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from .exceptions_types import EmailSyntaxError | |
from .rfc_constants import EMAIL_MAX_LENGTH, LOCAL_PART_MAX_LENGTH, DOMAIN_MAX_LENGTH, \ | |
DOT_ATOM_TEXT, DOT_ATOM_TEXT_INTL, ATEXT_RE, ATEXT_INTL_RE, ATEXT_HOSTNAME_INTL, QTEXT_INTL, \ | |
DNS_LABEL_LENGTH_LIMIT, DOT_ATOM_TEXT_HOSTNAME, DOMAIN_NAME_REGEX, DOMAIN_LITERAL_CHARS, \ | |
QUOTED_LOCAL_PART_ADDR | |
import re | |
import unicodedata | |
import idna # implements IDNA 2008; Python's codec is only IDNA 2003 | |
import ipaddress | |
from typing import Optional | |
def split_email(email): | |
# Return the local part and domain part of the address and | |
# whether the local part was quoted as a three-tuple. | |
# Typical email addresses have a single @-sign, but the | |
# awkward "quoted string" local part form (RFC 5321 4.1.2) | |
# allows @-signs (and escaped quotes) to appear in the local | |
# part if the local part is quoted. If the address is quoted, | |
# split it at a non-escaped @-sign and unescape the escaping. | |
if m := QUOTED_LOCAL_PART_ADDR.match(email): | |
local_part, domain_part = m.groups() | |
# Since backslash-escaping is no longer needed because | |
# the quotes are removed, remove backslash-escaping | |
# to return in the normalized form. | |
local_part = re.sub(r"\\(.)", "\\1", local_part) | |
return local_part, domain_part, True | |
else: | |
# Split at the one and only at-sign. | |
parts = email.split('@') | |
if len(parts) != 2: | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("The email address is not valid. It must have exactly one @-sign.") | |
local_part, domain_part = parts | |
return local_part, domain_part, False | |
def get_length_reason(addr, utf8=False, limit=EMAIL_MAX_LENGTH): | |
"""Helper function to return an error message related to invalid length.""" | |
diff = len(addr) - limit | |
prefix = "at least " if utf8 else "" | |
suffix = "s" if diff > 1 else "" | |
return f"({prefix}{diff} character{suffix} too many)" | |
def safe_character_display(c): | |
# Return safely displayable characters in quotes. | |
if c == '\\': | |
return f"\"{c}\"" # can't use repr because it escapes it | |
if unicodedata.category(c)[0] in ("L", "N", "P", "S"): | |
return repr(c) | |
# Construct a hex string in case the unicode name doesn't exist. | |
if ord(c) < 0xFFFF: | |
h = f"U+{ord(c):04x}".upper() | |
else: | |
h = f"U+{ord(c):08x}".upper() | |
# Return the character name or, if it has no name, the hex string. | |
return unicodedata.name(c, h) | |
def validate_email_local_part(local: str, allow_smtputf8: bool = True, allow_empty_local: bool = False, | |
quoted_local_part: bool = False): | |
"""Validates the syntax of the local part of an email address.""" | |
if len(local) == 0: | |
if not allow_empty_local: | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("There must be something before the @-sign.") | |
# The caller allows an empty local part. Useful for validating certain | |
# Postfix aliases. | |
return { | |
"local_part": local, | |
"ascii_local_part": local, | |
"smtputf8": False, | |
} | |
# Check the length of the local part by counting characters. | |
# (RFC 5321 4.5.3.1.1) | |
# We're checking the number of characters here. If the local part | |
# is ASCII-only, then that's the same as bytes (octets). If it's | |
# internationalized, then the UTF-8 encoding may be longer, but | |
# that may not be relevant. We will check the total address length | |
# instead. | |
if len(local) > LOCAL_PART_MAX_LENGTH: | |
reason = get_length_reason(local, limit=LOCAL_PART_MAX_LENGTH) | |
raise EmailSyntaxError(f"The email address is too long before the @-sign {reason}.") | |
# Check the local part against the non-internationalized regular expression. | |
# Most email addresses match this regex so it's probably fastest to check this first. | |
# (RFC 5322 3.2.3) | |
# All local parts matching the dot-atom rule are also valid as a quoted string | |
# so if it was originally quoted (quoted_local_part is True) and this regex matches, | |
# it's ok. | |
# (RFC 5321 4.1.2 / RFC 5322 3.2.4). | |
if DOT_ATOM_TEXT.match(local): | |
# It's valid. And since it's just the permitted ASCII characters, | |
# it's normalized and safe. If the local part was originally quoted, | |
# the quoting was unnecessary and it'll be returned as normalized to | |
# non-quoted form. | |
# Return the local part and flag that SMTPUTF8 is not needed. | |
return { | |
