py3-validate-email is a package for Python that check if an email is valid, not blacklisted, properly formatted and really exists.
This module is for Python 3.6 and above!
You can install the package with pip:
python -m pip install py3-validate-email
Basic usage:
from validate_email import validate_email is_valid = validate_email(email_address='[email protected]', check_regex=True, check_mx=True, from_address='[email protected]', helo_host='my.host.name', smtp_timeout=10, dns_timeout=10, use_blacklist=True)
check_regex
will check will the email address has a valid structure and defaults to True
check_mx
: check the mx-records and check whether the email actually exists
from_address
: the email address the probe will be sent from,
helo_host
: the host to use in SMTP HELO when checking for an email,
smtp_timeout
: seconds until SMTP timeout
dns_timeout
: seconds until DNS timeout
use_blacklist
: use the blacklist of domains downloaded from https://github.com/martenson/disposable-email-domains
The function validate_email_or_fail()
works exactly like validate_email
, except that it raises an exception in the case of validation failure instead of returning False
.
The package contains an auto-updater for downloading and updating the built-in blacklist.txt. It will run on each module load (and installation), but will try to update the content only if the file is older than 5 days, and if the content is not the same that's already downloaded.
The update can be triggered manually:
from validate_email.updater import update_builtin_blacklist update_builtin_blacklist(force: bool = False, background: bool = True, callback: Callable = None) -> Optional[Thread]
force
: forces the update even if the downloaded/installed file is fresh enough.
background
: starts the update in a Thread
so it won't make your code hang while it's updating. If you set this to true, the function will return the Thread used for starting the update so you can join()
it if necessary.
callback
: An optional Callable (function/method) to be called when the update is done.
See: https://github.com/karolyi/py3-validate-email/issues
Some SMTP Servers (Yahoo's servers for example) are only rejecting nonexistent emails after the end of DATA
command has been provided in the conversation with the server. This module only goes until the RCPT TO
and says it's valid if it doesn't get rejected there, since the DATA
part of the email is the email body itself. There's not much one can do with it, you have to accept false positives in the case of yahoo.com and some other providers. I'm not sure if rejecting emails after the DATA
command is a valid behavior based on the SMTP RFC, but I wouldn't wonder if not.
Check if you have port 25 access from your IP to the accepting server's IP. Even if you do, the server might use RBL's (spamhaus.org lists, for example), and your IP might get rejected because of being listed in one of the used lists by the email server. Your best bet is to use this module on another server that delivers emails, thus eliminating the chance of being blacklisted.
This module is a tool; every tool can become a weapon if not used properly. In my case, I use this module to check email address validity at registration time, so not thousands at once. Doing so might make you (your IP) end up in one of the aforementioned blocklists, as providers will detect you as a possible spammer. In short, I would advise against your use case.