Email::Address::XS - phpMan

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NAME SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION SEE ALSO AUTHOR COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
NAME
    Email::Address::XS - Parse and format RFC 5322 email addresses and
    groups

SYNOPSIS
      use Email::Address::XS;

      my $winstons_address = Email::Address::XS->new(phrase => 'Winston Smith', user => 'winston.smith', host => 'recdep.minitrue', comment => 'Records Department');
      print $winstons_address->address();
      # winston.smith AT recdep.minitrue

      my $julias_address = Email::Address::XS->new('Julia', 'julia AT ficdep.minitrue');
      print $julias_address->format();
      # Julia <julia AT ficdep.minitrue>

      my $users_address = Email::Address::XS->parse('user <user@oceania>');
      print $users_address->host();
      # oceania

      my $goldsteins_address = Email::Address::XS->parse_bare_address('goldstein AT brotherhood.oceania');
      print $goldsteins_address->user();
      # goldstein

      my @addresses = Email::Address::XS->parse('"Winston Smith" <winston.smith AT recdep.minitrue> (Records Department), Julia <julia AT ficdep.minitrue>');
      # ($winstons_address, $julias_address)


      use Email::Address::XS qw(format_email_addresses format_email_groups parse_email_addresses parse_email_groups);

      my $addresses_string = format_email_addresses($winstons_address, $julias_address, $users_address);
      # "Winston Smith" <winston.smith AT recdep.minitrue> (Records Department), Julia <julia AT ficdep.minitrue>, user <user@oceania>

      my @addresses = map { $_->address() } parse_email_addresses($addresses_string);
      # ('winston.smith AT recdep.minitrue', 'julia AT ficdep.minitrue', 'user@oceania')

      my $groups_string = format_email_groups('Brotherhood' => [ $winstons_address, $julias_address ], undef() => [ $users_address ]);
      # Brotherhood: "Winston Smith" <winston.smith AT recdep.minitrue> (Records Department), Julia <julia AT ficdep.minitrue>;, user <user@oceania>

      my @groups = parse_email_groups($groups_string);
      # ('Brotherhood' => [ $winstons_address, $julias_address ], undef() => [ $users_address ])


      use Email::Address::XS qw(compose_address split_address);

      my ($user, $host) = split_address('julia(outer party)@ficdep.minitrue');
      # ('julia', 'ficdep.minitrue')

      my $string = compose_address('charrington"@"shop', 'thought.police.oceania');
      # "charrington\"@\"shop"@thought.police.oceania

DESCRIPTION
    This module implements RFC 5322 <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5322>
    parser and formatter of email addresses and groups. It parses an input
    string from email headers which contain a list of email addresses or a
    groups of email addresses (like From, To, Cc, Bcc, Reply-To, Sender,
    ...). Also it can generate a string value for those headers from a list
    of email addresses objects. Module is backward compatible with RFC 2822
    <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2822> and RFC 822
    <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc822>.

    Parser and formatter functionality is implemented in XS and uses shared
    code from Dovecot IMAP server.

    It is a drop-in replacement for the Email::Address module which has
    several security issues. E.g. issue CVE-2015-7686 (Algorithmic
    complexity vulnerability)
    <https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2015-7686>, which
    allows remote attackers to cause denial of service, is still present in
    Email::Address version 1.908.

    Email::Address::XS module was created to finally fix CVE-2015-7686.

    Existing applications that use Email::Address module could be easily
    switched to Email::Address::XS module. In most cases only changing "use
    Email::Address" to "use Email::Address::XS" and replacing every
    "Email::Address" occurrence with "Email::Address::XS" is sufficient.

    So unlike Email::Address, this module does not use regular expressions
    for parsing but instead native XS implementation parses input string
    sequentially according to RFC 5322 grammar.

    Additionally it has support also for named groups and so can be use
    instead of the Email::Address::List module.

    If you are looking for the module which provides object representation
    for the list of email addresses suitable for the MIME email headers, see
    Email::MIME::Header::AddressList.

  EXPORT
    None by default. Exportable functions are: "parse_email_addresses",
    "parse_email_groups", "format_email_addresses", "format_email_groups",
    "compose_address", "split_address".

