It can't be done that way.

For instance, if the remote machine is down, your mail server will be retrying your mail (in increasingly large intervals) for the next week or so, long after your script has disconnected.

There is no way to predict what the remote machine will say. In fact, in some cases the remote machine will accept the mail, and then it will send back a bounce.

Most of the methods which enabled you to connect to a given machine and ascertain if an email address local to that machine is valid or not have been disabled, because spammers were using them to generate target email addresses.


In reply to Re: Net::SMTP success / failure response by matija
in thread Net::SMTP success / failure response by Anonymous Monk

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