Problems with symbol ø - google-docs-api

I noticed that users of my application can not create folders with symbol ø in the name.
For example "Infomøder og workshops".
Google docs api responds error: "The entity "oslash" was referenced, but not declared."
The symbol ø is encoded to ø in XML request to the API.
Example:
Infomøder og workshops
Is this wrong request? Do i need to encode such symbols with some different way?
Update: I have found that replacing of ø with Ø solves the problem. So it is needed to encode all entities not in HTML format. correct?

Related

Karate: Query Param values are getting encoded

I am using karate 0.6.1 version and facing issue with get request with queryparam.
Scenario Outline: Verify the response Data with account details when there are filter values are provided with wildcard
Given params { <paramName>: <paramValue> }
When method get
Then status 200
Examples:
| paramName | paramValue |
| Name | 'Volvo%' |
| Name | 'test data'|
in the request url with queryparam becomes like url?Name=Volvo%25
And url?Name=test+data
which is not correct, how should i resolve that.
It is actually not wrong,
Url encoding is required to differentiate between special characters in your data vs special characters that are reserved to construct the URL.
Reserved Characters URL Encoding:
: Separate protocol (http) from address encoded as %3B
/ Separate domain and directories encoded as %2F
# Separate anchors encoded as %23
? Separate query string encoded as %3F
& Separate query elements encoded as %24
# Separate username and password from domain encoded as %40
% Indicates an encoded character encoded as %25
+ Indicates a space encoded as %2B
<space> Not recommended in URLs encoded as %20 or +
so if you are going to pass any special characters as data via URL you need to % encode them to avoid conflicts.
In karate, if you want to avoid your URL getting encoded, don't construct your URL using path, params, param definitions.
Instead, build your entire URL as a string and pass it to url. like,
* url 'http://httpbin.org/get?Name=Stark'
You might get an exception if you are trying to pass any special
characters in this.
so consider encoding the URL if you are going to pass any special characters.

append space in URL in form of variable

I have an url say.
WWW.XYZ.COM
I have a varibale in bakend contains space in it. Then i want to add it with that url.
eg.www.xyz.com/variable or www.xyz.com/stack over
But url is not going to accept it. How can i do this?
A typical URL embed %20 in place of space.
That means your url www.xyz.com/stack overwill be treated as www.xyz.com/stack%20over. So, there can be a solution , write a function that will retrive data from backend as a %20 in every space. Then that will make an url. And try to make the pages appended as %20.
You have to use url encode like function to eliminate some characters (converting to other composite characters). Example of url encode in php
Say for Ex : this is your Stackoverflow URL
"stackoverflow.com/questions/51166674/append-space-in-url-in-form-of-variable"
Just Remove "-" in that.
Click Enter.
You Will See the same page with url
"stackoverflow.com/questions/51166674/append%20space%20in%20url%20in%20form%20of%20variable"
Just add %20 instead of space. I hope May be this is helpfull.
Thank you
Theory:
From HTML URL Encoding Reference
URLs can only be sent over the Internet using the ASCII character-set.
Since URLs often contain characters outside the ASCII set, the URL has to be converted into a valid ASCII format.
URL encoding replaces unsafe ASCII characters with a "%" followed by two hexadecimal digits.
URLs cannot contain spaces. URL encoding normally replaces a space with a plus (+) sign or with %20.
In other words, every character ('a', 'b', '', '_', ...) can be replace with its correspondant ASCII representation.
For example, the ASCII representation of space is %20.
Example: When you want to send the attribute "text" containing "Hello World" through a formular or URL, the web-server will process the input "text=Hello%20World" or, less frequent "text=Hello+World".
Your example: So, your URL www.xyz.com/stack over will be mostly represented as www.xyz.com/stack%20over
Reserved characther
= | ; | / | # | ? | : | space are reserved characters. RFC 1630

Not able to add {} in URI provided by axis-adb

I have the following piece of Code that I need to execute
URI uri = new URI("http://localhost:8080/rest/{data}");
The URI in the above example is from axis2-adb-1.5.1.jar - org.apache.axis2.databinding.types.URI
I tired using axis2-adb-1.6.1.jar as well. I get a MalformedURIException stating "Path Contains invalid character:{".
I can use a workaround and modify the URI to make it work
URI uri = new URI("http://localhost:8080/rest/%7Bdata%7D");
However, I am looking for options wherein I dont need to modify my input.
Moreover, can anyone answer me why does the axis jar have this limitation. I tried looking for explanations but could not find any.
Found few days ago that its not a valid scenario to add curly braces in URL. That can be added only after proper encoding
http://axis.apache.org/axis2/java/core/api/org/apache/axis2/databinding/types/URI.html
states
Parsing of a URI specification is done according to the URI syntax described in RFC 2396, and amended by RFC 2732.
Both RFC 2396 and RFC 2732 prescribes the following
Other characters are excluded because gateways and other transport
agents are known to sometimes modify such characters, or they are
used as delimiters.
unwise = "{" | "}" | "|" | "\" | "^" | "[" | "]" | "`"
Data corresponding to excluded characters must be escaped in order to
be properly represented within a URI.