"local_part": local, | |
"ascii_local_part": local, | |
"smtputf8": False, | |
} | |
# The local part failed the basic dot-atom check. Try the extended character set | |
# for internationalized addresses. It's the same pattern but with additional | |
# characters permitted. | |
# RFC 6531 section 3.3. | |
valid: Optional[str] = None | |
requires_smtputf8 = False | |
if DOT_ATOM_TEXT_INTL.match(local): | |
# But international characters in the local part may not be permitted. | |
if not allow_smtputf8: | |
# Check for invalid characters against the non-internationalized | |
# permitted character set. | |
# (RFC 5322 3.2.3) | |
bad_chars = { | |
safe_character_display(c) | |
for c in local | |
if not ATEXT_RE.match(c) | |
} | |
if bad_chars: | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("Internationalized characters before the @-sign are not supported: " + ", ".join(sorted(bad_chars)) + ".") | |
# Although the check above should always find something, fall back to this just in case. | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("Internationalized characters before the @-sign are not supported.") | |
# It's valid. | |
valid = "dot-atom" | |
requires_smtputf8 = True | |
# There are no syntactic restrictions on quoted local parts, so if | |
# it was originally quoted, it is probably valid. More characters | |
# are allowed, like @-signs, spaces, and quotes, and there are no | |
# restrictions on the placement of dots, as in dot-atom local parts. | |
elif quoted_local_part: | |
# Check for invalid characters in a quoted string local part. | |
# (RFC 5321 4.1.2. RFC 5322 lists additional permitted *obsolete* | |
# characters which are *not* allowed here. RFC 6531 section 3.3 | |
# extends the range to UTF8 strings.) | |
bad_chars = { | |
safe_character_display(c) | |
for c in local | |
if not QTEXT_INTL.match(c) | |
} | |
if bad_chars: | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("The email address contains invalid characters in quotes before the @-sign: " + ", ".join(sorted(bad_chars)) + ".") | |
# See if any characters are outside of the ASCII range. | |
bad_chars = { | |
safe_character_display(c) | |
for c in local | |
if not (32 <= ord(c) <= 126) | |
} | |
if bad_chars: | |
requires_smtputf8 = True | |
# International characters in the local part may not be permitted. | |
if not allow_smtputf8: | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("Internationalized characters before the @-sign are not supported: " + ", ".join(sorted(bad_chars)) + ".") | |
# It's valid. | |
valid = "quoted" | |
# If the local part matches the internationalized dot-atom form or was quoted, | |
# perform normalization and additional checks for Unicode strings. | |
if valid: | |
# RFC 6532 section 3.1 says that Unicode NFC normalization should be applied, | |
# so we'll return the normalized local part in the return value. | |
local = unicodedata.normalize("NFC", local) | |
# Check that the local part is a valid, safe, and sensible Unicode string. | |
# Some of this may be redundant with the range U+0080 to U+10FFFF that is checked | |
# by DOT_ATOM_TEXT_INTL and QTEXT_INTL. Other characters may be permitted by the | |
# email specs, but they may not be valid, safe, or sensible Unicode strings. | |
# See the function for rationale. | |
check_unsafe_chars(local, allow_space=(valid == "quoted")) | |
# Try encoding to UTF-8. Failure is possible with some characters like | |
# surrogate code points, but those are checked above. Still, we don't | |
# want to have an unhandled exception later. | |
try: | |
local.encode("utf8") | |
except ValueError as e: | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("The email address contains an invalid character.") from e | |
# If this address passes only by the quoted string form, re-quote it | |
# and backslash-escape quotes and backslashes (removing any unnecessary | |
# escapes). Per RFC 5321 4.1.2, "all quoted forms MUST be treated as equivalent, | |
# and the sending system SHOULD transmit the form that uses the minimum quoting possible." | |
if valid == "quoted": | |
local = '"' + re.sub(r'(["\\])', r'\\\1', local) + '"' | |
return { | |
"local_part": local, | |
"ascii_local_part": local if not requires_smtputf8 else None, | |
"smtputf8": requires_smtputf8, | |
} | |
