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ua-parser-js
Advanced tools
The ua-parser-js package is a utility for parsing user agent strings. It can be used to extract detailed information about the browser, engine, OS, CPU, and device from the user agent string provided by the client's browser.
Browser Detection
This feature allows you to detect the browser name and version from the user agent string.
const UAParser = require('ua-parser-js');
const parser = new UAParser();
const browser = parser.getBrowser();
console.log(browser);
Operating System Detection
This feature enables you to determine the operating system and its version from the user agent string.
const UAParser = require('ua-parser-js');
const parser = new UAParser();
const os = parser.getOS();
console.log(os);
Device Detection
With this feature, you can identify the device type, vendor, and model from the user agent string.
const UAParser = require('ua-parser-js');
const parser = new UAParser();
const device = parser.getDevice();
console.log(device);
Engine Detection
This feature allows you to extract the layout engine name and version from the user agent string.
const UAParser = require('ua-parser-js');
const parser = new UAParser();
const engine = parser.getEngine();
console.log(engine);
CPU Architecture Detection
This feature provides information about the CPU architecture from the user agent string.
const UAParser = require('ua-parser-js');
const parser = new UAParser();
const cpu = parser.getCPU();
console.log(cpu);
The 'device' package is another npm package that allows you to parse user agent strings to determine device type (phone, tablet, desktop, etc.). It is simpler than ua-parser-js and does not provide detailed information about browser, engine, or OS.
The 'platform' package is used for parsing and interpreting user agent strings. It provides information about the operating system, browser, and device in a structured format. It is similar to ua-parser-js but has a different API and may offer different levels of detail in the results.
Bowser is a browser detection library that is similar to ua-parser-js. It focuses on identifying browser type, version, and engine. It also provides methods to check if the browser matches certain criteria, which can be useful for feature detection and browser-specific adjustments.
JavaScript library to detect Browser, Engine, OS, CPU, and Device type/model from User-Agent data with relatively small footprint (~17KB minified, ~6KB gzipped) that can be used either in browser (client-side) or node.js (server-side).
new UAParser([uastring][,extensions])
UAParser([uastring][,extensions])
{ ua: '', browser: {}, cpu: {}, device: {}, engine: {}, os: {} }
getBrowser()
{ name: '', version: '' }
# Possible 'browser.name':
2345Explorer, 360 Browser, Amaya, Android Browser, Arora, Avant, Avast, AVG,
BIDUBrowser, Baidu, Basilisk, Blazer, Bolt, Brave, Bowser, Camino, Chimera,
Chrome Headless, Chrome WebView, Chrome, Chromium, Comodo Dragon, Dillo,
Dolphin, Doris, Edge, Electron, Epiphany, Facebook, Falkon, Fennec, Firebird,
Firefox [Reality], Flock, Flow, GSA, GoBrowser, ICE Browser, IE, IEMobile, IceApe,
IceCat, IceDragon, Iceweasel, Instagram, Iridium, Iron, Jasmine, K-Meleon,
Kindle, Konqueror, LBBROWSER, Line, Links, Lunascape, Lynx, MIUI Browser,
Maemo Browser, Maemo, Maxthon, MetaSr Midori, Minimo, Mobile Safari, Mosaic,
Mozilla, NetFront, NetSurf, Netfront, Netscape, NokiaBrowser, Oculus Browser,
OmniWeb, Opera Coast, Opera [Mini/Mobi/Tablet], PaleMoon, PhantomJS, Phoenix,
Polaris, Puffin, QQ, QQBrowser, QQBrowserLite, Quark, QupZilla, RockMelt, Safari,
Sailfish Browser, Samsung Browser, SeaMonkey, Silk, Skyfire, Sleipnir, Slim,
SlimBrowser, Swiftfox, Tesla, Tizen Browser, UCBrowser, Vivaldi, Waterfox, WeChat,
Weibo, Yandex, baidu, iCab, w3m, Whale Browser...
