Flanker is an open source parsing library written in Python by the Mailgun Team. Flanker currently consists of an address parsing library (flanker.addresslib) as well as a MIME parsing library (flanker.mime).
Detailed documentation is provided in the User Manual as well as the API Reference. A Quickstart Guide is provided below.
Flanker is heavily used by Mailgun in production with Python 2.7. The current production version is v0.8.5.
Support for Python 3 was added in v0.9.0 by popular demand from the community. We are not using Flanker with Python 3 in the house. All we know is that tests pass with Python 3.6, so use at your own risk. Feel free to report Python 3 specific issues if you see any.
You can install flanker via pip or clone the repo from GitHub.
You'll need Python headers files before you start working with flanker, so install them first:
# ubuntu
sudo apt-get install python-dev
# fedora
sudo yum install python-devel
If you are using pip, simply type:
pip install flanker
If you are cloning from GitHub, you can type:
git clone git@github.com:mailgun/flanker.git
cd flanker
pip install -e .
To parse a single mailbox (display name as well as email address):
>>> from flanker.addresslib import address
>>>
>>> address.parse('Foo foo@example.com')
Foo <foo@example.com>
An invalid address is returned as None:
>>> from flanker.addresslib import address
>>>
>>> print address.parse('@example.com')
None
To parse a single email address (no display name):
>>> from flanker.addresslib import address
>>>
>>> address.parse('foo@example.com', addr_spec_only=True)
foo@example.com
To parse an address list:
>>> from flanker.addresslib import address
>>>
>>> address.parse_list(['foo@example.com, bar@example.com, @example.com'])
[foo@example.com, bar@example.com]
To parse an address list as well as return a tuple containing the parsed addresses and the unparsable portions
>>> from flanker.addresslib import address
>>>
>>> address.parse_list(['foo@example.com, bar@example.com, @example.com'], as_tuple=True)
[foo@example.com, bar@example.com], ['@example.com']
To parse an address list in strict mode:
>>> from flanker.addresslib import address
>>>
>>> address.parse_list(['foo@example.com, bar@example.com, @example.com'], strict=True)
[foo@example.com, bar@example.com]
To validate an email address (parse as well as DNS, MX existence, and ESP grammar checks):
>>> from flanker.addresslib import address
>>>
>>> address.validate_address('foo@mailgun.com')
foo@mailgun.com
To validate an address list:
>>> from flanker.addresslib import address
>>>
>>> address.validate_list(['foo@mailgun.com, bar@mailgun.com, @mailgun.com'], as_tuple=True)
([foo@mailgun.com, bar@mailgun.com], ['@mailgun.com'])
For the following examples, message_string will be set to the following MIME message:
MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary=001a11c1d71697c7f004e6856996 From: Bob <bob@example.com> To: Alice <alice@example.com> Subject: hello, world Date: Mon, 16 Sep 2013 12:43:03 -0700 --001a11c1d71697c7f004e6856996 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Hello, *Alice* --001a11c1d71697c7f004e6856996 Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii <p>Hello, <b>Alice</b></p> --001a11c1d71697c7f004e6856996--
To parse a MIME message:
>>> from flanker import mime
>>>
>>> msg = mime.from_string(message_string)
MIME message headers (unicode multi-value dictionary with headers):
>>> from flanker import mime
>>>
>>> msg = mime.from_string(message_string)
>>> msg.headers.items()
[('Mime-Version', '1.0'),
('Content-Type',
('multipart/alternative', {'boundary': u'001a11c1d71697c7f004e6856996'})),
('From', 'Bob <bob@example.com>'),
('To', 'Alice <alice@example.com>'),
('Subject', 'hello, world'),
('Date', 'Mon, 16 Sep 2013 12:43:03 -0700')]
Useful content_type member with predicates:
>>> from flanker import mime
>>> msg = mime.from_string(message_string)
>>>
>>> msg.content_type.is_multipart()
True
>>>
>>> msg.content_type.is_singlepart()
False
>>>
>>> msg.content_type.is_message_container()
False
Decoded body of a message:
>>> from flanker import mime
>>> msg = mime.from_string(message_string)
>>>
>>> # None because message is multipart
>>> print msg.body
None
>>>
>>> for part in msg.parts:
print 'Content-Type: {} Body: {}'.format(part, part.body)
Content-Type: (text/plain) Body: Hello, *Alice*
Content-Type: (text/html) Body: <p>Hello, <b>Alice</b></p>
>>> # None because no enclosed messages exist
>>> print msg.enclosed
None