# It's not a valid local part. Let's find out why. | |
# (Since quoted local parts are all valid or handled above, these checks | |
# don't apply in those cases.) | |
# Check for invalid characters. | |
# (RFC 5322 3.2.3, plus RFC 6531 3.3) | |
bad_chars = { | |
safe_character_display(c) | |
for c in local | |
if not ATEXT_INTL_RE.match(c) | |
} | |
if bad_chars: | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("The email address contains invalid characters before the @-sign: " + ", ".join(sorted(bad_chars)) + ".") | |
# Check for dot errors imposted by the dot-atom rule. | |
# (RFC 5322 3.2.3) | |
check_dot_atom(local, 'An email address cannot start with a {}.', 'An email address cannot have a {} immediately before the @-sign.', is_hostname=False) | |
# All of the reasons should already have been checked, but just in case | |
# we have a fallback message. | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("The email address contains invalid characters before the @-sign.") | |
def check_unsafe_chars(s, allow_space=False): | |
# Check for unsafe characters or characters that would make the string | |
# invalid or non-sensible Unicode. | |
bad_chars = set() | |
for i, c in enumerate(s): | |
category = unicodedata.category(c) | |
if category[0] in ("L", "N", "P", "S"): | |
# Letters, numbers, punctuation, and symbols are permitted. | |
pass | |
elif category[0] == "M": | |
# Combining character in first position would combine with something | |
# outside of the email address if concatenated, so they are not safe. | |
# We also check if this occurs after the @-sign, which would not be | |
# sensible. | |
if i == 0: | |
bad_chars.add(c) | |
elif category == "Zs": | |
# Spaces outside of the ASCII range are not specifically disallowed in | |
# internationalized addresses as far as I can tell, but they violate | |
# the spirit of the non-internationalized specification that email | |
# addresses do not contain ASCII spaces when not quoted. Excluding | |
# ASCII spaces when not quoted is handled directly by the atom regex. | |
# | |
# In quoted-string local parts, spaces are explicitly permitted, and | |
# the ASCII space has category Zs, so we must allow it here, and we'll | |
# allow all Unicode spaces to be consistent. | |
if not allow_space: | |
bad_chars.add(c) | |
elif category[0] == "Z": | |
# The two line and paragraph separator characters (in categories Zl and Zp) | |
# are not specifically disallowed in internationalized addresses | |
# as far as I can tell, but they violate the spirit of the non-internationalized | |
# specification that email addresses do not contain line breaks when not quoted. | |
bad_chars.add(c) | |
elif category[0] == "C": | |
# Control, format, surrogate, private use, and unassigned code points (C) | |
# are all unsafe in various ways. Control and format characters can affect | |
# text rendering if the email address is concatenated with other text. | |
# Bidirectional format characters are unsafe, even if used properly, because | |
# they cause an email address to render as a different email address. | |
# Private use characters do not make sense for publicly deliverable | |
# email addresses. | |
bad_chars.add(c) | |
else: | |
# All categories should be handled above, but in case there is something new | |
# to the Unicode specification in the future, reject all other categories. | |
bad_chars.add(c) | |
if bad_chars: | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("The email address contains unsafe characters: " | |
+ ", ".join(safe_character_display(c) for c in sorted(bad_chars)) + ".") | |
def check_dot_atom(label, start_descr, end_descr, is_hostname): | |
# RFC 5322 3.2.3 | |
if label.endswith("."): | |
raise EmailSyntaxError(end_descr.format("period")) | |
if label.startswith("."): | |
raise EmailSyntaxError(start_descr.format("period")) | |
if ".." in label: | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("An email address cannot have two periods in a row.") | |
if is_hostname: | |
# RFC 952 | |
if label.endswith("-"): | |
raise EmailSyntaxError(end_descr.format("hyphen")) | |
if label.startswith("-"): | |
raise EmailSyntaxError(start_descr.format("hyphen")) | |
if ".-" in label or "-." in label: | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("An email address cannot have a period and a hyphen next to each other.") | |
def validate_email_domain_name(domain, test_environment=False, globally_deliverable=True): | |
"""Validates the syntax of the domain part of an email address.""" | |
