Provided by: libhttp-browserdetect-perl_3.35-1_all bug

NAME

       HTTP::BrowserDetect - Determine Web browser, version, and platform from an HTTP user agent
       string

VERSION

       version 3.35

SYNOPSIS

           use HTTP::BrowserDetect ();

           my $user_agent_string
               = 'Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10_11_6) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/52.0.2743.116 Safari/537.36';
           my $ua = HTTP::BrowserDetect->new($user_agent_string);

           # Print general information
           print 'Browser: ' . $ua->browser_string . "\n" if $ua->browser_string;
           print 'Version: ' . $ua->browser_version . $ua->browser_beta . "\n" if $ua->browser_version;
           print 'OS: ' . $ua->os_string . "\n" if $ua->os_string;

           # Detect operating system
           if ( $ua->windows ) {
               if ( $ua->winnt ) {
                   # do something
               }
               if ( $ua->win95 ) {
                   # do something
               }
           }
           print "Mac\n" if $ua->macosx;

           # Detect browser vendor and version
           print "Safari\n" if $ua->safari;
           print "MSIE\n" if $ua->ie;
           print "Mobile\n" if $ua->mobile;
           if ( $ua->browser_major(4) ) {
               if ( $ua->browser_minor > .5 ) {
                   # ...;
               }
           }
           if ( $ua->browser_version > 4.5 ) {
               # ...;
           }

DESCRIPTION

       The HTTP::BrowserDetect object does a number of tests on an HTTP user agent string. The
       results of these tests are available via methods of the object.

       For an online demonstration of this module's parsing, you can check out
       <http://www.browserdetect.org/>

       This module was originally based upon the JavaScript browser detection code available at
       <http://www.mozilla.org/docs/web-developer/sniffer/browser_type.html>.

CONSTRUCTOR AND STARTUP

   new()
           HTTP::BrowserDetect->new( $user_agent_string )

       The constructor may be called with a user agent string specified. Otherwise, it will use
       the value specified by $ENV{'HTTP_USER_AGENT'}, which is set by the web server when
       calling a CGI script.

SUBROUTINES/METHODS

Browser Information

   browser()
       Returns the browser, as one of the following values:

       chrome, firefox, ie, opera, safari, adm, applecoremedia, blackberry, brave, browsex,
       dalvik, elinks, links, lynx, emacs, epiphany, galeon, konqueror, icab, lotusnotes, mosaic,
       mozilla, netfront, netscape, n3ds, dsi, obigo, polaris, pubsub, realplayer, seamonkey,
       silk, staroffice, ucbrowser, webtv, samsung

       If the browser could not be identified (either because unrecognized or because it is a
       robot), returns "undef".

   browser_string()
       Returns a human formatted version of the browser name. These names are subject to change
       and are meant for display purposes. This may include information additional to what's in
       browser() (e.g. distinguishing Firefox from Iceweasel).

       If the user agent could not be identified, or if it was identified as a robot instead,
       returns "undef".

Browser Version

       Please note that that the version(), major() and minor() methods have been deprecated as
       of release 1.78 of this module. They should be replaced with browser_version(),
       browser_major(), browser_minor(), and browser_beta().

       The reasoning behind this is that version() method will, in the case of Safari, return the
       Safari/XXX numbers even when Version/XXX numbers are present in the UserAgent string (i.e.
       it will return incorrect versions for Safari in some cases).

   browser_version()
       Returns the browser version (major and minor) as a string. For example, for Chrome
       36.0.1985.67, this returns "36.0".

   browser_major()
       Returns the major part of the version as a string. For example, for Chrome 36.0.1985.67,
       this returns "36".

       Returns undef if no version information can be detected.

   browser_minor()
       Returns the minor part of the version as a string. This includes the decimal point; for
       example, for Chrome 36.0.1985.67, this returns ".0".

       Returns undef if no version information can be detected.

   browser_beta()
       Returns any part of the version after the major and minor version, as a string. For
       example, for Chrome 36.0.1985.67, this returns ".1985.67". The beta part of the string can
       contain any type of alphanumeric characters.

       Returns undef if no version information can be detected. Returns an empty string if
       version information is detected but it contains only a major and minor version with
       nothing following.

Operating System

   os()
       Returns one of the following strings, or "undef":

         windows, winphone, mac, macosx, linux, android, ios, os2, unix, vms,
         chromeos, firefoxos, ps3, psp, rimtabletos, blackberry, amiga, brew

   os_string()
       Returns a human formatted version of the OS name.  These names are subject to change and
       are really meant for display purposes. This may include information additional to what's
       in os() (e.g. distinguishing various editions of Windows from one another) (although for a
       way to do that that's more suitable for use in program logic, see below under "OS related
       properties").

