Invalid addresses, if detected, set host to '.SYNTAX-ERROR.'; but not all invalid addresses get detected as such, e.g. <.@host.do.main> is considered
valid though a single dot is not a valid local part without using quotation marks.
(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
imap_rfc822_parse_adrlist — Analyse une adresse email
Analyse la chaîne address
,
tel que définie dans la » RFC2822.
string
Une chaîne de caractères contenant les adresses
default_hostname
Le nom de l'hôte par défaut
Retourne un tableau d'objets. Les propriétés des objets sont :
"mailbox"
: Le nom de la boîte aux lettres (nom d'utilisateur)
"host"
: Le nom de l'hôte
"personal"
: Le nom personnel
"adl"
: at domain source route (NDT : ???)
Exemple #1 Exemple avec imap_rfc822_parse_adrlist()
<?php
$address_string = "Joe Doe <doe@example.com>, postmaster@example.com, root";
$address_array = imap_rfc822_parse_adrlist($address_string, "example.com");
if (!is_array($address_array) || count($address_array) < 1) {
die("Erreur !\n");
}
foreach ($address_array as $id => $val) {
echo "# $id\n";
echo " Boîte : " . $val->mailbox . "\n";
echo " Hôte : " . $val->host . "\n";
echo " Nom : " . $val->personal . "\n";
echo " adl : " . $val->adl . "\n";
}
?>
L'exemple ci-dessus va afficher :
# 0 Boîte : doe Hôte : example.com Nom : Joe Doe adl : # 1 Boîte : postmaster hôte : example.com Nom : adl : # 2 Boîte : root Hôte : example.com Nom : adl :
Invalid addresses, if detected, set host to '.SYNTAX-ERROR.'; but not all invalid addresses get detected as such, e.g. <.@host.do.main> is considered
valid though a single dot is not a valid local part without using quotation marks.
This function does NOT test the syntax of either the local part, or the host part, it will permit illegal characters on either side.
Note that 'host' refers to the email domain, not actually to any host.
The at domain list is an obsolete addressing method which was available for routing email. RFC2822 says that it must be accepted, but should be ignored in routing.
Note that if an address doesn't contain a personal part, or an "at domain list", that part of the array will be missing.
Although RFC2822 permits consecutive comma separators in a list of email addresses, this function does not. That's probably a bug.
In the following list of examples, #4 uses an "at domain list", #5 and after are illegal domains, but only the last actually generates an error.
$adds = 'ian eiloart <iane@example.ac.uk>,
shuf6@example.ac.uk,
blobby,
"ian,eiloart"<ian@example.ac.uk>,
<@example.com:foo@example.ac.uk>,
foo@#,
ian@-example.com,
ian@one@two';
$add_arr = imap_rfc822_parse_adrlist($adds, 'example.com');
var_export ($add_arr);
array (
0 =>
class stdClass {
var $mailbox = 'iane';
var $host = 'example.ac.uk';
var $personal = 'ian eiloart';
},
1 =>
class stdClass {
var $mailbox = 'shuf6';
var $host = 'example.ac.uk';
},
2 =>
class stdClass {
var $mailbox = 'blobby';
var $host = 'example.ac.uk';
},
3 =>
class stdClass {
var $mailbox = 'ian';
var $host = 'example.ac.uk';
var $personal = 'ian,eiloart';
},
4 =>
class stdClass {
var $mailbox = 'foo';
var $host = 'example.ac.uk';
var $adl = '@example.com';
},
5 =>
class stdClass {
var $mailbox = 'foo';
var $host = '#';
},
6 =>
class stdClass {
var $mailbox = 'ian';
var $host = '-example.com';
},
7 =>
class stdClass {
var $mailbox = 'ian';
var $host = 'one';
},
8 =>
class stdClass {
var $mailbox = 'UNEXPECTED_DATA_AFTER_ADDRESS';
var $host = '.SYNTAX-ERROR.';
},
)