% Documentation by ESR \section{Standard Module \module{smtplib}} \stmodindex{smtplib} \label{module-smtplib} The \module{smtplib} module defines an SMTP session object that can be used to send mail to any Internet machine with an SMTP or ESMTP listener daemon. For details of SMTP and ESMTP operation, consult \rfc{821} (\emph{Simple Mail Transfer Protocol}) and \rfc{1869} (\emph{SMTP Service Extensions}). \begin{classdesc}{SMTP}{\optional{host, port}} A \class{SMTP} instance encapsulates an SMTP connection. It has methods that support a full repertoire of SMTP and ESMTP operations. If the optional host and port parameters are given, the SMTP \method{connect()} method is called with those parameters during initialization. For normal use, you should only require the initialization/connect, \method{sendmail()}, and \method{quit()} methods An example is included below. \end{classdesc} \subsection{SMTP Objects} \label{SMTP-objects} An \class{SMTP} instance has the following methods: \begin{methoddesc}{set_debuglevel}{level} Set the debug output level. A true value for \var{level} results in debug messages for connection and for all messages sent to and received from the server. \end{methoddesc} \begin{methoddesc}{connect}{\optional{host='localhost'\optional{, port=0}}} Connect to a host on a given port. If the hostname ends with a colon (\character{:}) followed by a number, that suffix will be stripped off and the number interpreted as the port number to use. Note: This method is automatically invoked by the constructor if a host is specified during instantiation. \end{methoddesc} \begin{methoddesc}{docmd}{cmd, \optional{, argstring}} Send a command \var{cmd} to the server. The optional argument \var{argstring} is simply concatenated to the command, separated by a space. This returns a 2-tuple composed of a numeric response code and the actual response line (multiline responses are joined into one long line.) In normal operation it should not be necessary to call this method explicitly. It is used to implement other methods and may be useful for testing private extensions. \end{methoddesc} \begin{methoddesc}{helo}{\optional{hostname}} Identify yourself to the SMTP server using HELO. The hostname argument defaults to the FQDN of the local host. In normal operation it should not be necessary to call this method explicitly. It will be implicitly called by the \method{sendmail()} when necessary. \end{methoddesc} \begin{methoddesc}{ehlo}{\optional{hostname}} Identify yourself to an ESMTP server using HELO. The hostname argument defaults to the FQDN of the local host. Examine the response for ESMTP option and store them for use by \method{has_option()}. Unless you wish to use \method{has_option()} before sending mail, it should not be necessary to call this method explicitly. It will be implicitly called by \method{sendmail()} when necessary. \end{methoddesc} \begin{methoddesc}{has_option}{name} Return \code{1} if \var{name} is in the set of ESMTP options returned by the server, \code{0} otherwise. Case is ignored. \end{methoddesc} \begin{methoddesc}{verify}{address} Check the validity of an address on this server using SMTP VRFY. Returns a tuple consisting of code 250 and a full \rfc{822} address (including human name) if the user address is valid. Otherwise returns an SMTP error code of 400 or greater and an error string. Note: many sites disable SMTP VRFY in order to foil spammers. \end{methoddesc} \begin{methoddesc}{sendmail}{from_addr, to_addrs, msg\optional{, options=[]}} Send mail. The required arguments are an \rfc{822} from-address string, a list of \rfc{822} to-address strings, and a message string. The caller may pass a list of ESMTP options to be used in MAIL FROM commands. If there has been no previous EHLO or HELO command this session, this method tries ESMTP EHLO first. If the server does ESMTP, message size and each of the specified options will be passed to it (if the option is in the feature set the server advertises). If EHLO fails, HELO will be tried and ESMTP options suppressed. This method will return normally if the mail is accepted for at least one recipient. Otherwise it will throw an exception (either \exception{SMTPSenderRefused}, \exception{SMTPRecipientsRefused}, or \exception{SMTPDataError}). That is, if this method does not throw an exception, then someone should get your mail. If this method does not throw an exception, it returns a dictionary, with one entry for each recipient that was refused. \end{methoddesc} \begin{methoddesc}{quit}{} Terminate the SMTP session and close the connection. \end{methoddesc} Low-level methods corresponding to the standard SMTP/ESMTP commands HELP, RSET, NOOP, MAIL, RCPT, and DATA are also supported. Normally these do not need to be called directly, so they are not documented here. For details, consult the module code. \subsection{SMTP Example} \label{SMTP-example} % really need a little description here... \begin{verbatim} import sys, rfc822 def prompt(prompt): sys.stdout.write(prompt + ": ") return string.strip(sys.stdin.readline()) fromaddr = prompt("From") toaddrs = string.splitfields(prompt("To"), ',') print "Enter message, end with ^D:" msg = '' while 1: line = sys.stdin.readline() if not line: break msg = msg + line print "Message length is " + `len(msg)` server = SMTP('localhost') server.set_debuglevel(1) server.sendmail(fromaddr, toaddrs, msg) server.quit() \end{verbatim} \begin{seealso} \seetext{\rfc{821}, \emph{Simple Mail Transfer Protocol}. Available online at \url{http://info.internet.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc/files/rfc821.txt}.} \seetext{\rfc{1869}, \emph{SMTP Service Extensions}. Available online at \url{http://info.internet.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc/files/rfc1869.txt}.} \end{seealso}