       Returns "undef" if no OS information could be detected.

   os_version(), os_major(), os_minor(), os_beta()
       Returns version information for the OS, if any could be detected. The format is the same
       as for the browser_version() functions.

Mobile Devices

   mobile()
       Returns true if the browser appears to belong to a mobile phone or similar device (i.e.
       one small enough that the mobile version of a page is probably preferable over the desktop
       version).

       In previous versions, tablet devices sometimes had mobile() return true. They are now
       mutually exclusive.

   tablet()
       Returns true if the browser appears to belong to a tablet device.

   device()
       Returns the type of mobile / tablet hardware, if it can be detected.

       Currently returns one of: android, audrey, avantgo, blackberry, dsi, iopener, ipad,
       iphone, ipod, kindle, n3ds, palm, ps3, psp, wap, webos, winphone.

       Returns "undef" if this is not a tablet/mobile device or no hardware information can be
       detected.

   device_string()
       Returns a human formatted version of the hardware device name.  These names are subject to
       change and are really meant for display purposes.  You should use the device() method in
       your logic. This may include additional information (such as the model of phone if it is
       detectable).

       Returns "undef" if this is not a portable device or if no device name can be detected.

Robots

   robot()
       If the user agent appears to be a robot, spider, crawler, or other automated Web client,
       this returns one of the following values:

       lwp, slurp, yahoo, bingbot, msnmobile, msn, msoffice, ahrefs, altavista, apache,
       askjeeves, baidu, curl, facebook, getright, googleadsbot, googleadsense, googlebotimage,
       googlebotnews, googlebotvideo, googlefavicon, googlemobile, google, golib, indy, infoseek,
       ipsagent, linkchecker, linkexchange, lycos, malware, mj12bot, nutch, phplib, puf, rubylib,
       scooter, specialarchiver, wget, yandexbot, yandeximages, java, headlesschrome, unknown

       Returns "unknown" when the user agent is believed to be a robot but is not identified as
       one of the above specific robots.

       Returns "undef" if the user agent is not a robot or cannot be identified.

       Note that if a robot crafts a user agent designed to impersonate a particular browser, we
       generally set properties appropriate to both the actual robot, and the browser it is
       impersonating. For example, googlebot-mobile pretends to be mobile safari so that it will
       get mobile versions of pages. In this case, browser() will return 'safari', the properties
       will generally be set as if for Mobile Safari, the 'robot' property will be set, and
       robot() will return 'googlemobile'.

       lib()

       Returns true if the user agent appears to be an HTTP library or tool (e.g. LWP, curl,
       wget, java). Generally libraries are also classified as robots, although it is impossible
       to tell whether they are being operated by an automated system or a human.

       robot_string()

       Returns a human formatted version of the robot name. These names are subject to change and
       are meant for display purposes. This may include additional information (e.g. robots which
       return "unknown" from robot() generally can be identified in a human-readable fashion by
       reading robot_string() ).

       robot_id()

       This method is currently in beta.

       Returns an id consisting of lower case letters, numbers and dashes.  This id will remain
       constant, so you can use it for matching against a particular robot.  The ids were
       introduced in version 3.14.  There may still be a few corrections to ids in subsequent
       releases.  Once this method becomes stable the ids will also be frozen.

       all_robot_ids()

       This method returns an "ArrayRef" of all possible "robot_id" values.

   robot_version(), robot_major(), robot_minor(), robot_beta()
       Returns version information for the robot, if any could be detected. The format is the
       same as for the browser_version() functions.

       Note that if a robot crafts a user agent designed to impersonate a particular browser, we
       generally return results appropriate to both the actual robot, and the browser it is
       impersonating. For example, googlebot-mobile pretends to be mobile safari so that it will
       get mobile versions of pages. In this case, robot_version() will return the version of
       googlebot-mobile, and browser_version() will return the version of Safari that googlebot-
       mobile is impersonating.

Browser Properties

       Operating systems, devices, browser names, rendering engines, and true-or-false methods
       (e.g. "mobile" and "lib") are all browser properties. For example, calling
       browser_properties() for Mobile Safari running on an Android will return this list:

       ('android', 'device', 'mobile', 'mobile_safari', 'safari', 'webkit')

   browser_properties()
       Returns all properties for this user agent, as a list. Note that because a large number of
       cases must be considered, this will take significantly more time than simply querying the
       particular methods you care about.

       A mostly complete list of properties follows (i.e. each of these methods is both a method
       you can call, and also a property that may be in the list returned by browser_properties()
       ). In addition to this list, robot(), lib(), device(), mobile(), and tablet() are all
       browser properties.

