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/usr/share/pyshared/werkzeug/routing.py is in python-werkzeug 0.8.3+dfsg-1.

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# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
"""
    werkzeug.routing
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    When it comes to combining multiple controller or view functions (however
    you want to call them) you need a dispatcher.  A simple way would be
    applying regular expression tests on the ``PATH_INFO`` and calling
    registered callback functions that return the value then.

    This module implements a much more powerful system than simple regular
    expression matching because it can also convert values in the URLs and
    build URLs.

    Here a simple example that creates an URL map for an application with
    two subdomains (www and kb) and some URL rules:

    >>> m = Map([
    ...     # Static URLs
    ...     Rule('/', endpoint='static/index'),
    ...     Rule('/about', endpoint='static/about'),
    ...     Rule('/help', endpoint='static/help'),
    ...     # Knowledge Base
    ...     Subdomain('kb', [
    ...         Rule('/', endpoint='kb/index'),
    ...         Rule('/browse/', endpoint='kb/browse'),
    ...         Rule('/browse/<int:id>/', endpoint='kb/browse'),
    ...         Rule('/browse/<int:id>/<int:page>', endpoint='kb/browse')
    ...     ])
    ... ], default_subdomain='www')

    If the application doesn't use subdomains it's perfectly fine to not set
    the default subdomain and not use the `Subdomain` rule factory.  The endpoint
    in the rules can be anything, for example import paths or unique
    identifiers.  The WSGI application can use those endpoints to get the
    handler for that URL.  It doesn't have to be a string at all but it's
    recommended.

    Now it's possible to create a URL adapter for one of the subdomains and
    build URLs:

    >>> c = m.bind('example.com')
    >>> c.build("kb/browse", dict(id=42))
    'http://kb.example.com/browse/42/'
    >>> c.build("kb/browse", dict())
    'http://kb.example.com/browse/'
    >>> c.build("kb/browse", dict(id=42, page=3))
    'http://kb.example.com/browse/42/3'
    >>> c.build("static/about")
    '/about'
    >>> c.build("static/index", force_external=True)
    'http://www.example.com/'

    >>> c = m.bind('example.com', subdomain='kb')
    >>> c.build("static/about")
    'http://www.example.com/about'

    The first argument to bind is the server name *without* the subdomain.
    Per default it will assume that the script is mounted on the root, but
    often that's not the case so you can provide the real mount point as
    second argument:

    >>> c = m.bind('example.com', '/applications/example')

    The third argument can be the subdomain, if not given the default
    subdomain is used.  For more details about binding have a look at the
    documentation of the `MapAdapter`.

    And here is how you can match URLs:

    >>> c = m.bind('example.com')
    >>> c.match("/")
    ('static/index', {})
    >>> c.match("/about")
    ('static/about', {})
    >>> c = m.bind('example.com', '/', 'kb')
    >>> c.match("/")
    ('kb/index', {})
    >>> c.match("/browse/42/23")
    ('kb/browse', {'id': 42, 'page': 23})

    If matching fails you get a `NotFound` exception, if the rule thinks
    it's a good idea to redirect (for example because the URL was defined
    to have a slash at the end but the request was missing that slash) it
    will raise a `RequestRedirect` exception.  Both are subclasses of the
    `HTTPException` so you can use those errors as responses in the
    application.

    If matching succeeded but the URL rule was incompatible to the given
    method (for example there were only rules for `GET` and `HEAD` and
    routing system tried to match a `POST` request) a `MethodNotAllowed`
    method is raised.


    :copyright: (c) 2011 by the Werkzeug Team, see AUTHORS for more details.
    :license: BSD, see LICENSE for more details.
"""
import re
import posixpath
from pprint import pformat
from urlparse import urljoin

from werkzeug.urls import url_encode, url_decode, url_quote
from werkzeug.utils import redirect, format_string
from werkzeug.exceptions import HTTPException, NotFound, MethodNotAllowed
from werkzeug._internal import _get_environ
from werkzeug.datastructures import ImmutableDict, MultiDict


_rule_re = re.compile(r'''
    (?P<static>[^<]*)                           # static rule data
    <
    (?:
        (?P<converter>[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*)   # converter name
        (?:\((?P<args>.*?)\))?                  # converter arguments
        \:                                      # variable delimiter
    )?
    (?P<variable>[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*)        # variable name
    >
''', re.VERBOSE)
_simple_rule_re = re.compile(r'<([^>]+)>')
_converter_args_re = re.compile(r'''
    ((?P<name>\w+)\s*=\s*)?
    (?P<value>
        True|False|
        \d+.\d+|
        \d+.|
        \d+|
        \w+|
        [urUR]?(?P<stringval>"[^"]*?"|'[^']*')
    )\s*,
''', re.VERBOSE|re.UNICODE)


_PYTHON_CONSTANTS = {
    'None':     None,
    'True':     True,
    'False':    False
}


def _pythonize(value):
    if value in _PYTHON_CONSTANTS:
        return _PYTHON_CONSTANTS[value]
    for convert in int, float:
        try:
            return convert(value)
        except ValueError:
            pass
    if value[:1] == value[-1:] and value[0] in '"\'':
        value = value[1:-1]
    return unicode(value)


def parse_converter_args(argstr):
    argstr += ','
    args = []
    kwargs = {}

    for item in _converter_args_re.finditer(argstr):
        value = item.group('stringval')
        if value is None:
            value = item.group('value')
        value = _pythonize(value)
        if not item.group('name'):
            args.append(value)
        else:
            name = item.group('name')
            kwargs[name] = value

    return tuple(args), kwargs


def parse_rule(rule):
    """Parse a rule and return it as generator. Each iteration yields tuples
    in the form ``(converter, arguments, variable)``. If the converter is
    `None` it's a static url part, otherwise it's a dynamic one.

    :internal:
    """
    pos = 0
    end = len(rule)
    do_match = _rule_re.match
    used_names = set()
    while pos < end:
        m = do_match(rule, pos)
        if m is None:
            break
        data = m.groupdict()
        if data['static']:
            yield None, None, data['static']
        variable = data['variable']
        converter = data['converter'] or 'default'
        if variable in used_names:
            raise ValueError('variable name %r used twice.' % variable)
        used_names.add(variable)
        yield converter, data['args'] or None, variable
        pos = m.end()
    if pos < end:
        remaining = rule[pos:]
        if '>' in remaining or '<' in remaining:
            raise ValueError('malformed url rule: %r' % rule)
        yield None, None, remaining


def get_converter(map, name, args):
    """Create a new converter for the given arguments or raise
    exception if the converter does not exist.

