Kickbox determines if an email address is not only valid, but associated with a actual user. Uses include:
- Preventing users from creating accounts on your applications using fake, misspelled, or throw-away email addresses.
- Reducing bounces by removing old, invalid, and low quality email addresses from your mailing lists.
- Saving money and projecting your reputation by only sending to real email users.
To begin, hop over to kickbox.io and create a free account. Once you've signed up and logged in, click on API Settings and then click Add API Key. Take note of the generated API Key - you'll need it to setup the client as explained below.
Make sure you have composer installed.
Add the following to your composer.json
{
"require": {
"kickbox/kickbox": "*"
}
}Update your dependencies
$ php composer.phar updateThis package follows the
PSR-0convention names for its classes, which means you can easily integrate these classes loading in your own autoloader.
Works with [ 5.4 / 5.5 ]
<?php
// This file is generated by Composer
require_once 'vendor/autoload.php';
$client = new Kickbox\Client('Your_API_Key_Here');
$kickbox = $client->kickbox();
try {
$response = $kickbox->verify("[email protected]");
}
catch (Exception $e) {
echo "Code: " . $e->getCode() . " Message: " . $e->getMessage();
}timeout integer (optional) - Maximum time, in milliseconds, for the API to complete a verification request. Default: 6000.
// Example with options
$response = $kickbox->verify("[email protected]", array('timeout' => 6000));A successful API call responds with the following values:
- result
string- The verification result:deliverable,undeliverable,risky,unknown - reason
string- The reason for the result. Possible reasons are:invalid_email- Specified email is not a valid email address syntaxinvalid_domain- Domain for email does not existrejected_email- Email address was rejected by the SMTP server, email address does not existaccepted_email- Email address was accepted by the SMTP serverlow_quality- Email address has quality issues that may make it a risky or low-value addresslow_deliverability- Email address appears to be deliverable, but deliverability cannot be guaranteedno_connect- Could not connect to SMTP servertimeout- SMTP session timed outinvalid_smtp- SMTP server returned an unexpected/invalid responseunavailable_smtp- SMTP server was unavailable to process our requestunexpected_error- An unexpected error has occurred
- role
true | false- true if the email address is a role address ([email protected],[email protected], etc) - free
true | false- true if the email address uses a free email service like gmail.com or yahoo.com. - disposable
true | false- true if the email address uses a disposable domain like trashmail.com or mailinator.com. - accept_all
true | false- true if the email was accepted, but the domain appears to accept all emails addressed to that domain. - did_you_mean
null | string- Returns a suggested email if a possible spelling error was detected. ([email protected]->[email protected]) - sendex
float- A quality score of the provided email address ranging between 0 (no quality) and 1 (perfect quality). More information on the Sendex Score can be found here. - email
string- Returns a normalized version of the provided email address. ([email protected]->[email protected]) - user
string- The user (a.k.a local part) of the provided email address. ([email protected]->bob) - domain
string- The domain of the provided email address. ([email protected]->example.com) - success
true | false- true if the API request was successful (i.e., no authentication or unexpected errors occurred)
An example response would look like:
$response = $kickbox->verify('[email protected]');
var_dump($response);
//Below is an example of what the var_dump($response) looks like:
class Kickbox\HttpClient\Response#29 (3) {
public $body =>
array(13) {
'result' =>
string(11) "deliverable"
'reason' =>
string(14) "accepted_email"
'role' =>
bool(false)
'free' =>
bool(true)
'disposable' =>
bool(false)
'accept_all' =>
bool(false)
'did_you_mean' =>
NULL
'sendex' =>
int(1)
'email' =>
string(20) "[email protected]"
'user' =>
string(9) "test"
'domain' =>
string(10) "example.com"
'success' =>
bool(true)
'message' =>
NULL
}
public $code =>
int(200)
public $headers =>
class Guzzle\Http\Message\Header\HeaderCollection#40 (1) {
protected $headers =>
array(11) {
'server' =>
class Guzzle\Http\Message\Header#41 (3) {
...
}
'date' =>
class Guzzle\Http\Message\Header#42 (3) {
...
}
'content-type' =>
class Guzzle\Http\Message\Header#43 (3) {
...
}
'content-length' =>
class Guzzle\Http\Message\Header#44 (3) {
...
}
'connection' =>
class Guzzle\Http\Message\Header#45 (3) {
...
}
'cache-control' =>
class Guzzle\Http\Message\Header\CacheControl#46 (4) {
...
}
'pragma' =>
class Guzzle\Http\Message\Header#47 (3) {
...
}
'expires' =>
class Guzzle\Http\Message\Header#48 (3) {
...
}
'x-kickbox-balance' =>
class Guzzle\Http\Message\Header#49 (3) {
...
}
'set-cookie' =>
class Guzzle\Http\Message\Header#50 (3) {
...
}
'x-kickbox-response-time' =>
class Guzzle\Http\Message\Header#51 (3) {
...
}
}
}
}Along with each response, the following HTTP headers are included:
X-Kickbox-Balance- Your remaining verification credit balance (Daily + On Demand).X-Kickbox-Response-Time- The elapsed time (in milliseconds) it took Kickbox to process the request.
MIT
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