IMAP SEARCH complex query

I need to find all mails in IMAP mailbox which contains somestring in BODY and is FROM someone#me.com or TO someone#me.com.
Trying to do:
49:51.53 > JBPM3 SEARCH CHARSET utf-8 "BODY \"somestring\" (OR (TO \"someone#me.com\") (FROM \"someone#me.com\"))"
Receiving:
49:51.71 < JBPM3 BAD Could not parse command
How to make it work using GMail?
You may skip parenthesis '(' ')' to group logical expressions in IMAP.
Parenthesis are not needed in Polish Notation (see edit below):
A0001 SEARCH CHARSET utf-8 BODY "somestring" OR TO "someone#me.com" FROM "someone#me.com"
You could also use gmail search syntax (X-GM-RAW) command:
http://www.limilabs.com/blog/search-gmail-using-gmails-search-syntax
[Edit]
Parenthesis are sometimes required in IMAP SEARCH. This is because AND operator can have more than 2 operands and is not explicitly defined:
http://www.limilabs.com/blog/imap-search-requires-parentheses

What's valid and what's not in a URI query?

Background (question further down)
I've been Googling this back and forth reading RFCs and SO questions trying to crack this, but I still don't got jack.
So I guess we just vote for the "best" answer and that's it, or?
Basically it boils down to this.
3.4. Query Component
The query component is a string of information to be interpreted by the resource.
query = *uric
Within a query component, the characters ";", "/", "?", ":", "#", "&", "=", "+", ",", and "$" are reserved.
The first thing that boggles me is that *uric is defined like this
uric = reserved | unreserved | escaped
reserved = ";" | "/" | "?" | ":" | "#" | "&" | "=" | "+" | "$" | ","
This is however somewhat clarified by paragraphs such as
The "reserved" syntax class above refers to those characters that are allowed within a URI, but which may not be allowed within a particular component of the generic URI syntax; they are used as delimiters of the components described in Section 3.
Characters in the "reserved" set are not reserved in all contexts. The set of characters actually reserved within any given URI component is defined by that component. In general, a character is reserved if the semantics of the URI changes if the character is replaced with its escaped US-ASCII encoding.
This last excerpt feels somewhat backwards, but it clearly states that the reserved character set depends on context. Yet 3.4 states that all the reserved characters are reserved within a query component, however, the only things that would change the semantics here is escaping the question mark (?) as URIs do not define the concept of a query string.
At this point I've given up on the RFCs entirely but found RFC 1738 particularly interesting.
An HTTP URL takes the form:
http://<host>:<port>/<path>?<searchpart>
Within the <path> and <searchpart> components, "/", ";", "?" are reserved. The "/" character may be used within HTTP to designate a hierarchical structure.
I interpret this at least with regards to HTTP URLs that RFC 1738 supersedes RFC 2396. Because the URI query has no notion of a query string also the interpretation of reserved doesn't really let allow me to define query strings as I'm used to doing by now.
Question
This all started when I wanted to pass a list of numbers together with the request of another resource. I didn't think much of it, and just passed it as a comma separated values. To my surprise though the comma was escaped. The query page.html?q=1,2,3 encoded turned into page.html?q=1%2C2%2C3 it works, but it's ugly and didn't expect it. That's when I started going through RFCs.
My first question is simply, is encoding commas really necessary?
My answer, according to RFC 2396: yes, according to RFC 1738: no
Later I found related posts regarding the passing of lists between requests. Where the csv approach was poised as bad. This showed up instead, (haven't seen this before).
page.html?q=1;q=2;q=3
My second question, is this a valid URL?
My answer, according to RFC 2396: no, according to RFC 1738: no (; is reserved)
I don't have any issues with passing csv as long as it's numbers, but yes you do run into the risk of having to encode and decode values back and forth if the comma suddenly is needed for something else. Anyway I tried the semi-colon query string thing with ASP.NET and the result was not what I expected.
Default.aspx?a=1;a=2&b=1&a=3
Request.QueryString["a"] = "1;a=2,3"
Request.QueryString["b"] = "1"
I fail to see how this greatly differs from a csv approach as when I ask for "a" I get a string with commas in it. ASP.NET certainly is not a reference implementation but it hasn't let me down yet.
But most importantly -- my third question -- where is specification for this? and what would you do or for that matter not do?
That a character is reserved within a generic URL component doesn't mean it must be escaped when it appears within the component or within data in the component. The character must also be defined as a delimiter within the generic or scheme-specific syntax and the appearance of the character must be within data.
The current standard for generic URIs is RFC 3986, which has this to say:
2.2. Reserved Characters
URIs include components and subcomponents that are delimited by characters in the "reserved" set. These characters are called "reserved" because they may (or may not) be defined as delimiters by the generic syntax, by each scheme-specific syntax, or by the implementation-specific syntax of a URI's dereferencing algorithm. If data for a URI component would conflict with a reserved character's purpose as a delimiter [emphasis added], then the conflicting data must be percent-encoded before the URI is formed.
reserved = gen-delims / sub-delims
gen-delims = ":" / "/" / "?" / "#" / "[" / "]" / "#"
sub-delims = "!" / "$" / "&" / "'" / "(" / ")"
/ "*" / "+" / "," / ";" / "="
3.3. Path Component
[...]
pchar = unreserved / pct-encoded / sub-delims / ":" / "#"
[...]
3.4 Query Component
[...]
query = *( pchar / "/" / "?" )
Thus commas are explicitly allowed within query strings and only need to be escaped in data if specific schemes define it as a delimiter. The HTTP scheme doesn't use the comma or semi-colon as a delimiter in query strings, so they don't need to be escaped. Whether browsers follow this standard is another matter.
Using CSV should work fine for string data, you just have to follow standard CSV conventions and either quote data or escape the commas with backslashes.
As for RFC 2396, it also allows for unescaped commas in HTTP query strings:
2.2. Reserved Characters
Many URI include components consisting of or delimited by, certain
special characters. These characters are called "reserved", since
their usage within the URI component is limited to their reserved
purpose. If the data for a URI component would conflict with the
reserved purpose, then the conflicting data must be escaped before
forming the URI.
Since commas don't have a reserved purpose under the HTTP scheme, they don't have to be escaped in data. The note from § 2.3 about reserved characters being those that change semantics when percent-encoded applies only generally; characters may be percent-encoded without changing semantics for specific schemes and yet still be reserved.
I think the real question is: "What characters should be encoded in a query string?" And that depends mainly on two things: The validity and the meaning of a character.
Validity according to the RFC standard
In RFC3986 we can find which special characters are valid and which are not inside a query string:
// Valid:
! $ & ' ( ) * + , - . / : ; = ? # _ ~
% (should be followed by two hex chars to be completely valid (e.g. %7C))
// Invalid:
" < > [ \ ] ^ ` { | }
space
# (marks the end of the query string, so it can't be a part of it)
extended ASCII characters (e.g. °)
Deviations from the standard
Browsers and web frameworks do not always strictly follow the RFC standard. Below are some examples:
[, ] are not valid, but Chrome and Firefox do not encode these characters inside a query string. The reasoning given by Chrome devs is simply: "If other browsers and an RFC disagree, we will generally match other browsers." QueryHelpers.AddQueryString from ASP.NET Core on the other hand will encode these characters.
Other invalid characters that are not encoded by Chrome and Firefox are:
\ ^ ` { | }
' is a valid character inside a query string but will be encoded by Chrome, Firefox and QueryHelpers nevertheless. The explanation given by Firefox devs is that they knew that they don't have to encode it according to the RFC standard, but did it to reduce vulnerabilities.
Special meaning
Some characters are valid and also don't get encoded by browsers, but should still be encoded in certain cases.
+: Spaces are normally encoded as %20 but alternatively they can be encoded as +. So + inside a query string means it's an encoded space. If you want to include a character that's actually supposed to literally mean plus, then you have to use the encoded version of + which is %2B.
~: Some old Unix systems interpreted URI parts that started with ~ as a path to a home directory. So it's a good idea to encode ~ if it's not meant to denote the start of a Unix home directory path for an old system (so nowadays probably always encode).
=, &: Usually (although RFC doesn't specify that this is required) query strings contain parameters in the format "key1=value1&key2=value2". If that's the case and =s or &s should be part of the parameter key or the parameter value instead of giving them the role of separating the key and value or separating the parameters, then you have to encode those =s and &s. So if a parameter value should for some reason consist of the string "=&" then it has to be encoded as %3D%26 which then can be used for the full key and value: "weirdparam=%3D%26".
%: Usually web frameworks figure out that %s that are not followed by two hex characters simply mean the % itself, but it's still a good idea to always encode % when it's supposed to only mean % and not indicate the start of an encoded character (e.g. %7C) because RFC3986 specifies that % is only valid when followed by two hex characters. So don't use "percentageparam=%" use "percentageparam=%25" instead.
Encoding guidelines
