3.9 Validating Email Addresses

3.9.1 Problem

Your program accepts an email address as input, and you need to verify that the supplied address is valid.

3.9.2 Solution

Scan the email address supplied by the user, and validate it against the lexical rules set forth in RFC 822.

3.9.3 Discussion

RFC 822 defines the syntax for email addresses. Unfortunately, the syntax is complex, and it supports several address formats that are no longer relevant. The fortunate thing is that if anyone attempts to use one of these no-longer-relevant address formats, you can be reasonably certain they are attempting to do something they are not supposed to do.

You can use the following spc_email_isvalid( ) function to check the format of an email address. It will perform only a syntactical check and will not actually attempt to verify the authenticity of the address by attempting to deliver mail to it or by performing any DNS lookups on the domain name portion of the address.

The function only validates the actual email address and will not accept any associated data. For example, it will fail to validate "Bob Bobson <bob@bobson.com>", but it will successfully validate "bob@bobson.com". If the supplied email address is syntactically valid, spc_email_isvalid( ) will return 1; otherwise, it will return 0.

Keep in mind that almost any character is legal in an email address if it is properly quoted, so if you are passing an email address to something that may be sensitive to certain characters or character sequences (such as a command shell), you must be sure to properly escape those characters.

#include <string.h> int spc_email_isvalid(const char *address) {   int        count = 0;   const char *c, *domain;   static char *rfc822_specials = "()<>@,;:\\\"[]";   /* first we validate the name portion (name@domain) */   for (c = address;  *c;  c++) {     if (*c == '\"' && (c == address || *(c - 1) == '.' || *(c - 1) ==          '\"')) {       while (*++c) {         if (*c == '\"') break;         if (*c == '\\' && (*++c == ' ')) continue;         if (*c <= ' ' || *c >= 127) return 0;       }       if (!*c++) return 0;       if (*c == '@') break;       if (*c != '.') return 0;       continue;     }     if (*c == '@') break;     if (*c <= ' ' || *c >= 127) return 0;     if (strchr(rfc822_specials, *c)) return 0;   }   if (c == address || *(c - 1) == '.') return 0;   /* next we validate the domain portion (name@domain) */   if (!*(domain = ++c)) return 0;   do {     if (*c == '.') {       if (c == domain || *(c - 1) == '.') return 0;       count++;     }     if (*c <= ' ' || *c >= 127) return 0;     if (strchr(rfc822_specials, *c)) return 0;   } while (*++c);   return (count >= 1); }

3.9.4 See Also

RFC 822: Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet Text Messages



Secure Programming Cookbook for C and C++
Secure Programming Cookbook for C and C++: Recipes for Cryptography, Authentication, Input Validation & More
ISBN: 0596003943
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2005
Pages: 266

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