Looks like the 'domain can be up to 254 characters' part is not true. Here is my test data
<?php
$str = 'garahasgcdotrrriefvdqvegtartfhpnlwizanrhcqirnqllicyjhttvdylvkqccpljzrgledgqpjbttgwbqwgtkytkjxtufqcermdywzthceowyurrlmvvbiljraidwnmznazymwcjdozfaauzcnlwsxqfzgpzbsru1234567890ukxzqsvowzhnwnzzdzokhcffkpdvwycpcmxdknjvaakqjgjkvtqctpkhvgmeytsypkrfozeljsochfjvlszrwutiq';
$local = substr($str, 0, 64);
$domain = substr($str, 0, 63);
$com = substr($str, 0, 63);
$email = $local. '@' . $domain . '.' . $com;
$is_valid = filter_var($email , FILTER_VALIDATE_EMAIL);
Above code returns TRUE. But if I try to increase $domain or $com, it fails. And of course I can't increase $local as per above comment.
So totally, it accepts only 192 characters.
Update:
Answering my own answer/question above:
Looks like the 254 character for domain rule needs further explanation.
Looks like PHP used to allow more than 63 character to a sub domain until PHP 5.3.2. When https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=49576 went in as part of PHP 5.3.3 release, it changed this behaviour.
So We can have the subdomain of max length of 63 characters. However the all total length of domain part can go up to 254.
e.g
local[64]@subdomain[63].subdomain[63].subdomain[63] is valid, but not
local[64]@subdomain[65].subdomain[63]
Each dot in domain part is sub-domain which can have max of 63 characters.
Here is a sample code that shows the above theory(worked till 5.3.2 and stopped working from 5.3.3) - http://3v4l.org/tnUR9#v5214