    :internal:
    """
    if not name in map.converters:
        raise LookupError('the converter %r does not exist' % name)
    if args:
        args, kwargs = parse_converter_args(args)
    else:
        args = ()
        kwargs = {}
    return map.converters[name](map, *args, **kwargs)


class RoutingException(Exception):
    """Special exceptions that require the application to redirect, notifying
    about missing urls, etc.

    :internal:
    """


class RequestRedirect(HTTPException, RoutingException):
    """Raise if the map requests a redirect. This is for example the case if
    `strict_slashes` are activated and an url that requires a trailing slash.

    The attribute `new_url` contains the absolute destination url.
    """
    code = 301

    def __init__(self, new_url):
        RoutingException.__init__(self, new_url)
        self.new_url = new_url

    def get_response(self, environ):
        return redirect(self.new_url, self.code)


class RequestSlash(RoutingException):
    """Internal exception."""


class RequestAliasRedirect(RoutingException):
    """This rule is an alias and wants to redirect to the canonical URL."""

    def __init__(self, matched_values):
        self.matched_values = matched_values


class BuildError(RoutingException, LookupError):
    """Raised if the build system cannot find a URL for an endpoint with the
    values provided.
    """

    def __init__(self, endpoint, values, method):
        LookupError.__init__(self, endpoint, values, method)
        self.endpoint = endpoint
        self.values = values
        self.method = method


class ValidationError(ValueError):
    """Validation error.  If a rule converter raises this exception the rule
    does not match the current URL and the next URL is tried.
    """


class RuleFactory(object):
    """As soon as you have more complex URL setups it's a good idea to use rule
    factories to avoid repetitive tasks.  Some of them are builtin, others can
    be added by subclassing `RuleFactory` and overriding `get_rules`.
    """

    def get_rules(self, map):
        """Subclasses of `RuleFactory` have to override this method and return
        an iterable of rules."""
        raise NotImplementedError()


class Subdomain(RuleFactory):
    """All URLs provided by this factory have the subdomain set to a
    specific domain. For example if you want to use the subdomain for
    the current language this can be a good setup::

        url_map = Map([
            Rule('/', endpoint='#select_language'),
            Subdomain('<string(length=2):lang_code>', [
                Rule('/', endpoint='index'),
                Rule('/about', endpoint='about'),
                Rule('/help', endpoint='help')
            ])
        ])

    All the rules except for the ``'#select_language'`` endpoint will now
    listen on a two letter long subdomain that holds the language code
    for the current request.
    """

    def __init__(self, subdomain, rules):
        self.subdomain = subdomain
        self.rules = rules

    def get_rules(self, map):
        for rulefactory in self.rules:
            for rule in rulefactory.get_rules(map):
                rule = rule.empty()
                rule.subdomain = self.subdomain
                yield rule


class Submount(RuleFactory):
    """Like `Subdomain` but prefixes the URL rule with a given string::

        url_map = Map([
            Rule('/', endpoint='index'),
            Submount('/blog', [
                Rule('/', endpoint='blog/index'),
                Rule('/entry/<entry_slug>', endpoint='blog/show')
            ])
        ])

    Now the rule ``'blog/show'`` matches ``/blog/entry/<entry_slug>``.
    """

    def __init__(self, path, rules):
        self.path = path.rstrip('/')
        self.rules = rules

    def get_rules(self, map):
        for rulefactory in self.rules:
            for rule in rulefactory.get_rules(map):
                rule = rule.empty()
                rule.rule = self.path + rule.rule
                yield rule


class EndpointPrefix(RuleFactory):
    """Prefixes all endpoints (which must be strings for this factory) with
    another string. This can be useful for sub applications::

        url_map = Map([
            Rule('/', endpoint='index'),
            EndpointPrefix('blog/', [Submount('/blog', [
                Rule('/', endpoint='index'),
                Rule('/entry/<entry_slug>', endpoint='show')
            ])])
        ])
    """

    def __init__(self, prefix, rules):
        self.prefix = prefix
        self.rules = rules

    def get_rules(self, map):
        for rulefactory in self.rules:
            for rule in rulefactory.get_rules(map):
                rule = rule.empty()
                rule.endpoint = self.prefix + rule.endpoint
                yield rule


class RuleTemplate(object):
    """Returns copies of the rules wrapped and expands string templates in
    the endpoint, rule, defaults or subdomain sections.

    Here a small example for such a rule template::

        from werkzeug.routing import Map, Rule, RuleTemplate

        resource = RuleTemplate([
            Rule('/$name/', endpoint='$name.list'),
            Rule('/$name/<int:id>', endpoint='$name.show')
        ])

        url_map = Map([resource(name='user'), resource(name='page')])

    When a rule template is called the keyword arguments are used to
    replace the placeholders in all the string parameters.
    """

    def __init__(self, rules):
        self.rules = list(rules)

    def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
        return RuleTemplateFactory(self.rules, dict(*args, **kwargs))


class RuleTemplateFactory(RuleFactory):
    """A factory that fills in template variables into rules.  Used by
    `RuleTemplate` internally.

    :internal:
    """

    def __init__(self, rules, context):
        self.rules = rules
        self.context = context

    def get_rules(self, map):
        for rulefactory in self.rules:
            for rule in rulefactory.get_rules(map):
                new_defaults = subdomain = None
                if rule.defaults:
                    new_defaults = {}
                    for key, value in rule.defaults.iteritems():
                        if isinstance(value, basestring):
                            value = format_string(value, self.context)
                        new_defaults[key] = value
                if rule.subdomain is not None:
                    subdomain = format_string(rule.subdomain, self.context)
                new_endpoint = rule.endpoint
                if isinstance(new_endpoint, basestring):
                    new_endpoint = format_string(new_endpoint, self.context)
                yield Rule(
                    format_string(rule.rule, self.context),
                    new_defaults,
                    subdomain,
                    rule.methods,
                    rule.build_only,
                    new_endpoint,
                    rule.strict_slashes
                )


class Rule(RuleFactory):
    """A Rule represents one URL pattern.  There are some options for `Rule`
    that change the way it behaves and are passed to the `Rule` constructor.
    Note that besides the rule-string all arguments *must* be keyword arguments
    in order to not break the application on Werkzeug upgrades.