   OS related properties
       The following methods are available, each returning a true or false value.  Some methods
       also test for the operating system version. The indentations below show the hierarchy of
       tests (for example, win2k is considered a type of winnt, which is a type of win32)

       windows()

           win16 win3x win31
           win32
               winme win95 win98
               winnt
                   win2k winxp win2k3 winvista win7
                   win8
                       win8_0 win8_1
                   win10
                       win10_0
           wince
           winphone
               winphone7 winphone7_5 winphone8 winphone10

       dotnet()

       x11()

       webview()

       chromeos()

       firefoxos()

       mac()

       mac68k macppc macosx ios

       os2()

       bb10()

       rimtabletos()

       unix()

         sun sun4 sun5 suni86 irix irix5 irix6 hpux hpux9 hpux10
         aix aix1 aix2 aix3 aix4 linux sco unixware mpras reliant
         dec sinix freebsd bsd

       vms()

       amiga()

       ps3gameos()

       pspgameos()

       It may not be possible to detect Win98 in Netscape 4.x and earlier. On Opera 3.0, the
       userAgent string includes "Windows 95/NT4" on all Win32, so you can't distinguish between
       Win95 and WinNT.

   Browser related properties
       The following methods are available, each returning a true or false value.  Some methods
       also test for the browser version, saving you from checking the version separately.

       adm

       aol aol3 aol4 aol5 aol6

       applecoremedia

       avantgo

       browsex

       chrome

       dalvik

       emacs

       epiphany

       firefox

       galeon

       icab

       ie ie3 ie4 ie4up ie5 ie5up ie55 ie55up ie6 ie7 ie8 ie9 ie10 ie11

       ie_compat_mode

       The ie_compat_mode is used to determine if the IE user agent is for the compatibility mode
       view, in which case the real version of IE is higher than that detected. The true version
       of IE can be inferred from the version of Trident in the engine_version method.

       konqueror

       lotusnotes

       lynx links elinks

       mobile_safari

       mosaic

       mozilla

       neoplanet neoplanet2

       netfront

       netscape nav2 nav3 nav4 nav4up nav45 nav45up navgold nav6 nav6up

       obigo

       opera opera3 opera4 opera5 opera6 opera7

       polaris

       pubsub

       realplayer

       The realplayer method above tests for the presence of either the RealPlayer plug-in "(r1 "
       or the browser "RealPlayer".

       realplayer_browser

       The realplayer_browser method tests for the presence of the RealPlayer browser (but
       returns 0 for the plugin).

       safari

       samsung

       seamonkey

       silk

       staroffice

       ucbrowser

       webtv

       Netscape 6, even though it's called six, in the User-Agent string has version number 5.
       The nav6 and nav6up methods correctly handle this quirk. The Firefox test correctly
       detects the older-named versions of the browser (Phoenix, Firebird).

   Device related properties
       The following methods are available, each returning a true or false value.

       android

       audrey

       avantgo

       blackberry

       dsi

       iopener

       iphone

       ipod

       ipad

       kindle

       kindlefire

       n3ds

       palm

       webos

       wap

       Note that 'wap' indicates that the device is capable of WAP, not necessarily that the
       device is limited to WAP only. Most modern WAP devices are also capable of rendering
       standard HTML.

       psp

       ps3

   Robot properties
       These methods are now deprecated and will be removed in a future release.  Please use the
       "robot()" and "robot_id()" methods to identify the bots.  Use "robot_id()" if you need to
       match on a string, since the value that is returned by "robot" could possibly change in a
       future release.

       The following additional methods are available, each returning a true or false value. This
       is by no means a complete list of robots that exist on the Web.

       ahrefs

       altavista

       apache

       askjeeves

       baidu

       bingbot

       curl

       facebook

       getright

       golib

       google

       googleadsbot

       googleadsense

       googlemobile

       indy

       infoseek

       ipsagent

       java

       linkexchange

       lwp

       lycos

       malware

       mj12bot

       msn

       msoffice

       puf

       rubylib

       slurp

       wget

       yahoo

       yandex

       yandeximages

       headlesschrome

   Engine properties
       The following properties indicate if a particular rendering engine is being used.

       webkit

       gecko

       trident

       presto

       khtml

Other methods

   user_agent()
       Returns the value of the user agent string.

       Calling this method with a parameter to set the user agent has now been removed; please
       use HTTP::BrowserDetect->new() to pass the user agent string.

   u2f()
       Returns true if this browser and version are known to support Universal Second Factor
       (U2F).  This method will need future updates as more browsers fully support this standard.

   country()
       Returns the country string as it may be found in the user agent string. This will be in
       the form of an upper case 2 character code. ie: US, DE, etc

   language()
       Returns the language string as it is found in the user agent string. This will be in the
       form of an upper case 2 character code. ie: EN, DE, etc

   engine()
       Returns the rendering engine, one of the following:

       gecko, webkit, khtml, trident, ie, presto, netfront

       Note that this returns "webkit" for webkit based browsers (including Chrome/Blink). This
       is a change from previous versions of this library, which returned "KHTML" for webkit.