  Exportable Functions
    format_email_addresses
          use Email::Address::XS qw(format_email_addresses);

          my $winstons_address = Email::Address::XS->new(phrase => 'Winston Smith', address => 'winston AT recdep.minitrue');
          my $julias_address = Email::Address::XS->new(phrase => 'Julia', address => 'julia AT ficdep.minitrue');
          my @addresses = ($winstons_address, $julias_address);
          my $string = format_email_addresses(@addresses);
          print $string;
          # "Winston Smith" <winston AT recdep.minitrue>, Julia <julia AT ficdep.minitrue>

        Takes a list of email address objects and returns one formatted
        string of those email addresses.

    format_email_groups
          use Email::Address::XS qw(format_email_groups);

          my $winstons_address = Email::Address::XS->new(phrase => 'Winston Smith', user => 'winston.smith', host => 'recdep.minitrue');
          my $julias_address = Email::Address::XS->new('Julia', 'julia AT ficdep.minitrue');
          my $users_address = Email::Address::XS->new(address => 'user@oceania');

          my $groups_string = format_email_groups('Brotherhood' => [ $winstons_address, $julias_address ], undef() => [ $users_address ]);
          print $groups_string;
          # Brotherhood: "Winston Smith" <winston.smith AT recdep.minitrue>, Julia <julia AT ficdep.minitrue>;, user@oceania

          my $undisclosed_string = format_email_groups('undisclosed-recipients' => []);
          print $undisclosed_string;
          # undisclosed-recipients:;

        Like "format_email_addresses" but this method takes pairs which
        consist of a group display name and a reference to address list. If
        a group is not undef then address list is formatted inside named
        group.

    parse_email_addresses
          use Email::Address::XS qw(parse_email_addresses);

          my $string = '"Winston Smith" <winston.smith AT recdep.minitrue>, Julia <julia AT ficdep.minitrue>, user@oceania';
          my @addresses = parse_email_addresses($string);
          # @addresses now contains three Email::Address::XS objects, one for each address

        Parses an input string and returns a list of Email::Address::XS
        objects. Optional second string argument specifies class name for
        blessing new objects.

    parse_email_groups
          use Email::Address::XS qw(parse_email_groups);

          my $string = 'Brotherhood: "Winston Smith" <winston.smith AT recdep.minitrue>, Julia <julia AT ficdep.minitrue>;, user@oceania, undisclosed-recipients:;';
          my @groups = parse_email_groups($string);
          # @groups now contains list ('Brotherhood' => [ $winstons_object, $julias_object ], undef() => [ $users_object ], 'undisclosed-recipients' => [])

        Like "parse_email_addresses" but this function returns a list of
        pairs: a group display name and a reference to a list of addresses
        which belongs to that named group. An undef value for a group means
        that a following list of addresses is not inside any named group. An
        output is in a same format as a input for the function
        "format_email_groups". This function preserves order of groups and
        does not do any de-duplication or merging.

    compose_address
          use Email::Address::XS qw(compose_address);
          my $string_address = compose_address($user, $host);

        Takes an unescaped user part and unescaped host part of an address
        and returns escaped address.

        Available since version 1.01.

    split_address
          use Email::Address::XS qw(split_address);
          my ($user, $host) = split_address($string_address);

        Takes an escaped address and split it into pair of unescaped user
        part and unescaped host part of address. If splitting input address
        into these two parts is not possible then this function returns pair
        of undefs.

        Available since version 1.01.

  Class Methods
    new
          my $empty_address = Email::Address::XS->new();
          my $winstons_address = Email::Address::XS->new(phrase => 'Winston Smith', user => 'winston.smith', host => 'recdep.minitrue', comment => 'Records Department');
          my $julias_address = Email::Address::XS->new('Julia', 'julia AT ficdep.minitrue');
          my $users_address = Email::Address::XS->new(address => 'user@oceania');
          my $only_name = Email::Address::XS->new(phrase => 'Name');
          my $copy_of_winstons_address = Email::Address::XS->new(copy => $winstons_address);

        Constructs and returns a new "Email::Address::XS" object. Takes
        named list of arguments: phrase, address, user, host, comment and
        copy. An argument address takes precedence over user and host.

        When an argument copy is specified then it is expected an
        Email::Address::XS object and a cloned copy of that object is
        returned. All other parameters are ignored.

        Old syntax from the Email::Address module is supported too. Takes
        one to four positional arguments: phrase, address comment, and
        original string. Passing an argument original is deprecated, ignored
        and throws a warning.

    parse
          my $winstons_address = Email::Address::XS->parse('"Winston Smith" <winston.smith AT recdep.minitrue> (Records Department)');
          my @users_addresses = Email::Address::XS->parse('user1@oceania, user2@oceania');

        Parses an input string and returns a list of an Email::Address::XS
        objects. Same as the function "parse_email_addresses" but this one
        is class method.

        In scalar context this function returns just first parsed object. If
        more then one object was parsed then "is_valid" method on returned
        object returns false. If no object was parsed then empty
        Email::Address::XS object is returned.