    `string`
        Rule strings basically are just normal URL paths with placeholders in
        the format ``<converter(arguments):name>`` where the converter and the
        arguments are optional.  If no converter is defined the `default`
        converter is used which means `string` in the normal configuration.

        URL rules that end with a slash are branch URLs, others are leaves.
        If you have `strict_slashes` enabled (which is the default), all
        branch URLs that are matched without a trailing slash will trigger a
        redirect to the same URL with the missing slash appended.

        The converters are defined on the `Map`.

    `endpoint`
        The endpoint for this rule. This can be anything. A reference to a
        function, a string, a number etc.  The preferred way is using a string
        because the endpoint is used for URL generation.

    `defaults`
        An optional dict with defaults for other rules with the same endpoint.
        This is a bit tricky but useful if you want to have unique URLs::

            url_map = Map([
                Rule('/all/', defaults={'page': 1}, endpoint='all_entries'),
                Rule('/all/page/<int:page>', endpoint='all_entries')
            ])

        If a user now visits ``http://example.com/all/page/1`` he will be
        redirected to ``http://example.com/all/``.  If `redirect_defaults` is
        disabled on the `Map` instance this will only affect the URL
        generation.

    `subdomain`
        The subdomain rule string for this rule. If not specified the rule
        only matches for the `default_subdomain` of the map.  If the map is
        not bound to a subdomain this feature is disabled.

        Can be useful if you want to have user profiles on different subdomains
        and all subdomains are forwarded to your application::

            url_map = Map([
                Rule('/', subdomain='<username>', endpoint='user/homepage'),
                Rule('/stats', subdomain='<username>', endpoint='user/stats')
            ])

    `methods`
        A sequence of http methods this rule applies to.  If not specified, all
        methods are allowed. For example this can be useful if you want different
        endpoints for `POST` and `GET`.  If methods are defined and the path
        matches but the method matched against is not in this list or in the
        list of another rule for that path the error raised is of the type
        `MethodNotAllowed` rather than `NotFound`.  If `GET` is present in the
        list of methods and `HEAD` is not, `HEAD` is added automatically.

        .. versionchanged:: 0.6.1
           `HEAD` is now automatically added to the methods if `GET` is
           present.  The reason for this is that existing code often did not
           work properly in servers not rewriting `HEAD` to `GET`
           automatically and it was not documented how `HEAD` should be
           treated.  This was considered a bug in Werkzeug because of that.

    `strict_slashes`
        Override the `Map` setting for `strict_slashes` only for this rule. If
        not specified the `Map` setting is used.

    `build_only`
        Set this to True and the rule will never match but will create a URL
        that can be build. This is useful if you have resources on a subdomain
        or folder that are not handled by the WSGI application (like static data)

    `redirect_to`
        If given this must be either a string or callable.  In case of a
        callable it's called with the url adapter that triggered the match and
        the values of the URL as keyword arguments and has to return the target
        for the redirect, otherwise it has to be a string with placeholders in
        rule syntax::

            def foo_with_slug(adapter, id):
                # ask the database for the slug for the old id.  this of
                # course has nothing to do with werkzeug.
                return 'foo/' + Foo.get_slug_for_id(id)

            url_map = Map([
                Rule('/foo/<slug>', endpoint='foo'),
                Rule('/some/old/url/<slug>', redirect_to='foo/<slug>'),
                Rule('/other/old/url/<int:id>', redirect_to=foo_with_slug)
            ])

        When the rule is matched the routing system will raise a
        `RequestRedirect` exception with the target for the redirect.

        Keep in mind that the URL will be joined against the URL root of the
        script so don't use a leading slash on the target URL unless you
        really mean root of that domain.

    `alias`
        If enabled this rule serves as an alias for another rule with the same
        endpoint and arguments.

    `host`
        If provided and the URL map has host matching enabled this can be
        used to provide a match rule for the whole host.  This also means
        that the subdomain feature is disabled.

    .. versionadded:: 0.7
       The `alias` and `host` parameters were added.
    """

    def __init__(self, string, defaults=None, subdomain=None, methods=None,
                 build_only=False, endpoint=None, strict_slashes=None,
                 redirect_to=None, alias=False, host=None):
        if not string.startswith('/'):
            raise ValueError('urls must start with a leading slash')
        self.rule = string
        self.is_leaf = not string.endswith('/')

        self.map = None
        self.strict_slashes = strict_slashes
        self.subdomain = subdomain
        self.host = host
        self.defaults = defaults
        self.build_only = build_only
        self.alias = alias
        if methods is None:
            self.methods = None
        else:
            self.methods = set([x.upper() for x in methods])
            if 'HEAD' not in self.methods and 'GET' in self.methods:
                self.methods.add('HEAD')
        self.endpoint = endpoint
        self.redirect_to = redirect_to

        if defaults:
            self.arguments = set(map(str, defaults))
        else:
            self.arguments = set()
        self._trace = self._converters = self._regex = self._weights = None

    def empty(self):
        """Return an unbound copy of this rule.  This can be useful if you
        want to reuse an already bound URL for another map."""
        defaults = None
        if self.defaults:
            defaults = dict(self.defaults)
        return Rule(self.rule, defaults, self.subdomain, self.methods,
                    self.build_only, self.endpoint, self.strict_slashes,
                    self.redirect_to, self.alias, self.host)

    def get_rules(self, map):
        yield self

    def refresh(self):
        """Rebinds and refreshes the URL.  Call this if you modified the
        rule in place.

        :internal:
        """
        self.bind(self.map, rebind=True)

    def bind(self, map, rebind=False):
        """Bind the url to a map and create a regular expression based on
        the information from the rule itself and the defaults from the map.

