Splits a hostname into subdomains, domain and (effective) top-level domains.
Since domain name registrars organize their namespaces in different ways, it's not straight-forward to split a hostname into subdomains, the domain and top-level domains. In order to do that parse-domain uses a large list of known top-level domains from publicsuffix.org:
import { parseDomain, ParseResultType } from "parse-domain";
const parseResult = parseDomain(
// This should be a string with basic latin letters only.
// More information below.
"www.some.example.co.uk",
);
// Check if the domain is listed in the public suffix list
if (parseResult.type === ParseResultType.Listed) {
const { subDomains, domain, topLevelDomains } = parseResult;
console.log(subDomains); // ["www", "some"]
console.log(domain); // "example"
console.log(topLevelDomains); // ["co", "uk"]
} else {
// Read more about other parseResult types below...
}
This package has been designed for modern Node and browser environments with ECMAScript modules support. It assumes an ES2015 environment with Symbol()
, URL()
and TextDecoder()
globally available. You need to transpile it down to ES5 (e.g. by using Babel) if you need to support older environments.
The list of top-level domains is stored in a trie data structure and serialization format to ensure the fastest lookup and the smallest possible library size.
npm install parse-domain
💡 Please note: publicsuffix.org is updated several times per month. This package comes with a prebuilt list that has been downloaded at the time of npm publish
. In order to get an up-to-date list, you should run npx parse-domain-update
everytime you start or build your application. This will download the latest list from https://publicsuffix.org/list/public_suffix_list.dat
.
parseDomain
does not parse whole URLs. You should only pass the puny-encoded hostname section of the URL:
❌ Wrong | ✅ Correct |
---|---|
https://user@www.example.com:8080/path?query |
www.example.com |
münchen.de |
xn--mnchen-3ya.de |
食狮.com.cn?query |
xn--85x722f.com.cn |
There is the utility function fromUrl
which tries to extract the hostname from a (partial) URL and puny-encodes it:
import { parseDomain, fromUrl } from "parse-domain";
const { subDomains, domain, topLevelDomains } = parseDomain(
fromUrl("https://www.münchen.de?query"),
);
console.log(subDomains); // ["www"]
console.log(domain); // "xn--mnchen-3ya"
console.log(topLevelDomains); // ["de"]
// You can use the 'punycode' NPM package to decode the domain again
import { toUnicode } from "punycode";
console.log(toUnicode(domain)); // "münchen"
fromUrl
parses the URL using new URL()
. Depending on your target environments you need to make sure that there is a polyfill for it. It's globally available in all modern browsers (no IE) and in Node v10.
When parsing a hostname there are 5 possible results:
- invalid
- it is an ip address
- it is formally correct and the domain is
- reserved
- not listed in the public suffix list
- listed in the public suffix list
parseDomain
returns a ParseResult
with a type
property that allows to distinguish these cases.
The given input is first validated against RFC 3696 (the domain labels are limited to basic latin letters, numbers and hyphens). If the validation fails, parseResult.type
will be ParseResultType.Invalid
:
import { parseDomain, ParseResultType } from "parse-domain";
const parseResult = parseDomain("münchen.de");
console.log(parseResult.type === ParseResultType.Invalid); // true
Check out the API if you need more information about the validation error.
If you don't want the characters to be validated (e.g. because you need to allow underscores in hostnames), there's also a more relaxed validation mode (according to RFC 2181).
import { parseDomain, ParseResultType, Validation } from "parse-domain";
const parseResult = parseDomain("_jabber._tcp.gmail.com", {
validation: Validation.Lax,
});
console.log(parseResult.type === ParseResultType.Listed); // true
See also #134 for the discussion.
If the given input is an IP address, parseResult.type
will be ParseResultType.Ip
:
import { parseDomain, ParseResultType } from "parse-domain";
const parseResult = parseDomain("192.168.2.1");
console.log(parseResult.type === ParseResultType.Ip); // true
console.log(parseResult.ipVersion); // 4
It's debatable if a library for parsing domains should also accept IP addresses. In fact, you could argue that parseDomain
should reject an IP address as invalid. While this is true from a technical point of view, we decided to report IP addresses in a special way because we assume that a lot of people are using this library to make sense from an arbitrary hostname (see #102).
There are 5 top-level domains that are not listed in the public suffix list but reserved according to RFC 6761 and RFC 6762:
localhost
local
example
invalid
test
In these cases, parseResult.type
will be ParseResultType.Reserved
:
import { parseDomain, ParseResultType } from "parse-domain";
const parseResult = parseDomain("pecorino.local");
console.log(parseResult.type === ParseResultType.Reserved); // true
console.log(parseResult.labels); // ["pecorino", "local"]
If the given hostname is valid, but not listed in the downloaded public suffix list, parseResult.type
will be ParseResultType.NotListed
:
import { parseDomain, ParseResultType } from "parse-domain";
const parseResult = parseDomain("this.is.not-listed");
console.log(parseResult.type === ParseResultType.NotListed); // true
console.log(parseResult.labels); // ["this", "is", "not-listed"]
If a domain is not listed, it can be caused by an outdated list. Make sure to update the list once in a while.