# Check for invalid characters before normalization. | |
# (RFC 952 plus RFC 6531 section 3.3 for internationalized addresses) | |
bad_chars = { | |
safe_character_display(c) | |
for c in domain | |
if not ATEXT_HOSTNAME_INTL.match(c) | |
} | |
if bad_chars: | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("The part after the @-sign contains invalid characters: " + ", ".join(sorted(bad_chars)) + ".") | |
# Check for unsafe characters. | |
# Some of this may be redundant with the range U+0080 to U+10FFFF that is checked | |
# by DOT_ATOM_TEXT_INTL. Other characters may be permitted by the email specs, but | |
# they may not be valid, safe, or sensible Unicode strings. | |
check_unsafe_chars(domain) | |
# Perform UTS-46 normalization, which includes casefolding, NFC normalization, | |
# and converting all label separators (the period/full stop, fullwidth full stop, | |
# ideographic full stop, and halfwidth ideographic full stop) to regular dots. | |
# It will also raise an exception if there is an invalid character in the input, | |
# such as "⒈" which is invalid because it would expand to include a dot. | |
# Since several characters are normalized to a dot, this has to come before | |
# checks related to dots, like check_dot_atom which comes next. | |
try: | |
domain = idna.uts46_remap(domain, std3_rules=False, transitional=False) | |
except idna.IDNAError as e: | |
raise EmailSyntaxError(f"The part after the @-sign contains invalid characters ({e}).") from e | |
# The domain part is made up dot-separated "labels." Each label must | |
# have at least one character and cannot start or end with dashes, which | |
# means there are some surprising restrictions on periods and dashes. | |
# Check that before we do IDNA encoding because the IDNA library gives | |
# unfriendly errors for these cases, but after UTS-46 normalization because | |
# it can insert periods and hyphens (from fullwidth characters). | |
# (RFC 952, RFC 1123 2.1, RFC 5322 3.2.3) | |
check_dot_atom(domain, 'An email address cannot have a {} immediately after the @-sign.', 'An email address cannot end with a {}.', is_hostname=True) | |
# Check for RFC 5890's invalid R-LDH labels, which are labels that start | |
# with two characters other than "xn" and two dashes. | |
for label in domain.split("."): | |
if re.match(r"(?!xn)..--", label, re.I): | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("An email address cannot have two letters followed by two dashes immediately after the @-sign or after a period, except Punycode.") | |
if DOT_ATOM_TEXT_HOSTNAME.match(domain): | |
# This is a valid non-internationalized domain. | |
ascii_domain = domain | |
else: | |
# If international characters are present in the domain name, convert | |
# the domain to IDNA ASCII. If internationalized characters are present, | |
# the MTA must either support SMTPUTF8 or the mail client must convert the | |
# domain name to IDNA before submission. | |
# | |
# Unfortunately this step incorrectly 'fixes' domain names with leading | |
# periods by removing them, so we have to check for this above. It also gives | |
# a funky error message ("No input") when there are two periods in a | |
# row, also checked separately above. | |
# | |
# For ASCII-only domains, the transformation does nothing and is safe to | |
# apply. However, to ensure we don't rely on the idna library for basic | |
# syntax checks, we don't use it if it's not needed. | |
# | |
# uts46 is off here because it is handled above. | |
try: | |
ascii_domain = idna.encode(domain, uts46=False).decode("ascii") | |
except idna.IDNAError as e: | |
if "Domain too long" in str(e): | |
# We can't really be more specific because UTS-46 normalization means | |
# the length check is applied to a string that is different from the | |
# one the user supplied. Also I'm not sure if the length check applies | |
# to the internationalized form, the IDNA ASCII form, or even both! | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("The email address is too long after the @-sign.") from e | |
# Other errors seem to not be possible because the call to idna.uts46_remap | |
# would have already raised them. | |
raise EmailSyntaxError(f"The part after the @-sign contains invalid characters ({e}).") from e | |
# Check the syntax of the string returned by idna.encode. | |
# It should never fail. | |
if not DOT_ATOM_TEXT_HOSTNAME.match(ascii_domain): | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("The email address contains invalid characters after the @-sign after IDNA encoding.") | |