        :internal:
        """
        if self.map is not None and not rebind:
            raise RuntimeError('url rule %r already bound to map %r' %
                               (self, self.map))
        self.map = map
        if self.strict_slashes is None:
            self.strict_slashes = map.strict_slashes
        if self.subdomain is None:
            self.subdomain = map.default_subdomain
        self.compile()

    def compile(self):
        """Compiles the regular expression and stores it."""
        assert self.map is not None, 'rule not bound'

        if self.map.host_matching:
            domain_rule = self.host or ''
        else:
            domain_rule = self.subdomain or ''

        self._trace = []
        self._converters = {}
        self._weights = []
        regex_parts = []

        def _build_regex(rule):
            for converter, arguments, variable in parse_rule(rule):
                if converter is None:
                    regex_parts.append(re.escape(variable))
                    self._trace.append((False, variable))
                    for part in variable.split('/'):
                        if part:
                            self._weights.append((0, -len(part)))
                else:
                    convobj = get_converter(self.map, converter, arguments)
                    regex_parts.append('(?P<%s>%s)' % (variable, convobj.regex))
                    self._converters[variable] = convobj
                    self._trace.append((True, variable))
                    self._weights.append((1, convobj.weight))
                    self.arguments.add(str(variable))

        _build_regex(domain_rule)
        regex_parts.append('\\|')
        self._trace.append((False, '|'))
        _build_regex(self.is_leaf and self.rule or self.rule.rstrip('/'))
        if not self.is_leaf:
            self._trace.append((False, '/'))

        if self.build_only:
            return
        regex = r'^%s%s$' % (
            u''.join(regex_parts),
            (not self.is_leaf or not self.strict_slashes) and \
                '(?<!/)(?P<__suffix__>/?)' or ''
        )
        self._regex = re.compile(regex, re.UNICODE)

    def match(self, path):
        """Check if the rule matches a given path. Path is a string in the
        form ``"subdomain|/path(method)"`` and is assembled by the map.  If
        the map is doing host matching the subdomain part will be the host
        instead.

        If the rule matches a dict with the converted values is returned,
        otherwise the return value is `None`.

        :internal:
        """
        if not self.build_only:
            m = self._regex.search(path)
            if m is not None:
                groups = m.groupdict()
                # we have a folder like part of the url without a trailing
                # slash and strict slashes enabled. raise an exception that
                # tells the map to redirect to the same url but with a
                # trailing slash
                if self.strict_slashes and not self.is_leaf and \
                   not groups.pop('__suffix__'):
                    raise RequestSlash()
                # if we are not in strict slashes mode we have to remove
                # a __suffix__
                elif not self.strict_slashes:
                    del groups['__suffix__']

                result = {}
                for name, value in groups.iteritems():
                    try:
                        value = self._converters[name].to_python(value)
                    except ValidationError:
                        return
                    result[str(name)] = value
                if self.defaults:
                    result.update(self.defaults)

                if self.alias and self.map.redirect_defaults:
                    raise RequestAliasRedirect(result)

                return result

    def build(self, values, append_unknown=True):
        """Assembles the relative url for that rule and the subdomain.
        If building doesn't work for some reasons `None` is returned.

        :internal:
        """
        tmp = []
        add = tmp.append
        processed = set(self.arguments)
        for is_dynamic, data in self._trace:
            if is_dynamic:
                try:
                    add(self._converters[data].to_url(values[data]))
                except ValidationError:
                    return
                processed.add(data)
            else:
                add(url_quote(data, self.map.charset, safe='/:|'))
        domain_part, url = (u''.join(tmp)).split('|', 1)

        if append_unknown:
            query_vars = MultiDict(values)
            for key in processed:
                if key in query_vars:
                    del query_vars[key]

            if query_vars:
                url += '?' + url_encode(query_vars, self.map.charset,
                                        sort=self.map.sort_parameters,
                                        key=self.map.sort_key)

        return domain_part, url

    def provides_defaults_for(self, rule):
        """Check if this rule has defaults for a given rule.

        :internal:
        """
        return not self.build_only and self.defaults and \
               self.endpoint == rule.endpoint and self != rule and \
               self.arguments == rule.arguments

    def suitable_for(self, values, method=None):
        """Check if the dict of values has enough data for url generation.

        :internal:
        """
        # if a method was given explicitly and that method is not supported
        # by this rule, this rule is not suitable.
        if method is not None and self.methods is not None \
           and method not in self.methods:
            return False

        defaults = self.defaults or ()

        # all arguments required must be either in the defaults dict or
        # the value dictionary otherwise it's not suitable
        for key in self.arguments:
            if key not in defaults and key not in values:
                return False

        # in case defaults are given we ensure taht either the value was
        # skipped or the value is the same as the default value.
        if defaults:
            for key, value in defaults.iteritems():
                if key in values and value != values[key]:
                    return False

        return True

    def match_compare_key(self):
        """The match compare key for sorting.

        Current implementation:

        1.  rules without any arguments come first for performance
            reasons only as we expect them to match faster and some
            common ones usually don't have any arguments (index pages etc.)
        2.  The more complex rules come first so the second argument is the
            negative length of the number of weights.
        3.  lastly we order by the actual weights.

        :internal:
        """
        return bool(self.arguments), -len(self._weights), self._weights

    def build_compare_key(self):
        """The build compare key for sorting.

        :internal:
        """
        return self.alias and 1 or 0, -len(self.arguments), \
               -len(self.defaults or ())

    def __eq__(self, other):
        return self.__class__ is other.__class__ and \
               self._trace == other._trace

    def __ne__(self, other):
        return not self.__eq__(other)

    def __unicode__(self):
        return self.rule

    def __str__(self):
        charset = self.map is not None and self.map.charset or 'utf-8'
        return unicode(self).encode(charset)

    def __repr__(self):
        if self.map is None:
            return '<%s (unbound)>' % self.__class__.__name__
        charset = self.map is not None and self.map.charset or 'utf-8'
        tmp = []
        for is_dynamic, data in self._trace:
            if is_dynamic:
                tmp.append('<%s>' % data)
            else:
                tmp.append(data)
        return '<%s %r%s -> %s>' % (
            self.__class__.__name__,
            (u''.join(tmp).encode(charset)).lstrip('|'),
            self.methods is not None and ' (%s)' % \
                ', '.join(self.methods) or '',
            self.endpoint
        )


class BaseConverter(object):
    """Base class for all converters."""
    regex = '[^/]+'
    weight = 100

    def __init__(self, map):
        self.map = map

    def to_python(self, value):
        return value

    def to_url(self, value):
        return url_quote(value, self.map.charset)


class UnicodeConverter(BaseConverter):
    """This converter is the default converter and accepts any string but
    only one path segment.  Thus the string can not include a slash.

    This is the default validator.

