What are the recommendations for html <base> tag?

I've never seen <base> HTML tag actually used anywhere before. Are there pitfalls to its use that means I should avoid it?

The fact that I have never noticed it in use on a modern production site (or any site) makes me leery of it, though it seems like it might have useful applications for simplifying links on my site.


Edit

After using the base tag for a few weeks, I did end up finding some major gotchas with using the base tag that make it much less desirable than it first appeared. Essentially, the changes to href='#topic' and href='' under the base tag are very incompatible with their default behavior, and this change from the default behavior could easily make third party libraries outside of your control very unreliable in unexpected ways, since they will logically depend on the default behavior. Often the changes are subtle and lead to not-immediately-obvious problems when dealing with a large codebase. I have since created an answer detailing the issues that I experienced below. So test the link results for yourself before you commit to a widespread deployment of <base> , is my new advice!


Before deciding whether to use the <base> tag or not, you need to understand how it works, what it can be used for and what the implications are and finally outweigh the advantages/disadvantages.


The <base> tag mainly eases creating relative links in templating languages as you don't need to worry about the current context in every link.

You can do for example

<base href="${host}/${context}/${language}/">
...
<link rel="stylesheet" href="css/style.css" />
<script src="js/script.js"></script>
...
<a href="home">home</a>
<a href="faq">faq</a>
<a href="contact">contact</a>
...
<img src="img/logo.png" />

instead of

<link rel="stylesheet" href="/${context}/${language}/css/style.css" />
<script src="/${context}/${language}/js/script.js"></script>
...
<a href="/${context}/${language}/home">home</a>
<a href="/${context}/${language}/faq">faq</a>
<a href="/${context}/${language}/contact">contact</a>
...
<img src="/${context}/${language}/img/logo.png" />

Please note that the <base href> value ends with a slash, otherwise it will be interpreted relative to the last path.


As to browser compatibility, this causes only problems in IE. The <base> tag is in HTML specified as not having an end tag </base> , so it's legit to just use <base> without an end tag. However IE6 thinks otherwise and the entire content after the <base> tag is in such case placed as child of the <base> element in the HTML DOM tree. This can cause at first sight unexplainable problems in Javascript/jQuery/CSS, ie the elements being completely unreachable in specific selectors like html>body , until you discover in the HTML DOM inspector that there should be a base (and head ) in between.

A common IE6 fix is using an IE conditional comment to include the end tag:

<base href="http://example.com/en/"><!--[if lte IE 6]></base><![endif]-->

If you don't care about the W3 Validator, or when you're on HTML5 already, then you can just self-close it, every webbrowser supports it anyway:

<base href="http://example.com/en/" />

Closing the <base> tag also instantly fixes the insanity of IE6 on WinXP SP3 to request <script> resources with an relative URI in src in an infinite loop.

Another potential IE problem will manifest when you use a relative URI in the <base> tag, such as <base href="//example.com/somefolder/"> or <base href="/somefolder/"> . This will fail in IE6/7/8. This is however not exactly browser's fault; using relative URIs in the <base> tag is namely at its own wrong. The HTML4 specification stated that it should be an absolute URI, thus starting with the http:// or https:// scheme. This has been dropped in HTML5 specification. So if you use HTML5 and target HTML5 compatible browsers only, then you should be all fine by using a relative URI in the <base> tag.


As to using named/hash fragment anchors like <a href="#anchor"> , query string anchors like <a href="?foo=bar"> and path fragment anchors like <a href=";foo=bar"> , with the <base> tag you're basically declaring all relative links relative to it, including those kind of anchors. None of the relative links are relative to the current request URI anymore (as would happen without the <base> tag). This may in first place be confusing for starters. To construct those anchors the right way, you basically need to include the URI,

<a href="${uri}#anchor">hash fragment</a>
<a href="${uri}?foo=bar">query string</a>
<a href="${uri};foo=bar">path fragment</a>

where ${uri} basically translates to $_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'] in PHP, ${pageContext.request.requestURI} in JSP, and #{request.requestURI} in JSF. Noted should be that MVC frameworks like JSF have tags reducing all this boilerplate and removing the need for <base> . See also ao What URL to use to link / navigate to other JSF pages.