# Check the length of the domain name in bytes. | |
# (RFC 1035 2.3.4 and RFC 5321 4.5.3.1.2) | |
# We're checking the number of bytes ("octets") here, which can be much | |
# higher than the number of characters in internationalized domains, | |
# on the assumption that the domain may be transmitted without SMTPUTF8 | |
# as IDNA ASCII. (This is also checked by idna.encode, so this exception | |
# is never reached for internationalized domains.) | |
if len(ascii_domain) > DOMAIN_MAX_LENGTH: | |
reason = get_length_reason(ascii_domain, limit=DOMAIN_MAX_LENGTH) | |
raise EmailSyntaxError(f"The email address is too long after the @-sign {reason}.") | |
# Also check the label length limit. | |
# (RFC 1035 2.3.1) | |
for label in ascii_domain.split("."): | |
if len(label) > DNS_LABEL_LENGTH_LIMIT: | |
reason = get_length_reason(label, limit=DNS_LABEL_LENGTH_LIMIT) | |
raise EmailSyntaxError(f"After the @-sign, periods cannot be separated by so many characters {reason}.") | |
if globally_deliverable: | |
# All publicly deliverable addresses have domain names with at least | |
# one period, at least for gTLDs created since 2013 (per the ICANN Board | |
# New gTLD Program Committee, https://www.icann.org/en/announcements/details/new-gtld-dotless-domain-names-prohibited-30-8-2013-en). | |
# We'll consider the lack of a period a syntax error | |
# since that will match people's sense of what an email address looks | |
# like. We'll skip this in test environments to allow '@test' email | |
# addresses. | |
if "." not in ascii_domain and not (ascii_domain == "test" and test_environment): | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("The part after the @-sign is not valid. It should have a period.") | |
# We also know that all TLDs currently end with a letter. | |
if not DOMAIN_NAME_REGEX.search(ascii_domain): | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("The part after the @-sign is not valid. It is not within a valid top-level domain.") | |
# Check special-use and reserved domain names. | |
# Some might fail DNS-based deliverability checks, but that | |
# can be turned off, so we should fail them all sooner. | |
# See the references in __init__.py. | |
from . import SPECIAL_USE_DOMAIN_NAMES | |
for d in SPECIAL_USE_DOMAIN_NAMES: | |
# See the note near the definition of SPECIAL_USE_DOMAIN_NAMES. | |
if d == "test" and test_environment: | |
continue | |
if ascii_domain == d or ascii_domain.endswith("." + d): | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("The part after the @-sign is a special-use or reserved name that cannot be used with email.") | |
# We may have been given an IDNA ASCII domain to begin with. Check | |
# that the domain actually conforms to IDNA. It could look like IDNA | |
# but not be actual IDNA. For ASCII-only domains, the conversion out | |
# of IDNA just gives the same thing back. | |
# | |
# This gives us the canonical internationalized form of the domain. | |
try: | |
domain_i18n = idna.decode(ascii_domain.encode('ascii')) | |
except idna.IDNAError as e: | |
raise EmailSyntaxError(f"The part after the @-sign is not valid IDNA ({e}).") from e | |
# Check for invalid characters after normalization. These | |
# should never arise. See the similar checks above. | |
bad_chars = { | |
safe_character_display(c) | |
for c in domain | |
if not ATEXT_HOSTNAME_INTL.match(c) | |
} | |
if bad_chars: | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("The part after the @-sign contains invalid characters: " + ", ".join(sorted(bad_chars)) + ".") | |
check_unsafe_chars(domain) | |
# Return the IDNA ASCII-encoded form of the domain, which is how it | |
# would be transmitted on the wire (except when used with SMTPUTF8 | |
# possibly), as well as the canonical Unicode form of the domain, | |
# which is better for display purposes. This should also take care | |
# of RFC 6532 section 3.1's suggestion to apply Unicode NFC | |
# normalization to addresses. | |
return { | |
"ascii_domain": ascii_domain, | |
"domain": domain_i18n, | |
} | |
def validate_email_length(addrinfo): | |