Technically, the term top-level domain describes the very last domain in a hostname (uk
in example.co.uk
). Most people, however, use the term top-level domain for the public suffix which is a namespace "under which Internet users can directly register names".
Some examples for public suffixes:
com
inexample.com
co.uk
inexample.co.uk
co
inexample.co
- but also
com.co
inexample.com.co
If the hostname is listed in the public suffix list, the parseResult.type
will be ParseResultType.Listed
:
import { parseDomain, ParseResultType } from "parse-domain";
const parseResult = parseDomain("example.co.uk");
console.log(parseResult.type === ParseResultType.Listed); // true
console.log(parseResult.labels); // ["example", "co", "uk"]
Now parseResult
will also provide a subDomains
, domain
and topLevelDomains
property:
const { subDomains, domain, topLevelDomains } = parseResult;
console.log(subDomains); // []
console.log(domain); // "example"
console.log(topLevelDomains); // ["co", "uk"]
We recommend switching over the parseResult.type
:
switch (parseResult.type) {
case ParseResultType.Listed: {
const { hostname, topLevelDomains } = parseResult;
console.log(`${hostname} belongs to ${topLevelDomains.join(".")}`);
break;
}
case ParseResultType.Reserved:
case ParseResultType.NotListed: {
const { hostname } = parseResult;
console.log(`${hostname} is a reserved or unknown domain`);
break;
}
default:
throw new Error(`${hostname} is an ip address or invalid domain`);
}
What's surprising to a lot of people is that the definition of public suffix means that regular user domains can become effective top-level domains:
const { subDomains, domain, topLevelDomains } = parseDomain(
"parse-domain.github.io",
);
console.log(subDomains); // []
console.log(domain); // "parse-domain"
console.log(topLevelDomains); // ["github", "io"] 🤯
In this case, github.io
is nothing else than a private domain name registrar. github.io
is the effective top-level domain and browsers are treating it like that (e.g. for setting document.domain
).
If you want to deviate from the browser's understanding of a top-level domain and you're only interested in top-level domains acknowledged by ICANN, there's an icann
property:
const parseResult = parseDomain("parse-domain.github.io");
const { subDomains, domain, topLevelDomains } = parseResult.icann;
console.log(subDomains); // ["parse-domain"]
console.log(domain); // "github"
console.log(topLevelDomains); // ["io"]
const { subDomains, domain, topLevelDomains } = parseDomain("co.uk");
console.log(subDomains); // []
console.log(domain); // undefined
console.log(topLevelDomains); // ["co", "uk"]
The empty string ""
represents the DNS root and is considered to be valid. parseResult.type
will be ParseResultType.Reserved
in that case:
const { type, subDomains, domain, topLevelDomains } = parseDomain("");
console.log(type === ParseResultType.Reserved); // true
console.log(subDomains); // []
console.log(domain); // undefined
console.log(topLevelDomains); // []
🧩 = JavaScript export
🧬 = TypeScript export
🧩 export parseDomain(hostname: string | typeof NO_HOSTNAME, options?: ParseDomainOptions): ParseResult
Takes a hostname (e.g. "www.example.com"
) and returns a ParseResult
. The hostname must only contain basic latin letters, digits, hyphens and dots. International hostnames must be puny-encoded. Does not throw an error, even with invalid input.
import { parseDomain } from "parse-domain";
const parseResult = parseDomain("www.example.com");
Use Validation.Lax
if you want to allow all characters:
import { parseDomain, Validation } from "parse-domain";
const parseResult = parseDomain("_jabber._tcp.gmail.com", {
validation: Validation.Lax,
});
🧩 export fromUrl(input: string): string | typeof NO_HOSTNAME
Takes a URL-like string and tries to extract the hostname. Requires the global URL
constructor to be available on the platform. Returns the NO_HOSTNAME
symbol if the input was not a string or the hostname could not be extracted. Take a look at the test suite for some examples. Does not throw an error, even with invalid input.
NO_HOSTNAME
is a symbol that is returned by fromUrl
when it was not able to extract a hostname from the given string. When passed to parseDomain
, it will always yield a ParseResultInvalid
.
export type ParseDomainOptions = {
/**
* If no validation is specified, Validation.Strict will be used.
**/
validation?: Validation;
};
An object that holds all possible Validation validation
values:
export const Validation = {
/**
* Allows any octets as labels
* but still restricts the length of labels and the overall domain.
