An implementation for Ant-style path patterns.
Part of this mapping code has been kindly borrowed from Apache Ant and Spring Framework AntPathMatcher.
The mapping matches URLs using the following rules:
?
matches one character*
matches zero or more characters**
matches zero or more directories in a path{spring:[a-z]+}
matches the regexp[a-z]+
as a path variable named "spring"
Examples
com/t?st.jsp
— matches com/test.jsp but also com/tast.jsp or com/txst.jspcom/*.jsp
— matches all .jsp files in the com directorycom/**/test.jsp
— matches all test.jsp files underneath the com pathorg/springframework/**/*.jsp
— matches all .jsp files underneath the org/springframework pathorg/**/servlet/bla.jsp
— matches org/springframework/servlet/bla.jsp but also org/springframework/testing/servlet/bla.jsp and org/servlet/bla.jspcom/{filename:\\w+}.jsp
will match com/test.jsp and assign the value test to the filename variable
Note: a pattern and a path must both be absolute or must both be relative in order for the two to match. Therefore it is recommended that users of this implementation to sanitize patterns in order to prefix them with "/" as it makes sense in the context in which they're used.
npm install @howiefh/ant-path-matcher --save
import AntPathMatcher from '@howiefh/ant-path-matcher';
var pathMatcher = new AntPathMatcher();
pathMatcher.match("/?", "/a");
pathMatcher.match("test/*", "test/t");
pathMatcher.match("/**", "/testing/testing");
pathMatcher.match("/{bla}.*", "/testing.html");