/* eslint-disable import/prefer-default-export */ // This is a modified version of the file-uri-to-path package: // // - It removes the dependency to the "path" package, which wouldn't work with // React Native. // // - It always returns paths with forward slashes "/". This is normally handled // properly everywhere. // // - Adds the "platform" parameter to optionally return paths with "\" for win32 function fileUriToPath_(uri: string, platform: string) { const sep = '/'; if ( typeof uri !== 'string' || uri.length <= 7 || uri.substring(0, 7) !== 'file://' ) { throw new TypeError( 'must pass in a file:// URI to convert to a file path', ); } const rest = decodeURI(uri.substring(7)); const firstSlash = rest.indexOf('/'); let host = rest.substring(0, firstSlash); let path = rest.substring(firstSlash + 1); // 2. Scheme Definition // As a special case, can be the string "localhost" or the empty // string; this is interpreted as "the machine from which the URL is // being interpreted". if (host === 'localhost') { host = ''; } if (host) { host = sep + sep + host; } // 3.2 Drives, drive letters, mount points, file system root // Drive letters are mapped into the top of a file URI in various ways, // depending on the implementation; some applications substitute // vertical bar ("|") for the colon after the drive letter, yielding // "file:///c|/tmp/test.txt". In some cases, the colon is left // unchanged, as in "file:///c:/tmp/test.txt". In other cases, the // colon is simply omitted, as in "file:///c/tmp/test.txt". path = path.replace(/^(.+)\|/, '$1:'); // for Windows, we need to invert the path separators from what a URI uses // if (sep === '\\') { // path = path.replace(/\//g, '\\'); // } if (/^.+:/.test(path)) { // has Windows drive at beginning of path } else { // unix path… path = sep + path; } if (platform === 'win32') { return (host + path).replace(/\//g, '\\'); } else { return host + path; } } export const fileUriToPath = (path: string, platform = 'linux') => { const output = fileUriToPath_(path, platform); // The file-uri-to-path module converts Windows path such as // // file://c:/autoexec.bat => \\c:\autoexec.bat // // Probably because a file:// that starts with only two slashes is not // quite valid. If we use three slashes, it works: // // file:///c:/autoexec.bat => c:\autoexec.bat // // However there are various places in the app where we can find // paths with only two slashes because paths are often constructed // as `file://${resourcePath}` - which works in all OSes except // Windows. // // So here we introduce a special case - if we detect that we have // an invalid Windows path that starts with \\x:, we just remove // the first two backslashes. // // https://github.com/laurent22/joplin/issues/5693 if (output.match(/^\/\/[a-zA-Z]:/)) { return output.substr(2); } return output; }; export const isDataUrl = (path: string) => { return path.startsWith('data:'); }; export const isLink = (text: string) => { if (!text) return false; const linkRegex = /^(https?|file|joplin):\/\/[^)\s]+$/; return !!text.match(linkRegex); };