    Example::

        Rule('/pages/<page>'),
        Rule('/<string(length=2):lang_code>')

    :param map: the :class:`Map`.
    :param minlength: the minimum length of the string.  Must be greater
                      or equal 1.
    :param maxlength: the maximum length of the string.
    :param length: the exact length of the string.
    """

    def __init__(self, map, minlength=1, maxlength=None, length=None):
        BaseConverter.__init__(self, map)
        if length is not None:
            length = '{%d}' % int(length)
        else:
            if maxlength is None:
                maxlength = ''
            else:
                maxlength = int(maxlength)
            length = '{%s,%s}' % (
                int(minlength),
                maxlength
            )
        self.regex = '[^/]' + length


class AnyConverter(BaseConverter):
    """Matches one of the items provided.  Items can either be Python
    identifiers or strings::

        Rule('/<any(about, help, imprint, class, "foo,bar"):page_name>')

    :param map: the :class:`Map`.
    :param items: this function accepts the possible items as positional
                  arguments.
    """

    def __init__(self, map, *items):
        BaseConverter.__init__(self, map)
        self.regex = '(?:%s)' % '|'.join([re.escape(x) for x in items])


class PathConverter(BaseConverter):
    """Like the default :class:`UnicodeConverter`, but it also matches
    slashes.  This is useful for wikis and similar applications::

        Rule('/<path:wikipage>')
        Rule('/<path:wikipage>/edit')

    :param map: the :class:`Map`.
    """
    regex = '[^/].*?'
    weight = 200


class NumberConverter(BaseConverter):
    """Baseclass for `IntegerConverter` and `FloatConverter`.

    :internal:
    """
    weight = 50

    def __init__(self, map, fixed_digits=0, min=None, max=None):
        BaseConverter.__init__(self, map)
        self.fixed_digits = fixed_digits
        self.min = min
        self.max = max

    def to_python(self, value):
        if (self.fixed_digits and len(value) != self.fixed_digits):
            raise ValidationError()
        value = self.num_convert(value)
        if (self.min is not None and value < self.min) or \
           (self.max is not None and value > self.max):
            raise ValidationError()
        return value

    def to_url(self, value):
        value = self.num_convert(value)
        if self.fixed_digits:
            value = ('%%0%sd' % self.fixed_digits) % value
        return str(value)


class IntegerConverter(NumberConverter):
    """This converter only accepts integer values::

        Rule('/page/<int:page>')

    This converter does not support negative values.

    :param map: the :class:`Map`.
    :param fixed_digits: the number of fixed digits in the URL.  If you set
                         this to ``4`` for example, the application will
                         only match if the url looks like ``/0001/``.  The
                         default is variable length.
    :param min: the minimal value.
    :param max: the maximal value.
    """
    regex = r'\d+'
    num_convert = int


class FloatConverter(NumberConverter):
    """This converter only accepts floating point values::

        Rule('/probability/<float:probability>')

    This converter does not support negative values.

    :param map: the :class:`Map`.
    :param min: the minimal value.
    :param max: the maximal value.
    """
    regex = r'\d+\.\d+'
    num_convert = float

    def __init__(self, map, min=None, max=None):
        NumberConverter.__init__(self, map, 0, min, max)


#: the default converter mapping for the map.
DEFAULT_CONVERTERS = {
    'default':          UnicodeConverter,
    'string':           UnicodeConverter,
    'any':              AnyConverter,
    'path':             PathConverter,
    'int':              IntegerConverter,
    'float':            FloatConverter
}


class Map(object):
    """The map class stores all the URL rules and some configuration
    parameters.  Some of the configuration values are only stored on the
    `Map` instance since those affect all rules, others are just defaults
    and can be overridden for each rule.  Note that you have to specify all
    arguments besides the `rules` as keyword arguments!

    :param rules: sequence of url rules for this map.
    :param default_subdomain: The default subdomain for rules without a
                              subdomain defined.
    :param charset: charset of the url. defaults to ``"utf-8"``
    :param strict_slashes: Take care of trailing slashes.
    :param redirect_defaults: This will redirect to the default rule if it
                              wasn't visited that way. This helps creating
                              unique URLs.
    :param converters: A dict of converters that adds additional converters
                       to the list of converters. If you redefine one
                       converter this will override the original one.
    :param sort_parameters: If set to `True` the url parameters are sorted.
                            See `url_encode` for more details.
    :param sort_key: The sort key function for `url_encode`.
    :param encoding_errors: the error method to use for decoding
    :param host_matching: if set to `True` it enables the host matching
                          feature and disables the subdomain one.  If
                          enabled the `host` parameter to rules is used
                          instead of the `subdomain` one.

    .. versionadded:: 0.5
        `sort_parameters` and `sort_key` was added.

    .. versionadded:: 0.7
        `encoding_errors` and `host_matching` was added.
    """

    #: .. versionadded:: 0.6
    #:    a dict of default converters to be used.
    default_converters = ImmutableDict(DEFAULT_CONVERTERS)

    def __init__(self, rules=None, default_subdomain='', charset='utf-8',
                 strict_slashes=True, redirect_defaults=True,
                 converters=None, sort_parameters=False, sort_key=None,
                 encoding_errors='replace', host_matching=False):
        self._rules = []
        self._rules_by_endpoint = {}
        self._remap = True

        self.default_subdomain = default_subdomain
        self.charset = charset
        self.encoding_errors = encoding_errors
        self.strict_slashes = strict_slashes
        self.redirect_defaults = redirect_defaults
        self.host_matching = host_matching

        self.converters = self.default_converters.copy()
        if converters:
            self.converters.update(converters)

        self.sort_parameters = sort_parameters
        self.sort_key = sort_key

        for rulefactory in rules or ():
            self.add(rulefactory)

    def is_endpoint_expecting(self, endpoint, *arguments):
        """Iterate over all rules and check if the endpoint expects
        the arguments provided.  This is for example useful if you have
        some URLs that expect a language code and others that do not and
        you want to wrap the builder a bit so that the current language
        code is automatically added if not provided but endpoints expect
        it.

        :param endpoint: the endpoint to check.
        :param arguments: this function accepts one or more arguments
                          as positional arguments.  Each one of them is
                          checked.
        """
        self.update()
        arguments = set(arguments)
        for rule in self._rules_by_endpoint[endpoint]:
            if arguments.issubset(rule.arguments):
                return True
        return False

    def iter_rules(self, endpoint=None):
        """Iterate over all rules or the rules of an endpoint.