        Prior to version 1.01 return value in scalar context is undef when
        no object was parsed.

    parse_bare_address
          my $winstons_address = Email::Address::XS->parse_bare_address('winston.smith AT recdep.minitrue');

        Parses an input string as one bare email address (addr spec) which
        does not allow phrase part or angle brackets around email address
        and returns an Email::Address::XS object. It is just a wrapper
        around "address" method. Method "is_valid" can be used to check if
        parsing was successful.

        Available since version 1.01.

  Object Methods
    format
          my $string = $address->format();

        Returns formatted Email::Address::XS object as a string. This method
        throws a warning when "user" or "host" part of the email address is
        invalid or empty string.

    is_valid
          my $is_valid = $address->is_valid();

        Returns true if the parse function or method which created this
        Email::Address::XS object had not received any syntax error on input
        string and also that "user" and "host" part of the email address are
        not empty strings.

        Thus this function can be used for checking if Email::Address::XS
        object is valid before calling "format" method on it.

        Available since version 1.01.

    phrase
          my $phrase = $address->phrase();
          $address->phrase('Winston Smith');

        Accessor and mutator for the phrase (display name).

    user
          my $user = $address->user();
          $address->user('winston.smith');

        Accessor and mutator for the unescaped user (local/mailbox) part of
        an address.

    host
          my $host = $address->host();
          $address->host('recdep.minitrue');

        Accessor and mutator for the unescaped host (domain) part of an
        address.

        Since version 1.03 this method checks if setting a new value is
        syntactically valid. If not undef is set and returned.

    address
          my $string_address = $address->address();
          $address->address('winston.smith AT recdep.minitrue');

        Accessor and mutator for the escaped address (addr spec).

        Internally this module stores a user and a host part of an address
        separately. Function "compose_address" is used for composing full
        address and function "split_address" for splitting into a user and a
        host parts. If splitting new address into these two parts is not
        possible then this method returns undef and sets both parts to
        undef.

    comment
          my $comment = $address->comment();
          $address->comment('Records Department');

        Accessor and mutator for the comment which is formatted after an
        address. A comment can contain another nested comments in round
        brackets. When setting new comment this method check if brackets are
        balanced. If not undef is set and returned.

    name
          my $name = $address->name();

        This method tries to return a name which belongs to the address. It
        returns either "phrase" or "comment" or "user" part of the address
        or empty string (first defined value in this order). But it never
        returns undef.

    as_string
          my $address = Email::Address::XS->new(phrase => 'Winston Smith', address => 'winston.smith AT recdep.minitrue');
          my $stringified = $address->as_string();

        This method is used for object stringification. It returns string
        representation of object. By default object is stringified to
        "format".

        Available since version 1.01.

    original
          my $address = Email::Address::XS->parse('(Winston) "Smith"   <winston.smith AT recdep.minitrue> (Minitrue)');
          my $original = $address->original();
          # (Winston) "Smith"   <winston.smith AT recdep.minitrue> (Minitrue)
          my $format = $address->format();
          # Smith <winston.smith AT recdep.minitrue> (Minitrue)

        This method returns original part of the string which was used for
        parsing current Email::Address::XS object. If object was not created
        by parsing input string, then this method returns undef.

        Note that "format" method does not have to return same original
        string.

        Available since version 1.01.

  Overloaded Operators
    stringify
          my $address = Email::Address::XS->new(phrase => 'Winston Smith', address => 'winston.smith AT recdep.minitrue');
          print "Winston's address is $address.";
          # Winston's address is "Winston Smith" <winston.smith AT recdep.minitrue>.

        Stringification is done by method "as_string".

  Deprecated Functions and Variables
    For compatibility with the Email::Address module there are defined some
    deprecated functions and variables. Do not use them in new code. Their
    usage throws warnings.

    Altering deprecated variable $Email::Address::XS::STRINGIFY changes
    method which is called for objects stringification.

    Deprecated cache functions "purge_cache", "disable_cache" and
    "enable_cache" are noop and do nothing.

SEE ALSO
    RFC 822 <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc822>, RFC 2822
    <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2822>, RFC 5322
    <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5322>, Email::MIME::Header::AddressList,
    Email::Address, Email::Address::List, Email::AddressParser

AUTHOR
    Pali <pali AT cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
    Copyright (C) 2015-2018 by Pali <pali AT cpan.org>

    This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
    under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.6.0 or, at
    your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.

    Dovecot parser is licensed under The MIT License and copyrighted by
    Dovecot authors.


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