Data::Validate::Email - common email validation methods
use Data::Validate::Email qw(is_email is_email_rfc822);
if(is_email($suspect)){
print "Looks like an email address\n";
} elsif(is_email_rfc822($suspect)){
print "Doesn't much look like an email address, but passes rfc822\n";
} else {
print "Not an email address\n";
}
# or as an object
my $v = Data::Validate::Email->new();
die "not an email" unless ($v->is_email('foo'));
This module collects common email validation routines to make
input validation, and untainting easier and more readable.
All functions return an untainted value if the test passes, and
undef if it fails. This means that you should always check for a defined
status explicitly. Don't assume the return will be true. (e.g.
is_username('0'))
The value to test is always the first (and often only)
argument.
- new - constructor for OO
usage
-
new([\%opts]);
- Description
- Returns a Data::Validator::Email object. This lets you access all the
validator function calls as methods without importing them into your
namespace or using the clumsy
Data::Validate::Email::function_name() format.
- Arguments
- An optional hash reference is retained and passed on to other function
calls in the Data::Validate module series. This module does not utilize
the extra data, but some child calls do. See Data::Validate::Domain for an
example.
- Returns
- Returns a Data::Validate::Email object
- is_email - is
the value a well-formed email address?
-
is_email($value);
- Description
- Returns the untainted address if the test value appears to be a
well-formed email address. This method tries to match real-world
addresses, rather than trying to support everything that rfc822 allows.
(see is_email_rfc822 if you want the more permissive behavior.)
In short, it pretty much looks for something@something.tld. It
does not understand real names ("bob smith"
<bsmith@test.com>), or other comments. It will not accept
partially-qualified addresses ('bob', or 'bob@machine')
- Arguments
- $value
- The potential address to test.
- Returns
- Returns the untainted address on success, undef on failure.
- Notes, Exceptions,
& Bugs
- This function does not make any attempt to check whether an address is
genuinely deliverable. It only looks to see that the format is email-like.
The function accepts an optional hash reference as a second
argument to change the validation behavior. It is passed on unchanged to
Neil Neely's Data::Validate::Domain::is_domain() function. See
that module's documentation for legal values.
- is_email_rfc822
- does the value look like an RFC 822 address?
-
is_email_rfc822($value);
- Description
- Returns the untainted address if the test value appears to be a
well-formed email address according to RFC822. Note that the standard
allows for a wide variety of address formats, including ones with real
names and comments.
In most cases you probably want to use is_email()
instead. This one will accept things that you probably aren't expecting
('foo@bar', for example.)
- Arguments
- $value
- The potential address to test.
- Returns
- Returns the untainted address on success, undef on failure.
- Notes, Exceptions,
& Bugs
- This check uses Email::Address::XS module to do its validation.
The function does not make any attempt to check whether an
address is genuinely deliverable. It only looks to see that the format
is email-like.
- is_domain -
does the value look like a domain name?
-
is_domain($value);
- Description
- Returns the untainted domain if the test value appears to be a well-formed
domain name. This test uses the same logic as is_email(), rather
than the somewhat more permissive pattern specified by RFC822.
- Arguments
- $value
- The potential domain to test.
- Returns
- Returns the untainted domain on success, undef on failure.
- Notes, Exceptions,
& Bugs
- The function does not make any attempt to check whether a domain is
actually exists. It only looks to see that the format is appropriate.
As of version 0.03, this is a direct pass-through to Neil
Neely's Data::Validate::Domain::is_domain() function.
The function accepts an optional hash reference as a second
argument to change the validation behavior. It is passed on unchanged to
Neil Neely's Data::Validate::Domain::is_domain() function. See
that module's documentation for legal values.
- is_username
- does the value look like a username?
-
is_username($value);
- Description
- Returns the untainted username if the test value appears to be a
well-formed username. More specifically, it tests to see if the value is
legal as the username component of an email address as defined by
is_email(). Note that this definition is more restrictive than the
one in RFC822.
- Arguments
- $value
- The potential username to test.
- Returns
- Returns the untainted username on success, undef on failure.
- Notes, Exceptions,
& Bugs
- The function does not make any attempt to check whether a username
actually exists on your system. It only looks to see that the format is
appropriate.
Richard Sonnen <sonnen@richardsonnen.com>.
Copyright (c) 2004 Richard Sonnen. All rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.