        :param endpoint: if provided only the rules for that endpoint
                         are returned.
        :return: an iterator
        """
        self.update()
        if endpoint is not None:
            return iter(self._rules_by_endpoint[endpoint])
        return iter(self._rules)

    def add(self, rulefactory):
        """Add a new rule or factory to the map and bind it.  Requires that the
        rule is not bound to another map.

        :param rulefactory: a :class:`Rule` or :class:`RuleFactory`
        """
        for rule in rulefactory.get_rules(self):
            rule.bind(self)
            self._rules.append(rule)
            self._rules_by_endpoint.setdefault(rule.endpoint, []).append(rule)
        self._remap = True

    def bind(self, server_name, script_name=None, subdomain=None,
             url_scheme='http', default_method='GET', path_info=None,
             query_args=None):
        """Return a new :class:`MapAdapter` with the details specified to the
        call.  Note that `script_name` will default to ``'/'`` if not further
        specified or `None`.  The `server_name` at least is a requirement
        because the HTTP RFC requires absolute URLs for redirects and so all
        redirect exceptions raised by Werkzeug will contain the full canonical
        URL.

        If no path_info is passed to :meth:`match` it will use the default path
        info passed to bind.  While this doesn't really make sense for
        manual bind calls, it's useful if you bind a map to a WSGI
        environment which already contains the path info.

        `subdomain` will default to the `default_subdomain` for this map if
        no defined. If there is no `default_subdomain` you cannot use the
        subdomain feature.

        .. versionadded:: 0.7
           `query_args` added

        .. versionadded:: 0.8
           `query_args` can now also be a string.
        """
        server_name = server_name.lower()
        if self.host_matching:
            if subdomain is not None:
                raise RuntimeError('host matching enabled and a '
                                   'subdomain was provided')
        elif subdomain is None:
            subdomain = self.default_subdomain
        if script_name is None:
            script_name = '/'
        if isinstance(server_name, unicode):
            server_name = server_name.encode('idna')
        return MapAdapter(self, server_name, script_name, subdomain,
                          url_scheme, path_info, default_method, query_args)

    def bind_to_environ(self, environ, server_name=None, subdomain=None):
        """Like :meth:`bind` but you can pass it an WSGI environment and it
        will fetch the information from that dictionary.  Note that because of
        limitations in the protocol there is no way to get the current
        subdomain and real `server_name` from the environment.  If you don't
        provide it, Werkzeug will use `SERVER_NAME` and `SERVER_PORT` (or
        `HTTP_HOST` if provided) as used `server_name` with disabled subdomain
        feature.

        If `subdomain` is `None` but an environment and a server name is
        provided it will calculate the current subdomain automatically.
        Example: `server_name` is ``'example.com'`` and the `SERVER_NAME`
        in the wsgi `environ` is ``'staging.dev.example.com'`` the calculated
        subdomain will be ``'staging.dev'``.

        If the object passed as environ has an environ attribute, the value of
        this attribute is used instead.  This allows you to pass request
        objects.  Additionally `PATH_INFO` added as a default of the
        :class:`MapAdapter` so that you don't have to pass the path info to
        the match method.

        .. versionchanged:: 0.5
            previously this method accepted a bogus `calculate_subdomain`
            parameter that did not have any effect.  It was removed because
            of that.

        .. versionchanged:: 0.8
           This will no longer raise a ValueError when an unexpected server
           name was passed.

        :param environ: a WSGI environment.
        :param server_name: an optional server name hint (see above).
        :param subdomain: optionally the current subdomain (see above).
        """
        environ = _get_environ(environ)
        if server_name is None:
            if 'HTTP_HOST' in environ:
                server_name = environ['HTTP_HOST']
            else:
                server_name = environ['SERVER_NAME']
                if (environ['wsgi.url_scheme'], environ['SERVER_PORT']) not \
                   in (('https', '443'), ('http', '80')):
                    server_name += ':' + environ['SERVER_PORT']
        elif subdomain is None and not self.host_matching:
            server_name = server_name.lower()
            if 'HTTP_HOST' in environ:
                wsgi_server_name = environ.get('HTTP_HOST')
            else:
                wsgi_server_name = environ.get('SERVER_NAME')
                if (environ['wsgi.url_scheme'], environ['SERVER_PORT']) not \
                   in (('https', '443'), ('http', '80')):
                    wsgi_server_name += ':' + environ['SERVER_PORT']
            wsgi_server_name = wsgi_server_name.lower()
            cur_server_name = wsgi_server_name.split('.')
            real_server_name = server_name.split('.')
            offset = -len(real_server_name)
            if cur_server_name[offset:] != real_server_name:
                # This can happen even with valid configs if the server was
                # accesssed directly by IP address under some situations.
                # Instead of raising an exception like in Werkzeug 0.7 or
                # earlier we go by an invalid subdomain which will result
                # in a 404 error on matching.
                subdomain = '<invalid>'
            else:
                subdomain = '.'.join(filter(None, cur_server_name[:offset]))
        return Map.bind(self, server_name, environ.get('SCRIPT_NAME'),
                        subdomain, environ['wsgi.url_scheme'],
                        environ['REQUEST_METHOD'], environ.get('PATH_INFO'),
                        query_args=environ.get('QUERY_STRING', ''))

    def update(self):
        """Called before matching and building to keep the compiled rules
        in the correct order after things changed.
        """
        if self._remap:
            self._rules.sort(key=lambda x: x.match_compare_key())
            for rules in self._rules_by_endpoint.itervalues():
                rules.sort(key=lambda x: x.build_compare_key())
            self._remap = False

    def __repr__(self):
        rules = self.iter_rules()
        return '%s(%s)' % (self.__class__.__name__, pformat(list(rules)))


class MapAdapter(object):
    """Returned by :meth:`Map.bind` or :meth:`Map.bind_to_environ` and does
    the URL matching and building based on runtime information.
    """

    def __init__(self, map, server_name, script_name, subdomain,
                 url_scheme, path_info, default_method, query_args=None):
        self.map = map
        self.server_name = server_name
        if not script_name.endswith('/'):
            script_name += '/'
        self.script_name = script_name
        self.subdomain = subdomain
        self.url_scheme = url_scheme
        self.path_info = path_info or u''
        self.default_method = default_method
        self.query_args = query_args

    def dispatch(self, view_func, path_info=None, method=None,
                 catch_http_exceptions=False):
        """Does the complete dispatching process.  `view_func` is called with
        the endpoint and a dict with the values for the view.  It should
        look up the view function, call it, and return a response object
        or WSGI application.  http exceptions are not caught by default
        so that applications can display nicer error messages by just
        catching them by hand.  If you want to stick with the default
        error messages you can pass it ``catch_http_exceptions=True`` and
        it will catch the http exceptions.

