As I said in my comment, it's generally not a good idea to parse HTML with Regular Expressions, but you can sometimes get away with it if the HTML you're parsing is well-behaved.
In order to only get URLs that are in the href
attribute of <a>
elements, I find it easiest to do it in multiple stages. From your comments, it looks like you only want the top level domain, not the full URL. In that case you can use something like this:
grep -Eoi '<a [^>]+>' source.html |
grep -Eo 'href="[^\"]+"' |
grep -Eo '(http|https)://[^/"]+'
where source.html
is the file containing the HTML code to parse.
This code will print all top-level URLs that occur as the href
attribute of any <a>
elements in each line. The -i
option to the first grep
command is to ensure that it will work on both <a>
and <A>
elements. I guess you could also give -i
to the 2nd grep
to capture upper case HREF
attributes, OTOH, I'd prefer to ignore such broken HTML. :)
To process the contents of http://google.com/
wget -qO- http://google.com/ |
grep -Eoi '<a [^>]+>' |
grep -Eo 'href="[^\"]+"' |
grep -Eo '(http|https)://[^/"]+'
output
http://www.google.com.au
http://maps.google.com.au
https://play.google.com
http://www.youtube.com
http://news.google.com.au
https://mail.google.com
https://drive.google.com
http://www.google.com.au
http://www.google.com.au
https://accounts.google.com
http://www.google.com.au
https://www.google.com
https://plus.google.com
http://www.google.com.au
My output is a little different from the other examples as I get redirected to the Australian Google page.
Bad HTML!
error for the page, or a local HTML file in this case.) — from this answer