Provided by: tcllib_1.15-dfsg-2_all bug

NAME

       smtp - Client-side tcl implementation of the smtp protocol

SYNOPSIS

       package require Tcl

       package require mime  ?1.5.4?

       package require smtp  ?1.4.5?

       ::smtp::sendmessage token option...

_________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       The smtp library package provides the client side of the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) (1) (2).

       ::smtp::sendmessage token option...
              This  command  sends  the  MIME  part  (see  package mime) represented by token to an SMTP server.
              options is a list of options and their associated values.  The recognized options are:

              -servers
                     A list of SMTP servers. The default is localhost.

              -ports A list of SMTP ports. The default is 25.

              -client
                     The name to use as our hostname when connecting to the server. By default  this  is  either
                     localhost  if  one  of  the  servers is localhost, or is set to the string returned by info
                     hostname.

              -queue Indicates that the SMTP server should be asked to queue the message for later processing. A
                     boolean value.

              -atleastone
                     Indicates that the SMTP server must find at least one recipient acceptable for the  message
                     to be sent. A boolean value.

              -originator
                     A  string  containing  an  822-style  address  specification.  If  present the header isn't
                     examined for an originator address.

              -recipients
                     A string containing one or more 822-style address specifications.  If  present  the  header
                     isn't  examined for recipient addresses). If the string contains more than one address they
                     will be separated by commas.

              -header
                     A list containing two elements, an smtp header and its associated value (the -header option
                     may occur zero or more times).

              -usetls
                     This package supports the RFC 3207 TLS extension (3) by default provided the tls package is
                     available. You can turn this off with this boolean option.

              -tlspolicy
                     This option lets you specify a command to be called if an error occurs  during  TLS  setup.
                     The  command  is  called  with  the  SMTP code and diagnostic message appended. The command
                     should return 'secure' or 'insecure' where insecure will cause the package to  continue  on
                     the  unencrypted  channel.   Returning  'secure' will cause the socket to be closed and the
                     next server in the -servers list to be tried.

              -username

              -password
                     If your SMTP server requires authentication (RFC 2554 (4)) before accepting  mail  you  can
                     use -username and -password to provide your authentication details to the server. Currently
                     this  package  supports  DIGEST-MD5,  CRAM-MD5, LOGIN and PLAIN authentication methods. The
                     most secure method will be tried first and each method tried in turn until  we  are  either
                     authorized or we run out of methods. Note that if the server permits a TLS connection, then
                     the authorization will occur after we begin using the secure channel.

                     Please  also read the section on Authentication, it details the necessary prequisites, i.e.
                     packages needed to support these options and authentication.

       If the -originator option is not present, the originator address is taken  from  From  (or  Resent-From);
       similarly,  if  the -recipients option is not present, recipient addresses are taken from To, cc, and Bcc
       (or Resent-To, and so on). Note that the header key/values supplied by  the  -header  option  (not  those
       present  in the MIME part) are consulted. Regardless, header key/values are added to the outgoing message
       as necessary to ensure that a valid 822-style message is sent.

       The command returns a list indicating which recipients were unacceptable to the SMTP server. Each element
       of the list is another list, containing the address, an  SMTP  error  code,  and  a  textual  diagnostic.
       Depending on the -atleastone option and the intended recipients, a non-empty list may still indicate that
       the message was accepted by the server.

AUTHENTICATION

       Beware.  SMTP  authentication  uses SASL. I.e. if the user has to authenticate a connection, i.e. use the
       options -user and -password (see above) it is necessary to have the sasl package available so  that  smtp
       can load it.

       This is a soft dependency because not everybody requires authentication, and sasl depends on a lot of the
       cryptographic (secure) hashes, i.e. all of md5, otp, md4, sha1, and ripemd160.

EXAMPLE

              proc send_simple_message {recipient email_server subject body} {
              package require smtp
              package require mime
              set token [mime::initialize -canonical text/plain \\
              -string $body]
              mime::setheader $token Subject $subject
              smtp::sendmessage $token \\
              -recipients $recipient -servers $email_server
              mime::finalize $token
              }
              send_simple_message someone@somewhere.com localhost \\
              "This is the subject." "This is the message."

REFERENCES

       [1]    Jonathan  B.  Postel,  "SIMPLE  MAIL  TRANSFER  PROTOCOL", RFC 821, August 1982.  (http://www.rfc-
              editor.org/rfc/rfc821.txt)

       [2]    J.  Klensin,  "Simple  Mail  Transfer  Protocol",  RFC   2821,   April   2001.    (http://www.rfc-
              editor.org/rfc/rfc2821.txt)

       [3]    P.  Hoffman,  "SMTP  Service  Extension  for Secure SMTP over Transport Layer Security", RFC 3207,
              February 2002.  (http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc3207.txt)

       [4]    J. Myers, "SMTP Service Extension for Authentication", RFC  2554,  March  1999.   (http://www.rfc-
              editor.org/rfc/rfc2554.txt)

BUGS, IDEAS, FEEDBACK

       This  document,  and  the package it describes, will undoubtedly contain bugs and other problems.  Please
       report     such     in     the      category      smtp      of      the      Tcllib      SF      Trackers
       [http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=12883].   Please also report any ideas for enhancements you may
       have for either package and/or documentation.

SEE ALSO

       ftp, http, mime, pop3

KEYWORDS

       email, internet, mail, mime, net, rfc 2554, rfc 2821, rfc 3207, rfc 821, rfc 822, smtp, tls

CATEGORY

       Networking

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 1999-2000 Marshall T. Rose and others

mime                                                  1.4.5                                           smtp(3tcl)