# If the email address has an ASCII representation, then we assume it may be | |
# transmitted in ASCII (we can't assume SMTPUTF8 will be used on all hops to | |
# the destination) and the length limit applies to ASCII characters (which is | |
# the same as octets). The number of characters in the internationalized form | |
# may be many fewer (because IDNA ASCII is verbose) and could be less than 254 | |
# Unicode characters, and of course the number of octets over the limit may | |
# not be the number of characters over the limit, so if the email address is | |
# internationalized, we can't give any simple information about why the address | |
# is too long. | |
if addrinfo.ascii_email and len(addrinfo.ascii_email) > EMAIL_MAX_LENGTH: | |
if addrinfo.ascii_email == addrinfo.normalized: | |
reason = get_length_reason(addrinfo.ascii_email) | |
elif len(addrinfo.normalized) > EMAIL_MAX_LENGTH: | |
# If there are more than 254 characters, then the ASCII | |
# form is definitely going to be too long. | |
reason = get_length_reason(addrinfo.normalized, utf8=True) | |
else: | |
reason = "(when converted to IDNA ASCII)" | |
raise EmailSyntaxError(f"The email address is too long {reason}.") | |
# In addition, check that the UTF-8 encoding (i.e. not IDNA ASCII and not | |
# Unicode characters) is at most 254 octets. If the addres is transmitted using | |
# SMTPUTF8, then the length limit probably applies to the UTF-8 encoded octets. | |
# If the email address has an ASCII form that differs from its internationalized | |
# form, I don't think the internationalized form can be longer, and so the ASCII | |
# form length check would be sufficient. If there is no ASCII form, then we have | |
# to check the UTF-8 encoding. The UTF-8 encoding could be up to about four times | |
# longer than the number of characters. | |
# | |
# See the length checks on the local part and the domain. | |
if len(addrinfo.normalized.encode("utf8")) > EMAIL_MAX_LENGTH: | |
if len(addrinfo.normalized) > EMAIL_MAX_LENGTH: | |
# If there are more than 254 characters, then the UTF-8 | |
# encoding is definitely going to be too long. | |
reason = get_length_reason(addrinfo.normalized, utf8=True) | |
else: | |
reason = "(when encoded in bytes)" | |
raise EmailSyntaxError(f"The email address is too long {reason}.") | |
def validate_email_domain_literal(domain_literal): | |
# This is obscure domain-literal syntax. Parse it and return | |
# a compressed/normalized address. | |
# RFC 5321 4.1.3 and RFC 5322 3.4.1. | |
# Try to parse the domain literal as an IPv4 address. | |
# There is no tag for IPv4 addresses, so we can never | |
# be sure if the user intends an IPv4 address. | |
if re.match(r"^[0-9\.]+$", domain_literal): | |
try: | |
addr = ipaddress.IPv4Address(domain_literal) | |
except ValueError as e: | |
raise EmailSyntaxError(f"The address in brackets after the @-sign is not valid: It is not an IPv4 address ({e}) or is missing an address literal tag.") from e | |
# Return the IPv4Address object and the domain back unchanged. | |
return { | |
"domain_address": addr, | |
"domain": f"[{addr}]", | |
} | |
# If it begins with "IPv6:" it's an IPv6 address. | |
if domain_literal.startswith("IPv6:"): | |
try: | |
addr = ipaddress.IPv6Address(domain_literal[5:]) | |
except ValueError as e: | |
raise EmailSyntaxError(f"The IPv6 address in brackets after the @-sign is not valid ({e}).") from e | |
# Return the IPv6Address object and construct a normalized | |
# domain literal. | |
return { | |
"domain_address": addr, | |
"domain": f"[IPv6:{addr.compressed}]", | |
} | |
# Nothing else is valid. | |
if ":" not in domain_literal: | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("The part after the @-sign in brackets is not an IPv4 address and has no address literal tag.") | |
# The tag (the part before the colon) has character restrictions, | |
# but since it must come from a registry of tags (in which only "IPv6" is defined), | |
# there's no need to check the syntax of the tag. See RFC 5321 4.1.2. | |
# Check for permitted ASCII characters. This actually doesn't matter | |
# since there will be an exception after anyway. | |
bad_chars = { | |
safe_character_display(c) | |
for c in domain_literal | |
if not DOMAIN_LITERAL_CHARS.match(c) | |
} | |
if bad_chars: | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("The part after the @-sign contains invalid characters in brackets: " + ", ".join(sorted(bad_chars)) + ".") | |
# There are no other domain literal tags. | |
# https://www.iana.org/assignments/address-literal-tags/address-literal-tags.xhtml | |
raise EmailSyntaxError("The part after the @-sign contains an invalid address literal tag in brackets.") | |