email_checker

Simple library checking the validity of an email. Checks are performed in the following order: - REGEX: validate the emails has a good looking format - MX: validate the domain sever contains MX records - SMTP: validate the SMTP behind the MX records knows this email address (no email sent)


Keywords
email, validation
License
MIT

Documentation

EmailChecker

Hex.pm Version .github/workflows/ci.yml Coverage Status GitHub license Last Updated

Simple library checking the validity of an email. Checks are performed in the following order:

  • REGEX: validate the emails has a good looking format
  • MX: validate the domain sever contains MX records
  • SMTP: validate the SMTP behind the MX records knows this email address (no email sent)
    • ⚠️ That's rare but, some SMTP define a catchall email address. Meaning all emails using this domain seems valid even if they are not.
    • ⚠️ Most email providers nowadays don't support this method. You should only use it if you know what you're doing.

Installation

# mix.exs
def application do
  [mod: {YourModule, []},
   applications: [
     # other applications...
     :email_checker,
     # other applications...
     ]
  ]
end

def deps do
  [
    # other dependencies...
    {:email_checker, "~> 0.1.2"}
    # other dependencies...
  ]
end

Configuration

# config/config.exs -- default
config :email_checker,
  default_dns: :system,
  also_dns: [],
  validations: [EmailChecker.Check.Format, EmailChecker.Check.MX],
  smtp_retries: 2,
  timeout_milliseconds: :infinity

In the test environment, we need to manually load DNS records to validate if an MX exists or not. When we load the library Erlang doesn't have its DNS record list yet. So to avoid any problem, we define a default DNS. By default the value for the test environment is : {8, 8, 8, 8}, which is Google's primary public DNS server. If you find that you have odd failures in name resolution, you may have to specify a default DNS server.

In the case you need to load more DNS servers manually after the default one, you can set a list of more DNS server IPs in the also_dns setting.

Please note that the IP address is represented as a tuple separated by commas.

The default validations setting should be suitable for most cases. If you use fake but valid-looking email addresses in your own tests, you may need to set the validations to just [Format], and MX and SMTP testing will then not be used in that configuration.

The SMTP validation strategy will attempt 2 retries, by default.

The MX and SMTP validation strategies, each in their own way, use the same default timeout for net connections as the underlying Erlang library calls. It is important to note that this value is :infinity, and the call will take as long as the call takes. You likely want to set to a sensible timeout in milliseconds. Please note that:

  • For the MX validation, this is the timeout of the call to the DNS server for MX records.
  • For the SMTP validation, the timeout is divided by the number of retries.
# config/config.exs -- example personalized configuration
config :email_checker,
  default_dns: {8, 8, 8, 8},
  smtp_retries: 1,
  timeout_milliseconds: 6000

Usage

EmailChecker.valid?("kevin@disneur.me")
#=> true
EmailChecker.valid?("non-existing@disneur.me")
#=> false

CHANGELOG

CHANGELOG

LICENSE

MIT