Returns the path from an FTP
URI
.
RFC 1738 specifically states that the path for an FTP
URI
does not include the / which separates the URI
path from the URI
host. Example:
ftp://ftp.example.com/pub/ruby
The above URI
indicates that the client should connect to ftp.example.com then cd to pub/ruby from the initial login directory.
If you want to cd to an absolute directory, you must include an escaped / (%2F) in the path. Example:
ftp://ftp.example.com/%2Fpub/ruby
This method will then return “/pub/ruby”.
Gets the hostname of address
from the hosts file.
Gets all hostnames for address
from the hosts file.
Gets the hostname for address
from the DNS
resolver.
address
must be a Resolv::IPv4
, Resolv::IPv6
or a String
. Retrieved name will be a Resolv::DNS::Name
.
Gets all hostnames for address
from the DNS
resolver.
address
must be a Resolv::IPv4
, Resolv::IPv6
or a String
. Retrieved names will be Resolv::DNS::Name
instances.
This method retrieves the name of the notation.
Method
contributed by Henrik Martensson
FIXME This probably won’t work properly
Name of the gem
The name of the unresolved dependency
Extract the host part of the URI
and unwrap brackets for IPv6 addresses.
This method is the same as URI::Generic#host
except brackets for IPv6 (and future IP) addresses are removed.
uri = URI("http://[::1]/bar") uri.hostname #=> "::1" uri.host #=> "[::1]"
Sets the host part of the URI
as the argument with brackets for IPv6 addresses.
This method is the same as URI::Generic#host=
except the argument can be a bare IPv6 address.
uri = URI("http://foo/bar") uri.hostname = "::1" uri.to_s #=> "http://[::1]/bar"
If the argument seems to be an IPv6 address, it is wrapped with brackets.
v
Public setter for the path component v
(with validation).
See also URI::Generic.check_path
.
require 'uri' uri = URI.parse("http://my.example.com/pub/files") uri.path = "/faq/" uri.to_s #=> "http://my.example.com/faq/"
Returns the conversion path of ec.
The result is an array of conversions.
ec = Encoding::Converter.new("ISO-8859-1", "EUC-JP", crlf_newline: true) p ec.convpath #=> [[#<Encoding:ISO-8859-1>, #<Encoding:UTF-8>], # [#<Encoding:UTF-8>, #<Encoding:EUC-JP>], # "crlf_newline"]
Each element of the array is a pair of encodings or a string. A pair means an encoding conversion. A string means a decorator.
In the above example, [#<Encoding:ISO-8859-1>,
Sets the name and the expanded name
The server hostname
The server hostname