Encode every character that is otherwise invalid* according to RFC3986 and every character that can have special meaning but should only be interpreted in a literal way without giving it a special meaning. You can also encode things that aren't required to be encoded, like '. Why? Because it doesn't hurt to encode more than necessary. Servers and web frameworks when parsing a query string will decode every encoded character, no matter if it was really necessary to previously encode that character or not.
The only characters of a query string that shouldn't be encoded are those that can have a special meaning and shouldn't lose that special meaning, e.g. don't encode the = of "key1=value1". For that to achieve don't apply an encoding method to the whole query string (and also not to the whole URI) but apply it only and separately to the query parameter keys and values. For example, with JS:
var url = "http://example.com?" + encodeURIComponent(myKey1) + "=" + encodeURIComponent(myValue1) + "&" + encodeURIComponent(myKey2)...;
Note that encodeURIComponent encodes a lot more characters than necessary meaning characters that are valid in a query string and don't have special meaning there e.g. /, ?, ...
The reason is that encodeURIComponent wasn't created for query strings alone but instead encodes characters that have special meaning outside of the query string as well, e.g. / for the path URI component. QueryHelpers.AddQueryString works in a similar manner. Under the hood it uses System.Text.Encodings.Web.DefaultUrlEncoder which is not just meant for query strings but also for isegment, ipath-noscheme and ifragment.
* You could probably get away with only regarding those characters as invalid that are both not allowed by the RFC and that are also always encoded by Chrome for instance. This would be Space " < >. But it's probably better to be on the safer side and encode at least everything that RFC3986 considers invalid.
OP's questions
My first question is simply, is encoding commas really necessary -> No it's not necessary, but it doesn't hurt (except ugliness) and will happen with default encoding methods e.g. encodeURIComponent and decoding and query string parsing should work nevertheless.
My second question, is this a valid URL (page.html?q=1;q=2;q=3)? -> It's RFC valid, but your server / web framework might have a hard time parsing the query string when it might expect the typical "key1=value1&key2=value2" format for query strings.
Where is specification for this? -> There isn't a single specification that covers everything because some things are implementation specific. For instance there are different ways of specifying arrays inside of query strings.
Just use ?q=1+2+3
I am answering here a fourth question :) that did not ask but all started with: how do i pass list of numbers a-la comma-separated values? Seems to me the best approach is just to pass them space-separated, where spaces will get url-form-encoded to +. Works great, as longs as you know the values in the list contain no spaces (something numbers tend not to).
page.html?q=1;q=2;q=3
is this a valid URL?
Yes. The ; is reserved, but not by an RFC. The context that defines this component is the definition of the application/x-www-form-urlencoded media type, which is part of the HTML standard (section 17.13.4.1). In particular the sneaky note hidden away in section B.2.2:
We recommend that HTTP server implementors, and in particular, CGI implementors support the use of ";" in place of "&" to save authors the trouble of escaping "&" characters in this manner.
Unfortunately many popular server-side scripting frameworks including ASP.NET do not support this usage.
I would like to note that page.html?q=1&q=2&q=3 is a valid url as well. This is a completely legitimate way of expressing an array in a query string. Your server technology will determine how exactly that is presented.
In Classic ASP, you check Response.QueryString("q").Count and then use Response.QueryString("q")(0) (and (1) and (2)).
Note that you saw this in your ASP.NET, too (I think it was not intended, but look):
Default.aspx?a=1;a=2&b=1&a=3
Request.QueryString["a"] = "1;a=2,3"
Request.QueryString["b"] = "1"
Notice that the semicolon is ignored, so you have a defined twice, and you got its value twice, separated by a comma. Using all ampersands Default.aspx?a=1&a=2&b=1&a=3 will yield a as "1,2,3". But I am sure there is a method to get each individual element, in case the elements themselves contain commas. It is simply the default property of the non-indexed QueryString that concatenates the sub-values together with comma separators.
I had the same issue. The URL that was hyperlinked was a third party URL and was expecting a list of parameters in format page.html?q=1,2,3 ONLY and the URL page.html?q=1%2C2%2C3 did not work. I was able to get it working using javascript. May not be the best approach but can check out the solution here if it helps anyone.
If you are sending the ENCODED characters to FLASH/SWF file, then you should ENCODE the character twice!! (because of Flash parser)

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