Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: hostparse
Version: 0.0.2
Summary: A command-line client for URL and hostname swizzling 
Home-page: https://github.com/0x3a/hostparse
Author: Yonathan Klijnsma
Author-email: admin@0x3a.com
License: UNKNOWN
Description: # hostparse
        `hostparse` - A command-line client for URL and hostname swizzling
        
        ## Usage
        `hostparse` installs as a commandline utility and takes input from stdin. In essence hostparse has a few simple parseable items it can extract from a URL. This is the full list of items:
        
        * scheme
        * username
        * password
        * subdomain
        * domain
        * hostname
        * tld
        * port
        * path
        * params
        * query
        * fragment
        
        These items can be used as 'swizzling' operators seperated by a comma (`,`). For example, lets say the input contains a url from which you want to extract just the registered domain with its tld you can do:
        
        ```
        hostparse domain,tld
        ```
        
        Now what is neat with these items is that the tool will match the shortest match without duplicates. This means that instead of typing `tld` you can also type `tl` or even `t` as there are no other items that would conflict. The same query as before can also be written as:
        
        ```
        hostparse d,t
        ```
        
        The only thing to be careful of is the match, for example you can't use `p` for `port` as it will also match other items (the tool will warn you about this and simply return without processing data). You have to get the right match, `po` will work for `ports` however `pa` won't work woth `path` as it will also match `params` which means you have to use `pat` for path.
        
        Additionally the data the tool outputs uses a delimiter based on the items you choose, so if you choose `domain` and `tld` it will be outputed as: `<domain>.<tld>`. You can change this delimiter value with the `-d` operator after you specify the items to filter out. If you don't want a delimiter you can specify it as `-d''`.
        
        One extra thing to point out: the order of the items you specify is also how they are represented in the output.
        
        ## Bugs & Features
        
        Feel free to open issues for features or bugs you've found or do a pull request and you will be rewarded somewhere later in life for it.
        
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