        Here a small example for the dispatch usage::

            from werkzeug.wrappers import Request, Response
            from werkzeug.wsgi import responder
            from werkzeug.routing import Map, Rule

            def on_index(request):
                return Response('Hello from the index')

            url_map = Map([Rule('/', endpoint='index')])
            views = {'index': on_index}

            @responder
            def application(environ, start_response):
                request = Request(environ)
                urls = url_map.bind_to_environ(environ)
                return urls.dispatch(lambda e, v: views[e](request, **v),
                                     catch_http_exceptions=True)

        Keep in mind that this method might return exception objects, too, so
        use :class:`Response.force_type` to get a response object.

        :param view_func: a function that is called with the endpoint as
                          first argument and the value dict as second.  Has
                          to dispatch to the actual view function with this
                          information.  (see above)
        :param path_info: the path info to use for matching.  Overrides the
                          path info specified on binding.
        :param method: the HTTP method used for matching.  Overrides the
                       method specified on binding.
        :param catch_http_exceptions: set to `True` to catch any of the
                                      werkzeug :class:`HTTPException`\s.
        """
        try:
            try:
                endpoint, args = self.match(path_info, method)
            except RequestRedirect, e:
                return e
            return view_func(endpoint, args)
        except HTTPException, e:
            if catch_http_exceptions:
                return e
            raise

    def match(self, path_info=None, method=None, return_rule=False,
              query_args=None):
        """The usage is simple: you just pass the match method the current
        path info as well as the method (which defaults to `GET`).  The
        following things can then happen:

        - you receive a `NotFound` exception that indicates that no URL is
          matching.  A `NotFound` exception is also a WSGI application you
          can call to get a default page not found page (happens to be the
          same object as `werkzeug.exceptions.NotFound`)

        - you receive a `MethodNotAllowed` exception that indicates that there
          is a match for this URL but not for the current request method.
          This is useful for RESTful applications.

        - you receive a `RequestRedirect` exception with a `new_url`
          attribute.  This exception is used to notify you about a request
          Werkzeug requests from your WSGI application.  This is for example the
          case if you request ``/foo`` although the correct URL is ``/foo/``
          You can use the `RequestRedirect` instance as response-like object
          similar to all other subclasses of `HTTPException`.

        - you get a tuple in the form ``(endpoint, arguments)`` if there is
          a match (unless `return_rule` is True, in which case you get a tuple
          in the form ``(rule, arguments)``)

        If the path info is not passed to the match method the default path
        info of the map is used (defaults to the root URL if not defined
        explicitly).

        All of the exceptions raised are subclasses of `HTTPException` so they
        can be used as WSGI responses.  The will all render generic error or
        redirect pages.

        Here is a small example for matching:

        >>> m = Map([
        ...     Rule('/', endpoint='index'),
        ...     Rule('/downloads/', endpoint='downloads/index'),
        ...     Rule('/downloads/<int:id>', endpoint='downloads/show')
        ... ])
        >>> urls = m.bind("example.com", "/")
        >>> urls.match("/", "GET")
        ('index', {})
        >>> urls.match("/downloads/42")
        ('downloads/show', {'id': 42})

        And here is what happens on redirect and missing URLs:

        >>> urls.match("/downloads")
        Traceback (most recent call last):
          ...
        RequestRedirect: http://example.com/downloads/
        >>> urls.match("/missing")
        Traceback (most recent call last):
          ...
        NotFound: 404 Not Found

        :param path_info: the path info to use for matching.  Overrides the
                          path info specified on binding.
        :param method: the HTTP method used for matching.  Overrides the
                       method specified on binding.
        :param return_rule: return the rule that matched instead of just the
                            endpoint (defaults to `False`).
        :param query_args: optional query arguments that are used for
                           automatic redirects as string or dictionary.  It's
                           currently not possible to use the query arguments
                           for URL matching.

        .. versionadded:: 0.6
           `return_rule` was added.

        .. versionadded:: 0.7
           `query_args` was added.

        .. versionchanged:: 0.8
           `query_args` can now also be a string.
        """
        self.map.update()
        if path_info is None:
            path_info = self.path_info
        if not isinstance(path_info, unicode):
            path_info = path_info.decode(self.map.charset,
                                         self.map.encoding_errors)
        if query_args is None:
            query_args = self.query_args
        method = (method or self.default_method).upper()

        path = u'%s|/%s' % (self.map.host_matching and self.server_name or
                            self.subdomain, path_info.lstrip('/'))

        have_match_for = set()
        for rule in self.map._rules:
            try:
                rv = rule.match(path)
            except RequestSlash:
                raise RequestRedirect(self.make_redirect_url(
                    path_info + '/', query_args))
            except RequestAliasRedirect, e:
                raise RequestRedirect(self.make_alias_redirect_url(
                    path, rule.endpoint, e.matched_values, method, query_args))
            if rv is None:
                continue
            if rule.methods is not None and method not in rule.methods:
                have_match_for.update(rule.methods)
                continue

            if self.map.redirect_defaults:
                redirect_url = self.get_default_redirect(rule, method, rv,
                                                         query_args)
                if redirect_url is not None:
                    raise RequestRedirect(redirect_url)

            if rule.redirect_to is not None:
                if isinstance(rule.redirect_to, basestring):
                    def _handle_match(match):
                        value = rv[match.group(1)]
                        return rule._converters[match.group(1)].to_url(value)
                    redirect_url = _simple_rule_re.sub(_handle_match,
                                                       rule.redirect_to)
                else:
                    redirect_url = rule.redirect_to(self, **rv)
                raise RequestRedirect(str(urljoin('%s://%s%s%s' % (
                    self.url_scheme,
                    self.subdomain and self.subdomain + '.' or '',
                    self.server_name,
                    self.script_name
                ), redirect_url)))

            if return_rule:
                return rule, rv
            else:
                return rule.endpoint, rv

        if have_match_for:
            raise MethodNotAllowed(valid_methods=list(have_match_for))
        raise NotFound()

    def test(self, path_info=None, method=None):
        """Test if a rule would match.  Works like `match` but returns `True`
        if the URL matches, or `False` if it does not exist.

