true;
Hi you validate https http,ftp,sftp,ftps,any thing starting with www.
string regular = @"^(ht|f|sf)tp(s?)\:\/\/[0-9a-zA-Z]([-.\w]*[0-9a-zA-Z])*(:(0-9)*)*(\/?)([a-zA-Z0-9\-\.\?\,\'\/\\\+&%\$#_]*)?$";
string regular123 = @"^(www.)[0-9a-zA-Z]([-.\w]*[0-9a-zA-Z])*(:(0-9)*)*(\/?)([a-zA-Z0-9\-\.\?\,\'\/\\\+&%\$#_]*)?$";
string myString = textBox1.Text.Trim();
if (Regex.IsMatch(myString, regular))
{
MessageBox.Show("It is valide url " + myString);
}
else if (Regex.IsMatch(myString, regular123))
{
MessageBox.Show("Valide url with www. " + myString);
}
else
{
MessageBox.Show("InValide URL " + myString);
}
Or this source code good image valid optimization:
public static string ValidateImage(string absoluteUrl,string defaultUrl)
{
Uri myUri=null;
if (Uri.TryCreate(absoluteUrl, UriKind.Absolute, out myUri))
{
using (WebClient client = new WebClient())
{
try
{
using (Stream stream = client.OpenRead(myUri))
{
Image image = Image.FromStream(stream);
return (image != null) ? absoluteUrl : defaultUrl;
}
}
catch (ArgumentException)
{
return defaultUrl;
}
catch (WebException)
{
return defaultUrl;
}
}
}
else
{
return defaultUrl;
}
}
Sou and demo asp.net mvc source image created:
<img src="@ValidateImage("http://example.com/demo.jpg","nophoto.png")"/>
Use it.....
string myString = http//:google.com;
Uri myUri;
Uri.TryCreate(myString, UriKind.RelativeOrAbsolute, out myUri);
if (myUri.IsAbsoluteUri == false)
{
MessageBox.Show("Please Input Valid Feed Url");
}
My solution:
string regular = @"^(ht|f|sf)tp(s?)\:\/\/[0-9a-zA-Z]([-.\w]*[0-9a-zA-Z])*(:(0-9)*)*(\/?)([a-zA-Z0-9\-\.\?\,\'\/\\\+&%\$#_]*)?$";
string myString = textBox1.Text.Trim();
if (Regex.IsMatch(myString, regular))
{
MessageBox.Show("it is valide url " + myString);
}
else
{
MessageBox.Show("InValide url " + myString);
}
you can use the function Uri.TryCreate
As Panagiotis Kanavos suggested if you like to test and create a url or you can use Uri.IsWellFormedUriString
function as suggested by Todd Menier if you just wanted to test the validity of Url. this can by handy if you are just validating user input for now and need to create url some time later in life time of your application.
**But my post is for the People, like myself :( , still hitting their heads against .net 1.1 **
both above methods were introduced in .net 2.0 so you guys still have to use try catch method, which, in my opinion, is still far better than using regular expression.
private bool IsValidHTTPURL(string url)
{
bool result = false;
try
{
Uri uri = new Uri(url);
result = (uri.Scheme == "http" || uri.Scheme == "https");
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
log.Error("Exception while validating url", ex);
}
return result;
}
I wanted to check if the url also contains a domain extension, it needs to be a valid website url.