Breakdown of the effects of the base tag:

The base tag appears to have some non-intuitive effects, and I recommend being aware of the outcomes and testing them for yourself before relying on <base> ! Since I've discovered them after trying to use the base tag to handle local sites with differing urls and only found out the problematic effects after, to my dismay, I feel compelled to create this summary of these potential pitfalls for others.

I'll use a base tag of: <base href="http://www.example.com/other-subdirectory/"> as my example in the cases below, and will pretend that the page that the code is on is http://localsite.com/original-subdirectory

Major:

No links or named anchors or blank hrefs will point to the original subdirectory, unless that is made explicit: The base tag makes everything link differently, including same-page anchor links to the base tag's url instead, eg:

  • <a href='#top-of-page' title='Some title'>A link to the top of the page via a named anchor</a>
    becomes
    <a href='http://www.example.com/other-subdirectory/#top-of-page' title='Some title'>A link to an #named-anchor on the completely different base page</a>

  • <a href='?update=1' title='Some title'>A link to this page</a>
    becomes
    <a href='http://www.example.com/other-subdirectory/?update=1' title='Some title'>A link to the base tag's page instead</a>

  • With some work, you can fix these problems on links that you have control over, by explicitly specifying that these links link to the page that they are on, but when you add third-party libraries to the mix that rely on the standard behavior, it can easily cause a big mess.

    Minor:

    IE6 fix that requires conditional comments: Requires conditional comments for ie6 to avoid screwing up the dom hierarchy, ie <base href="http://www.example.com/"><!--[if lte IE 6]></base><![endif]--> as BalusC mentions in his answer above.

    So overall, the major problem makes use tricky unless you have full editing control over every link, and as I originally feared, that makes it more trouble than it's worth. Now I have to go off and rewrite all my uses of it! :p

    Related links of testing for issues when using "fragments"/hashes:

    http://www.w3.org/People/mimasa/test/base/

    http://www.w3.org/People/mimasa/test/base/results


    Edit by Izzy: For all of you running into the same confusion as me concerning the comments:

    I've just tested it out myself, with the following results:

  • trailing slash or not, makes no difference to the examples given here ( #anchor and ?query would simply be appended to the specified <BASE> ).
  • It however makes a difference for relative links: omitting the trailing slash, other.html and dir/other.html would start at the DOCUMENT_ROOT with the given example [per which browser?], /other-subdirectory being (correctly) treated as file and thus omitted [per which browser?].
  • So for relative links, BASE works fine with the moved page – while anchors and ?queries would need the file name be specified explicitly (with BASE having a trailing slash, or the last element not corresponding to the name of the file it's used in).

    Think of it as <BASE> replacing the full URL to the file itself (and not the directory it resides in), and you'll get things right. Assuming the file used in this example was other-subdirectory/test.html (after it moved to the new location), the correct specification should have been:

    <base href="http://www.example.com/other-subdirectory/test.html ">

    – et voila, everything works as expected: #anchor , ?query , other.html , very/other.html , /completely/other.html .


    Well, wait a minute. I don't think the base tag deserves this bad reputation.

    The nice thing about the base tag is that it enables you to do complex URL rewrites with less hassle.

    Here's an example. You decide to move http://example.com/product/category/thisproduct to http://example.com/product/thisproduct. You change your .htaccess file to rewrite the first URL to the second URL.

    With the base tag in place, you do your .htaccess rewrite and that's it. No problem. But without the base tag, all of your relative links will break.

    URL rewrites are often necessary, because tweaking them can help your site's architecture and search engine visibility. True, you'll need workarounds for the "#" and '' problems that folks mentioned. But the base tag deserves a place in the toolkit.

    链接地址: http://www.djcxy.com/p/89132.html

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