Read this post and wrote a simple Tampermonkey script as a solution.

// ==UserScript==
// @name         Fix community link
// @version      0.1
// @description  try to take over the world!
// @match        https://sh.itjust.works/post/*
// ==/UserScript==

(function() {
    'use strict';
    const postLinks = document.getElementById("postContent").querySelectorAll("a:not(.community-link)") // get every links that is NOT a community link

    const fixLink = (aTags) => {
        for (let aTag of aTags) {
            const isCommunityLink = aTag.pathname.startsWith("/c/");
            aTag.href = isCommunityLink?aTag.pathname + "@" + aTag.host:aTag.href
        };
    }

    fixLink(postLinks)

    const comments = document.getElementsByClassName("comment-content");

    for (let comment of comments) {
        let commentLinks = comment.querySelectorAll("a:not(.community-link)");
        fixLink(commentLinks)
    }
})();

Any advice? I especially hate the fact that the way to check if it’s a link for lemmy community is through pathname but I thought there’s can’t be a real solution besides listing all the lemmy instances or actually making a request somehow.

Any inputs are welcome!

Can you provide an example URL that breaks this solution?

Oh man I was hoping you’d ask because URLs are way worse than people imagine and that’s still not even a tenth of what emails can do

HtTpS://user:pw@lemdro.id:443 is a valid url to lemdro.id and should match but will not

Http://maliciouswebsite.to/?q=http://lemdro.id will match but should not

To give you an idea of how bad this is I suggest anyone tell me if their lemmy app parsed those properly because Thunder treats the 1st one as an email and Jerboa thinks both are URLs

You also have the instances that have a valid address with www in front of them for old school internet habits, there’s urls that can have quotes in them, urls with chinese characters or russian characters that are both valid in their encoding but have a canonical form in ASCII

It’s a mess, and the correct way to do this is still faster than your regex in the end which is crazy

HtTpS://user:pw@lemdro.id:443 is a valid url to lemdro.id and should match but will not

Well that one:

  • technically shouldn’t match, because it’s not a community URL
  • is not the form I expect and want to be using for this case
  • may actually work (if it were a real community link, which again, it’s not), because after authentication I think the browser strips the credentials

Http://maliciouswebsite.to/?q=http://lemdro.id will match but should not

No, it does not match.


AFAICT, this solution is working properly, but if you can find a URL that breaks it, please let me know.

Lmao ah yes, one of those

If you’re not convinced with this you never will

You can just wrap your var with “new URL()” and have something faster, correct and easier to read, but I’m guessing you’ll change your ways silently in a few years when you’ve forgotten about this interaction and managed to convince yourself it was your own idea!

Until then i guess you can add /c/whatev at the end of my two examples and find something else to criticize and decide not to support

I’m not trying to be combative, I’m trying to understand. I’d like to see the failure in action so I can appreciate and pursue the proposed solution.

But when I added the community bit to the first URL, the browser resolved it and stripped the credentials, so the resulting URL matched. But the example credentials weren’t real so it’s not a great test; if there’s an real example I can test, please share it. Though I don’t see why I’d auth to an instance just to view it from a different instance.

When I added the community bit to the second URL, it was not a match, as it shouldn’t be. The pattern must match the entire URL.

You can find it in action on regex101 with the regex indeed matching the query string in the maliciouswebsite and not matching even just something with the port and no user/password

It is valid (just weird & not recommended) to give a user:pw combo to a website that doesn’t ask for one in the headers. Browsers stripping it off is a different thing

The sheer number of things you have to take into account to properly parse a URL should convince you to not use regexes for it

The fact that it’s less code, more correct, faster and more readable to use new URL() should also be enough to convince you to not use regexes

I meant to communicate that the Redirector addon uses the given pattern to see if the entire URL string matches, not part of it. So the malicious URL does not match.

I’m wondering if there’s a real URL for which the Redirector approach will not work.

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