This is what i came up with:
public static bool IsValidUrl(string url)
{
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(url)) { return false;}
if (!url.StartsWith("http://"))
{
url = "http://" + url;
}
Uri outWebsite;
return Uri.TryCreate(url, UriKind.Absolute, out outWebsite) && outWebsite.Host.Replace("www.", "").Split('.').Count() > 1 && outWebsite.HostNameType == UriHostNameType.Dns && outWebsite.Host.Length > outWebsite.Host.LastIndexOf(".") + 1 && 255 >= url.Length;
}
I've tested the code with linqpad:
void Main()
{
// Errors
IsValidUrl("www.google/cookie.png").Dump();
IsValidUrl("1234").Dump();
IsValidUrl("abcdef").Dump();
IsValidUrl("abcdef/test.png").Dump();
IsValidUrl("www.org").Dump();
IsValidUrl("google").Dump();
IsValidUrl("google.").Dump();
IsValidUrl("google/test").Dump();
IsValidUrl("User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; rv:17.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/17.0").Dump();
IsValidUrl("</script><script>alert(9)</script>").Dump();
IsValidUrl("Accept: application/json, text/javascript, */*; q=0.01").Dump();
IsValidUrl("DNT: 1").Dump();
Environment.NewLine.Dump();
// Success
IsValidUrl("google.nl").Dump();
IsValidUrl("www.google.nl").Dump();
IsValidUrl("http://google.nl").Dump();
IsValidUrl("http://www.google.nl").Dump();
}
Results:
False False False False False False False False False False False False
True True True True
I ran into a very similar case so I wrote a static class which can be easily used along with xUnit tests to verify the logic passed several cases.
Usage (returns ValidationModel
):
var message = UrlValidator.Validate(input).ValidationMessage;
or
var result = UrlValidator.Validate(input).IsValid;
ValidationModel.cs
public class ValidationModel
{
public const string InvalidScheme = "Invalid URI scheme.";
public const string EmptyInputValue = "Empty input value.";
public const string InvalidUriFormat = "Invalid URI format.";
public const string PassedValidation = "Passed validation";
public const string HttpScheme = "http://";
public const string HttpsScheme = "https://";
public bool IsValid { get; set; }
public string ValidationMessage { get; set; }
}
UrlValidator.cs
public static class UrlValidator
{
public static ValidationModel Validate(string input)
{
var validation = new ValidationModel();
if (input == string.Empty)
{
validation.IsValid = false;
validation.ValidationMessage = ValidationModel.EmptyInputValue;
return validation;
}
try
{
var uri = new Uri(input);
var leftPart = uri.GetLeftPart(UriPartial.Scheme);
if (leftPart.Equals(ValidationModel.HttpScheme) || leftPart.Equals(ValidationModel.HttpsScheme))
{
validation.IsValid = true;
validation.ValidationMessage = ValidationModel.PassedValidation;
return validation;
}
validation.IsValid = false;
validation.ValidationMessage = ValidationModel.InvalidScheme;
}
catch (UriFormatException)
{
validation.IsValid = false;
validation.ValidationMessage = ValidationModel.InvalidUriFormat;
}
return validation;
}
}
UrlValidatorTests.cs
public class UrlValidatorTests
{
[Theory]
[InlineData("http://intel.com", true, ValidationModel.PassedValidation)]
[InlineData("https://intel.com", true, ValidationModel.PassedValidation)]
[InlineData("https://intel.com/index.html", true, ValidationModel.PassedValidation)]
[InlineData("", false, ValidationModel.EmptyInputValue)]
[InlineData("http://", false, ValidationModel.InvalidUriFormat)]
[InlineData("//intel.com", false, ValidationModel.InvalidScheme)]
[InlineData("://intel.com", false, ValidationModel.InvalidUriFormat)]
[InlineData("f://intel.com", false, ValidationModel.InvalidScheme)]
[InlineData("htttp://intel.com", false, ValidationModel.InvalidScheme)]
[InlineData("intel.com", false, ValidationModel.InvalidUriFormat)]
[InlineData("ftp://intel.com", false, ValidationModel.InvalidScheme)]
[InlineData("http:intel.com", false, ValidationModel.InvalidUriFormat)]
public void Validate_Input_ExpectedResult(string input, bool expectedResult, string expectedInvalidMessage)
{
//Act
var result = UrlValidator.Validate(input);
//Assert
Assert.Equal(expectedResult, result.IsValid);
Assert.Equal(expectedInvalidMessage, result.ValidationMessage);
}
}
精彩评论