Email::Valid - Check validity of Internet email addresses
use Email::Valid;
my $address = Email::Valid->address('maurice@hevanet.com');
print ($address ? 'yes' : 'no');
This module determines whether an email address is well-formed, and optionally,
whether a mail host exists for the domain.
Please note that there is no way to determine whether an address
is deliverable without attempting delivery (for details, see perlfaq 9
<http://perldoc.perl.org/perlfaq9.html#How-do-I-check-a-valid-mail-address>).
This module requires perl 5.004 or later and the Mail::Address module. Either
the Net::DNS module or the nslookup utility is required for DNS checks. The
Net::Domain::TLD module is required to check the validity of top level
domains.
Every method which accepts an
"<ADDRESS>" parameter may be passed
either a string or an instance of the Mail::Address class. All errors raise an
exception.
- new ( [PARAMS] )
- This method is used to construct an Email::Valid object. It accepts an
optional list of named parameters to control the behavior of the object at
instantiation.
The following named parameters are allowed. See the individual
methods below for details.
-mxcheck
-tldcheck
-fudge
-fqdn
-allow_ip
-local_rules
- mx ( <ADDRESS>|<DOMAIN> )
- This method accepts an email address or domain name and determines whether
a DNS record (A or MX) exists for it.
The method returns true if a record is found and undef if
not.
Either the Net::DNS module or the nslookup utility is required
for DNS checks. Using Net::DNS is the preferred method since error
handling is improved. If Net::DNS is available, you can modify the
behavior of the resolver (e.g. change the default tcp_timeout value) by
manipulating the global Net::DNS::Resolver instance stored in
$Email::Valid::Resolver.
- rfc822 ( <ADDRESS> )
- This method determines whether an address conforms to the RFC822
specification (except for nested comments). It returns true if it conforms
and undef if not.
- fudge ( <TRUE>|<FALSE> )
- Specifies whether calls to address() should attempt to correct
common addressing errors. Currently, this results in the removal of spaces
in AOL addresses, and the conversion of commas to periods in Compuserve
addresses. The default is false.
- allow_ip ( <TRUE>|<FALSE> )
- Specifies whether a "domain literal" is acceptable as the domain
part. That means addresses like:
"rjbs@[1.2.3.4]"
The checking for the domain literal is stricter than the RFC
and looser than checking for a valid IP address, but this is subject
to change.
The default is true.
- fqdn ( <TRUE>|<FALSE> )
- Specifies whether addresses passed to address() must contain a
fully qualified domain name (FQDN). The default is true.
Please note! FQDN checks only occur for
non-domain-literals. In other words, if you have set
"allow_ip" and the address ends in a
bracketed IP address, the FQDN check will not occur.
- tld ( <ADDRESS> )
- This method determines whether the domain part of an address is in a
recognized top-level domain.
Please note! TLD checks only occur for
non-domain-literals. In other words, if you have set
"allow_ip" and the address ends in a
bracketed IP address, the TLD check will not occur.
- local_rules ( <TRUE>|<FALSE> )
- Specifies whether addresses passed to address() should be tested
for domain specific restrictions. Currently, this is limited to certain
AOL restrictions that I'm aware of. The default is false.
- mxcheck ( <TRUE>|<FALSE> )
- Specifies whether addresses passed to address() should be checked
for a valid DNS entry. The default is false.
- tldcheck ( <TRUE>|<FALSE> )
- Specifies whether addresses passed to address() should be checked
for a valid top level domains. The default is false.
- address ( <ADDRESS> )
- This is the primary method which determines whether an email address is
valid. Its behavior is modified by the values of mxcheck(),
tldcheck(), local_rules(), fqdn(), and
fudge(). If the address passes all checks, the (possibly modified)
address is returned as a string. Otherwise, undef is returned. In a list
context, the method also returns an instance of the Mail::Address class
representing the email address.
- details ()
- If the last call to address() returned undef, you can call this
method to determine why it failed. Possible values are:
rfc822
localpart
local_rules
fqdn
mxcheck
tldcheck
If the class is not instantiated, you can get the same
information from the global
$Email::Valid::Details.
Let's see if the address 'maurice@hevanet.com' conforms to the RFC822
specification:
print (Email::Valid->address('maurice@hevanet.com') ? 'yes' : 'no');
Additionally, let's make sure there's a mail host for it:
print (Email::Valid->address( -address => 'maurice@hevanet.com',
-mxcheck => 1 ) ? 'yes' : 'no');
Let's see an example of how the address may be modified:
$addr = Email::Valid->address('Alfred Neuman <Neuman @ foo.bar>');
print "$addr\n"; # prints Neuman@foo.bar
Now let's add the check for top level domains:
$addr = Email::Valid->address( -address => 'Neuman@foo.bar',
-tldcheck => 1 );
print "$addr\n"; # doesn't print anything
Need to determine why an address failed?
unless(Email::Valid->address('maurice@hevanet')) {
print "address failed $Email::Valid::Details check.\n";
}
If an error is encountered, an exception is raised. This is really
only possible when performing DNS queries. Trap any exceptions by wrapping
the call in an eval block:
eval {
$addr = Email::Valid->address( -address => 'maurice@hevanet.com',
-mxcheck => 1 );
};
warn "an error was encountered: $@" if $@;
Significant portions of this module are based on the ckaddr program written by
Tom Christiansen and the RFC822 address pattern developed by Jeffrey Friedl.
Neither were involved in the construction of this module; all errors are mine.
Thanks very much to the following people for their suggestions and
bug fixes:
Otis Gospodnetic <otis@DOMINIS.com>
Kim Ryan <kimaryan@ozemail.com.au>
Pete Ehlke <pde@listserv.music.sony.com>
Lupe Christoph
David Birnbaum
Achim
Elizabeth Mattijsen (liz@dijkmat.nl)
Mail::Address, Net::DNS, Net::Domain::TLD, perlfaq9
<https://metacpan.org/pod/distribution/perlfaq/lib/perlfaq9.pod>
RFC822 <https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc0822.txt> - standard for
the format of ARPA internet text messages. Superseded by RFC2822
<https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2822.txt>.
Maurice Aubrey <maurice@hevanet.com>
- Alexandr Ciornii <alexchorny@gmail.com>
- Karel Miko <karel.miko@gmail.com>
- McA <McA@github.com>
- Michael Schout <mschout@gkg.net>
- Mohammad S Anwar <mohammad.anwar@yahoo.com>
- Neil Bowers <neil@bowers.com>
- Ricardo SIGNES <rjbs@cpan.org>
- Steve Bertrand <steveb@cpan.org>
- Svetlana <svetlana.wiczer@gmail.com>
- Troy Morehouse <troymore@nbnet.nb.ca>
This software is copyright (c) 1998 by Maurice Aubrey.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.