*
* @see https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2181#section-11
**/
Lax: "LAX",
/**
* Only allows ASCII letters, digits and hyphens (aka LDH),
* forbids hyphens at the beginning or end of a label
* and requires top-level domain names not to be all-numeric.
*
* This is the default if no validation is configured.
*
* @see https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc3696#section-2
*/
Strict: "STRICT",
};
This type represents all possible validation
values.
A ParseResult
is either a ParseResultInvalid
, ParseResultIp
, ParseResultReserved
, ParseResultNotListed
or ParseResultListed
.
All parse results have a type
property that is either "INVALID"
, "IP"
,"RESERVED"
,"NOT_LISTED"
or"LISTED"
. Use the exported ParseResultType to check for the type instead of checking against string literals.
All parse results also have a hostname
property that provides access to the sanitized hostname that was passed to parseDomain
.
An object that holds all possible ParseResult type
values:
const ParseResultType = {
Invalid: "INVALID",
Ip: "IP",
Reserved: "RESERVED",
NotListed: "NOT_LISTED",
Listed: "LISTED",
};
This type represents all possible ParseResult type
values.
Describes the shape of the parse result that is returned when the given hostname does not adhere to RFC 1034:
- The hostname is not a string
- The hostname is longer than 253 characters
- A domain label is shorter than 1 character
- A domain label is longer than 63 characters
- A domain label contains a character that is not a basic latin character, digit or hyphen
type ParseResultInvalid = {
type: ParseResultType.INVALID;
hostname: string | typeof NO_HOSTNAME;
errors: Array<ValidationError>;
};
// Example
{
type: "INVALID",
hostname: ".com",
errors: [...]
}
Describes the shape of a validation error as returned by parseDomain
type ValidationError = {
type: ValidationErrorType;
message: string;
column: number;
};
// Example
{
type: "LABEL_MIN_LENGTH",
message: `Label "" is too short. Label is 0 octets long but should be at least 1.`,
column: 1,
}
An object that holds all possible ValidationError type
values:
const ValidationErrorType = {
NoHostname: "NO_HOSTNAME",
DomainMaxLength: "DOMAIN_MAX_LENGTH",
LabelMinLength: "LABEL_MIN_LENGTH",
LabelMaxLength: "LABEL_MAX_LENGTH",
LabelInvalidCharacter: "LABEL_INVALID_CHARACTER",
LastLabelInvalid: "LAST_LABEL_INVALID",
};
This type represents all possible type
values of a ValidationError.
This type describes the shape of the parse result that is returned when the given hostname was an IPv4 or IPv6 address.
type ParseResultIp = {
type: ParseResultType.Ip;
hostname: string;
ipVersion: 4 | 6;
};
// Example
{
type: "IP",
hostname: "192.168.0.1",
ipVersion: 4
}
According to RFC 3986, IPv6 addresses need to be surrounded by [
and ]
in URLs. parseDomain
accepts both IPv6 address with and without square brackets:
// Recognized as IPv4 address
parseDomain("192.168.0.1");
// Both are recognized as proper IPv6 addresses
parseDomain("::");
parseDomain("[::]");
This type describes the shape of the parse result that is returned when the given hostname
- is the root domain (the empty string
""
) - belongs to the top-level domain
localhost
,local
,example
,invalid
ortest
type ParseResultReserved = {
type: ParseResultType.Reserved;
hostname: string;
labels: Array<string>;
};
// Example
{
type: "RESERVED",
hostname: "pecorino.local",
labels: ["pecorino", "local"]
}
127.0.0.1
, will not be reported as reserved, but as ParseResultIp
. See #117.
Describes the shape of the parse result that is returned when the given hostname is valid and does not belong to a reserved top-level domain, but is not listed in the downloaded public suffix list.
type ParseResultNotListed = {
type: ParseResultType.NotListed;
hostname: string;
labels: Array<string>;
};
// Example
{
type: "NOT_LISTED",
hostname: "this.is.not-listed",
labels: ["this", "is", "not-listed"]
}
Describes the shape of the parse result that is returned when the given hostname belongs to a top-level domain that is listed in the public suffix list.
type ParseResultListed = {
type: ParseResultType.Listed;
hostname: string;
labels: Array<string>;
subDomains: Array<string>;
domain: string | undefined;
topLevelDomains: Array<string>;
icann: {
subDomains: Array<string>;
domain: string | undefined;
topLevelDomains: Array<string>;
};
};
// Example
{
type: "LISTED",
hostname: "parse-domain.github.io",
labels: ["parse-domain", "github", "io"]
subDomains: [],
domain: "parse-domain",
topLevelDomains: ["github", "io"],
icann: {
subDomains: ["parse-domain"],
domain: "github",
topLevelDomains: ["io"]
}
}
MIT