        :param path_info: the path info to use for matching.  Overrides the
                          path info specified on binding.
        :param method: the HTTP method used for matching.  Overrides the
                       method specified on binding.
        """
        try:
            self.match(path_info, method)
        except RequestRedirect:
            pass
        except HTTPException:
            return False
        return True

    def allowed_methods(self, path_info=None):
        """Returns the valid methods that match for a given path.

        .. versionadded:: 0.7
        """
        try:
            self.match(path_info, method='--')
        except MethodNotAllowed, e:
            return e.valid_methods
        except HTTPException, e:
            pass
        return []

    def get_host(self, domain_part):
        """Figures out the full host name for the given domain part.  The
        domain part is a subdomain in case host matching is disabled or
        a full host name.
        """
        if self.map.host_matching:
            if domain_part is None:
                return self.server_name
            return domain_part
        subdomain = domain_part
        if subdomain is None:
            subdomain = self.subdomain
        return (subdomain and subdomain + '.' or '') + self.server_name

    def get_default_redirect(self, rule, method, values, query_args):
        """A helper that returns the URL to redirect to if it finds one.
        This is used for default redirecting only.

        :internal:
        """
        assert self.map.redirect_defaults
        for r in self.map._rules_by_endpoint[rule.endpoint]:
            # every rule that comes after this one, including ourself
            # has a lower priority for the defaults.  We order the ones
            # with the highest priority up for building.
            if r is rule:
                break
            if r.provides_defaults_for(rule) and \
               r.suitable_for(values, method):
                values.update(r.defaults)
                domain_part, path = r.build(values)
                return self.make_redirect_url(
                    path, query_args, domain_part=domain_part)

    def encode_query_args(self, query_args):
        if not isinstance(query_args, basestring):
            query_args = url_encode(query_args, self.map.charset)
        return query_args

    def make_redirect_url(self, path_info, query_args=None, domain_part=None):
        """Creates a redirect URL.

        :internal:
        """
        suffix = ''
        if query_args:
            suffix = '?' + self.encode_query_args(query_args)
        return str('%s://%s/%s%s' % (
            self.url_scheme,
            self.get_host(domain_part),
            posixpath.join(self.script_name[:-1].lstrip('/'),
                           url_quote(path_info.lstrip('/'), self.map.charset)),
            suffix
        ))

    def make_alias_redirect_url(self, path, endpoint, values, method, query_args):
        """Internally called to make an alias redirect URL."""
        url = self.build(endpoint, values, method, append_unknown=False,
                         force_external=True)
        if query_args:
            url += '?' + self.encode_query_args(query_args)
        assert url != path, 'detected invalid alias setting.  No canonical ' \
               'URL found'
        return url

    def _partial_build(self, endpoint, values, method, append_unknown):
        """Helper for :meth:`build`.  Returns subdomain and path for the
        rule that accepts this endpoint, values and method.

        :internal:
        """
        # in case the method is none, try with the default method first
        if method is None:
            rv = self._partial_build(endpoint, values, self.default_method,
                                     append_unknown)
            if rv is not None:
                return rv

        # default method did not match or a specific method is passed,
        # check all and go with first result.
        for rule in self.map._rules_by_endpoint.get(endpoint, ()):
            if rule.suitable_for(values, method):
                rv = rule.build(values, append_unknown)
                if rv is not None:
                    return rv

    def build(self, endpoint, values=None, method=None, force_external=False,
              append_unknown=True):
        """Building URLs works pretty much the other way round.  Instead of
        `match` you call `build` and pass it the endpoint and a dict of
        arguments for the placeholders.

        The `build` function also accepts an argument called `force_external`
        which, if you set it to `True` will force external URLs. Per default
        external URLs (include the server name) will only be used if the
        target URL is on a different subdomain.

        >>> m = Map([
        ...     Rule('/', endpoint='index'),
        ...     Rule('/downloads/', endpoint='downloads/index'),
        ...     Rule('/downloads/<int:id>', endpoint='downloads/show')
        ... ])
        >>> urls = m.bind("example.com", "/")
        >>> urls.build("index", {})
        '/'
        >>> urls.build("downloads/show", {'id': 42})
        '/downloads/42'
        >>> urls.build("downloads/show", {'id': 42}, force_external=True)
        'http://example.com/downloads/42'

        Because URLs cannot contain non ASCII data you will always get
        bytestrings back.  Non ASCII characters are urlencoded with the
        charset defined on the map instance.

        Additional values are converted to unicode and appended to the URL as
        URL querystring parameters:

        >>> urls.build("index", {'q': 'My Searchstring'})
        '/?q=My+Searchstring'

        If a rule does not exist when building a `BuildError` exception is
        raised.

        The build method accepts an argument called `method` which allows you
        to specify the method you want to have an URL built for if you have
        different methods for the same endpoint specified.

        .. versionadded:: 0.6
           the `append_unknown` parameter was added.

        :param endpoint: the endpoint of the URL to build.
        :param values: the values for the URL to build.  Unhandled values are
                       appended to the URL as query parameters.
        :param method: the HTTP method for the rule if there are different
                       URLs for different methods on the same endpoint.
        :param force_external: enforce full canonical external URLs.
        :param append_unknown: unknown parameters are appended to the generated
                               URL as query string argument.  Disable this
                               if you want the builder to ignore those.
        """
        self.map.update()
        if values:
            if isinstance(values, MultiDict):
                valueiter = values.iteritems(multi=True)
            else:
                valueiter = values.iteritems()
            values = dict((k, v) for k, v in valueiter if v is not None)
        else:
            values = {}

        rv = self._partial_build(endpoint, values, method, append_unknown)
        if rv is None:
            raise BuildError(endpoint, values, method)
        domain_part, path = rv

        host = self.get_host(domain_part)

        # shortcut this.
        if not force_external and (
            (self.map.host_matching and host == self.server_name) or
            (not self.map.host_matching and domain_part == self.subdomain)):
            return str(urljoin(self.script_name, './' + path.lstrip('/')))
        return str('%s://%s%s/%s' % (
            self.url_scheme,
            host,
            self.script_name[:-1],
            path.lstrip('/')
        ))