# 'browser.version' determined dynamically
getDevice()
{ model: '', type: '', vendor: '' }
# Possible 'device.type':
console, mobile, tablet, smarttv, wearable, embedded
# Possible 'device.vendor':
Acer, Alcatel, Amazon, Apple, Archos, ASUS, AT&T, BenQ, BlackBerry, Dell,
Essential, Fairphone, GeeksPhone, Google, HP, HTC, Huawei, Jolla, Lenovo, LG,
Meizu, Microsoft, Motorola, Nexian, Nintendo, Nokia, Nvidia, OnePlus, OPPO, Ouya,
Palm, Panasonic, Pebble, Polytron, Realme, RIM, Samsung, Sharp, Siemens,
Sony[Ericsson], Sprint, Tesla, Vivo, Vodafone, Xbox, Xiaomi, Zebra, ZTE, ...
# 'device.model' determined dynamically
getEngine()
{ name: '', version: '' }
# Possible 'engine.name'
Amaya, Blink, EdgeHTML, Flow, Gecko, Goanna, iCab, KHTML, Links, Lynx, NetFront,
NetSurf, Presto, Tasman, Trident, w3m, WebKit
# 'engine.version' determined dynamically
getOS()
{ name: '', version: '' }
# Possible 'os.name'
AIX, Amiga OS, Android, Arch, Bada, BeOS, BlackBerry, CentOS, Chromium OS,
Contiki, Fedora, Firefox OS, FreeBSD, Debian, DragonFly, Fuchsia, Gentoo, GNU,
Haiku, Hurd, iOS, Joli, KaiOS, Linpus, Linux, Mac OS, Mageia, Mandriva, MeeGo,
Minix, Mint, Morph OS, NetBSD, Nintendo, OpenBSD, OpenVMS, OS/2, Palm, PC-BSD,
PCLinuxOS, Plan9, PlayStation, QNX, Raspbian, RedHat, RIM Tablet OS, RISC OS,
Sailfish, Series40, Slackware, Solaris, SUSE, Symbian, Tizen, Ubuntu, Unix,
VectorLinux, WebOS, Windows [Phone/Mobile], Zenwalk, ...
# 'os.version' determined dynamically
getCPU()
{ architecture: '' }
# Possible 'cpu.architecture'
68k, amd64, arm[64/hf], avr, ia[32/64], irix[64], mips[64], pa-risc, ppc, sparc[64]
getResult()
{ ua: '', browser: {}, cpu: {}, device: {}, engine: {}, os: {} }
getUA()
setUA(uastring)
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
<script src="ua-parser.min.js"></script>
<script>
var parser = new UAParser();
console.log(parser.getResult());
/*
/// This will print an object structured like this:
{
ua: "",
browser: {
name: "",
version: "",
major: "" //@deprecated
},
engine: {
name: "",
version: ""
},
os: {
name: "",
version: ""
},
device: {
model: "",
type: "",
vendor: ""
},
cpu: {
architecture: ""
}
}
*/
// Default result depends on current window.navigator.userAgent value
// Now let's try a custom user-agent string as an example
var uastring1 = "Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64) AppleWebKit/535.2 (KHTML, like Gecko) Ubuntu/11.10 Chromium/15.0.874.106 Chrome/15.0.874.106 Safari/535.2";
parser.setUA(uastring1);
var result = parser.getResult();
// You can also use UAParser constructor directly without having to create an instance:
// var result = UAParser(uastring1);
console.log(result.browser); // {name: "Chromium", version: "15.0.874.106"}
console.log(result.device); // {model: undefined, type: undefined, vendor: undefined}
console.log(result.os); // {name: "Ubuntu", version: "11.10"}
console.log(result.os.version); // "11.10"
console.log(result.engine.name); // "WebKit"
console.log(result.cpu.architecture); // "amd64"
// Do some other tests
var uastring2 = "Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; Konqueror/4.1; OpenBSD) KHTML/4.1.4 (like Gecko)";
console.log(parser.setUA(uastring2).getBrowser().name); // "Konqueror"
console.log(parser.getOS()); // {name: "OpenBSD", version: undefined}
console.log(parser.getEngine()); // {name: "KHTML", version: "4.1.4"}