       Returns "undef" if none of the above rendering engines can be detected.

   engine_string()
       Returns a human formatted version of the rendering engine.

       Note that this returns "WebKit" for webkit based browsers (including Chrome/Blink). This
       is a change from previous versions of this library, which returned "KHTML" for webkit.

       Returns "undef" if none of the known rendering engines can be detected.

   engine_version(), engine_major(), engine_minor(), engine_beta()
       Returns version information for the rendering engine, if any could be detected. The format
       is the same as for the browser_version() functions.

Deprecated methods

   device_name()
       Deprecated alternate name for device_string()

   version()
       This is probably not what you want.  Please use either browser_version() or
       engine_version() instead.

       Returns the version (major and minor) as a string.

       This function returns wrong values for some Safari versions, for compatibility with
       earlier code. browser_version() returns correct version numbers for Safari.

   major()
       This is probably not what you want. Please use either browser_major() or engine_major()
       instead.

       Returns the integer portion of the browser version as a string.

       This function returns wrong values for some Safari versions, for compatibility with
       earlier code. browser_version() returns correct version numbers for Safari.

   minor()
       This is probably not what you want. Please use either browser_minor() or engine_minor()
       instead.

       Returns the decimal portion of the browser version as a string.

       This function returns wrong values for some Safari versions, for compatibility with
       earlier code. browser_version() returns correct version numbers for Safari.

   beta()
       This is probably not what you want. Please use browser_beta() instead.

       Returns the beta version, consisting of any characters after the major and minor version
       number, as a string.

       This function returns wrong values for some Safari versions, for compatibility with
       earlier code. browser_version() returns correct version numbers for Safari.

   public_version(), public_major(), public_minor(), public_beta()
       Deprecated.  Please use browser_version() and related functions instead.

   gecko_version()
       If a Gecko rendering engine is used (as in Mozilla or Firefox), returns the engine
       version. If no Gecko browser is being used, or the version number can't be detected,
       returns undef.

       This is an old function, preserved for compatibility; please use engine_version() in new
       code.

CREDITS

       Lee Semel, lee@semel.net (Original Author)

       Peter Walsham (co-maintainer)

       Olaf Alders, "olaf at wundercounter.com" (co-maintainer)

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

       Thanks to the following for their contributions:

       cho45

       Leonardo Herrera

       Denis F. Latypoff

       merlynkline

       Simon Waters

       Toni Cebrin

       Florian Merges

       david.hilton.p

       Steve Purkis

       Andrew McGregor

       Robin Smidsrod

       Richard Noble

       Josh Ritter

       Mike Clarke

       Marc Sebastian Pelzer

       Alexey Surikov

       Maros Kollar

       Jay Rifkin

       Luke Saunders

       Jacob Rask

       Heiko Weber

       Jon Jensen

       Jesse Thompson

       Graham Barr

       Enrico Sorcinelli

       Olivier Bilodeau

       Yoshiki Kurihara

       Paul Findlay

       Uwe Voelker

       Douglas Christopher Wilson

       John Oatis

       Atsushi Kato

       Ronald J. Kimball

       Bill Rhodes

       Thom Blake

       Aran Deltac

       yeahoffline

       David Ihnen

       Hao Wu

       Perlover

       Daniel Stadie

       ben hengst

       Andrew Moise

       Atsushi Kato

       Marco Fontani

       Nicolas Doye

TO DO

       POD coverage is not 100%.

SEE ALSO

       "Browser ID (User-Agent) Strings", <http://www.zytrax.com/tech/web/browser_ids.htm>

       HTML::ParseBrowser.

SUPPORT

       You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.

           perldoc HTTP::BrowserDetect

       You can also look for information at:

       •   GitHub Source Repository

           <http://github.com/oalders/http-browserdetect>

       •   Reporting Issues

           <https://github.com/oalders/http-browserdetect/issues>

       •   Search CPAN

           <https://metacpan.org/module/HTTP::BrowserDetect>

CONTRIBUTING

       Patches are certainly welcome, with many thanks for the excellent contributions which have
       already been received. The preferred method of patching would be to fork the GitHub repo
       and then send a pull request.

       Please include a test case as this will speed up the time to release your changes. Just
       edit t/useragents.json so that the test coverage includes any changes you have made.
       Please open a GitHub issue if you have any questions.

AUTHORS

       •   Lee Semel <lee@semel.net>

       •   Peter Walsham

       •   Olaf Alders <olaf@wundercounter.com> (current maintainer)

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is copyright (c) 1999 by Lee Semel.

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as
       the Perl 5 programming language system itself.