var uastring3 = 'Mozilla/5.0 (PlayBook; U; RIM Tablet OS 1.0.0; en-US) AppleWebKit/534.11 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/7.1.0.7 Safari/534.11';
console.log(parser.setUA(uastring3).getDevice().model); // "PlayBook"
console.log(parser.getOS()) // {name: "RIM Tablet OS", version: "1.0.0"}
console.log(parser.getBrowser().name); // "Safari"
</script>
</head>
<body>
</body>
</html>
$ npm install ua-parser-js
var http = require('http');
var parser = require('ua-parser-js');
http.createServer(function (req, res) {
// get user-agent header
var ua = parser(req.headers['user-agent']);
// write the result as response
res.end(JSON.stringify(ua, null, ' '));
})
.listen(1337, '127.0.0.1');
console.log('Server running at http://127.0.0.1:1337/');
$ npm install --save @types/ua-parser-js
# Download TS type definition from DefinitelyTyped repository:
# https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/tree/master/types/ua-parser-js
Although written in vanilla js, this library will automatically detect if jQuery/Zepto is present and create $.ua
object (with values based on its User-Agent) along with window.UAParser
constructor. To get/set user-agent you can use: $.ua.get()
/ $.ua.set(uastring)
.
// Say we are in a browser with default user-agent: 'Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; U; Android 2.3.4; en-us; Sprint APA7373KT Build/GRJ22) AppleWebKit/533.1 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/4.0':
// Get the details
console.log($.ua.device); // {vendor: "HTC", model: "Evo Shift 4G", type: "mobile"}
console.log($.ua.os); // {name: "Android", version: "2.3.4"}
console.log($.ua.os.name); // "Android"
console.log($.ua.get()); // "Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; U; Android 2.3.4; en-us; Sprint APA7373KT Build/GRJ22) AppleWebKit/533.1 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/4.0"
// Now lets try to reset to another custom user-agent
$.ua.set('Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; U; Android 3.0.1; en-us; Xoom Build/HWI69) AppleWebKit/534.13 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/4.0 Safari/534.13');
// Test again
console.log($.ua.browser.name); // "Safari"
console.log($.ua.engine.name); // "Webkit"
console.log($.ua.device); // {vendor: "Motorola", model: "Xoom", type: "tablet"}
console.log(parseInt($.ua.browser.version.split('.')[0], 10)); // 4
// Add class to <body> tag
// <body class="ua-browser-safari ua-devicetype-tablet">
$('body').addClass('ua-browser-' + $.ua.browser.name + ' ua-devicetype-' + $.ua.device.type);
UAParser([uastring,] extensions)
// Example:
var myOwnListOfBrowsers = [
[/(mybrowser)\/([\w\.]+)/i], [UAParser.BROWSER.NAME, UAParser.BROWSER.VERSION]
];
var myParser = new UAParser({ browser: myOwnListOfBrowsers });
var myUA = 'Mozilla/5.0 MyBrowser/1.3';
console.log(myParser.setUA(myUA).getBrowser()); // {name: "MyBrowser", version: "1.3"}
Made with contributors-img.
$ npm test
develop
branchMIT License
Copyright (c) 2012-2021 Faisal Salman <f@faisalman.com>
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
FAQs
Detect Browser, Engine, OS, CPU, and Device type/model from User-Agent data. Supports browser & node.js environment
The npm package ua-parser-js receives a total of 7,698,804 weekly downloads. As such, ua-parser-js popularity was classified as popular.
We found that ua-parser-js demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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