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MIME::Lite(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
MIME::Lite(3) |
MIME::Lite - low-calorie MIME generator
MIME::Lite is not recommended by its current maintainer. There are a number of
alternatives, like Email::MIME or MIME::Entity and Email::Sender, which you
should probably use instead. MIME::Lite continues to accrue weird bug reports,
and it is not receiving a large amount of refactoring due to the availability
of better alternatives. Please consider using something else.
Create and send using the default send method for your OS a single-part message:
use MIME::Lite;
### Create a new single-part message, to send a GIF file:
$msg = MIME::Lite->new(
From => 'me@myhost.com',
To => 'you@yourhost.com',
Cc => 'some@other.com, some@more.com',
Subject => 'Helloooooo, nurse!',
Type => 'image/gif',
Encoding => 'base64',
Path => 'hellonurse.gif'
);
$msg->send; # send via default
Create a multipart message (i.e., one with attachments) and send
it via SMTP
### Create a new multipart message:
$msg = MIME::Lite->new(
From => 'me@myhost.com',
To => 'you@yourhost.com',
Cc => 'some@other.com, some@more.com',
Subject => 'A message with 2 parts...',
Type => 'multipart/mixed'
);
### Add parts (each "attach" has same arguments as "new"):
$msg->attach(
Type => 'TEXT',
Data => "Here's the GIF file you wanted"
);
$msg->attach(
Type => 'image/gif',
Path => 'aaa000123.gif',
Filename => 'logo.gif',
Disposition => 'attachment'
);
### use Net::SMTP to do the sending
$msg->send('smtp','some.host', Debug=>1 );
Output a message:
### Format as a string:
$str = $msg->as_string;
### Print to a filehandle (say, a "sendmail" stream):
$msg->print(\*SENDMAIL);
Send a message:
### Send in the "best" way (the default is to use "sendmail"):
$msg->send;
### Send a specific way:
$msg->send('type',@args);
Specify default send method:
MIME::Lite->send('smtp','some.host',Debug=>0);
with authentication
MIME::Lite->send('smtp','some.host', AuthUser=>$user, AuthPass=>$pass);
using SSL
MIME::Lite->send('smtp','some.host', SSL => 1, Port => 465 );
In the never-ending quest for great taste with fewer calories, we proudly
present: MIME::Lite.
MIME::Lite is intended as a simple, standalone module for
generating (not parsing!) MIME messages... specifically, it allows you to
output a simple, decent single- or multi-part message with text or binary
attachments. It does not require that you have the Mail:: or MIME:: modules
installed, but will work with them if they are.
You can specify each message part as either the literal data
itself (in a scalar or array), or as a string which can be given to
open() to get a readable filehandle (e.g., "<filename"
or "somecommand|").
You don't need to worry about encoding your message data: this
module will do that for you. It handles the 5 standard MIME encodings.
$msg = MIME::Lite->new(
From =>'me@myhost.com',
To =>'you@yourhost.com',
Cc =>'some@other.com, some@more.com',
Subject =>'Helloooooo, nurse!',
Data =>"How's it goin', eh?"
);
$msg = MIME::Lite->new(
From =>'me@myhost.com',
To =>'you@yourhost.com',
Cc =>'some@other.com, some@more.com',
Subject =>'Helloooooo, nurse!',
Type =>'image/gif',
Encoding =>'base64',
Path =>'hellonurse.gif'
);
### Create the multipart "container":
$msg = MIME::Lite->new(
From =>'me@myhost.com',
To =>'you@yourhost.com',
Cc =>'some@other.com, some@more.com',
Subject =>'A message with 2 parts...',
Type =>'multipart/mixed'
);
### Add the text message part:
### (Note that "attach" has same arguments as "new"):
$msg->attach(
Type =>'TEXT',
Data =>"Here's the GIF file you wanted"
);
### Add the image part:
$msg->attach(
Type =>'image/gif',
Path =>'aaa000123.gif',
Filename =>'logo.gif',
Disposition => 'attachment'
);
This will create a multipart message exactly as above, but using the
"attach to singlepart" hack:
### Start with a simple text message:
$msg = MIME::Lite->new(
From =>'me@myhost.com',
To =>'you@yourhost.com',
Cc =>'some@other.com, some@more.com',
Subject =>'A message with 2 parts...',
Type =>'TEXT',
Data =>"Here's the GIF file you wanted"
);
### Attach a part... the make the message a multipart automatically:
$msg->attach(
Type =>'image/gif',
Path =>'aaa000123.gif',
Filename =>'logo.gif'
);
### Create a standalone part:
$part = MIME::Lite->new(
Top => 0,
Type =>'text/html',
Data =>'<H1>Hello</H1>',
);
$part->attr('content-type.charset' => 'UTF-8');
$part->add('X-Comment' => 'A message for you');
### Attach it to any message:
$msg->attach($part);
### Write it to a filehandle:
$msg->print(\*STDOUT);
### Write just the header:
$msg->print_header(\*STDOUT);
### Write just the encoded body:
$msg->print_body(\*STDOUT);
### Get entire message as a string:
$str = $msg->as_string;
### Get just the header:
$str = $msg->header_as_string;
### Get just the encoded body:
$str = $msg->body_as_string;
### Send in the "best" way (the default is to use "sendmail"):
$msg->send;
$msg = MIME::Lite->new(
To =>'you@yourhost.com',
Subject =>'HTML with in-line images!',
Type =>'multipart/related'
);
$msg->attach(
Type => 'text/html',
Data => qq{
<body>
Here's <i>my</i> image:
<img src="cid:myimage.gif">
</body>
},
);
$msg->attach(
Type => 'image/gif',
Id => 'myimage.gif',
Path => '/path/to/somefile.gif',
);
$msg->send();
### Do something like this in your 'main':
if ($I_DONT_HAVE_SENDMAIL) {
MIME::Lite->send('smtp', $host, Timeout=>60,
AuthUser=>$user, AuthPass=>$pass);
}
### Now this will do the right thing:
$msg->send; ### will now use Net::SMTP as shown above
To alter the way the entire module behaves, you have the following
methods/options:
- MIME::Lite->field_order()
- When used as a classmethod, this changes the default order in which
headers are output for all messages. However, please consider using
the instance method variant instead, so you won't stomp on other message
senders in the same application.
- MIME::Lite->quiet()
- This classmethod can be used to suppress/unsuppress all warnings coming
from this module.
- MIME::Lite->send()
- When used as a classmethod, this can be used to specify a different
default mechanism for sending message. The initial default is:
MIME::Lite->send("sendmail", "/usr/lib/sendmail -t -oi -oem");
However, you should consider the similar but smarter and
taint-safe variant:
MIME::Lite->send("sendmail");
Or, for non-Unix users:
MIME::Lite->send("smtp");
- $MIME::Lite::AUTO_CC
- If true, automatically send to the Cc/Bcc addresses for
send_by_smtp(). Default is true.
- $MIME::Lite::AUTO_CONTENT_TYPE
- If true, try to automatically choose the content type from the file name
in
"new()"/"build()".
In other words, setting this true changes the default
"Type" from
"TEXT" to
"AUTO".
Default is false, since we must maintain
backwards-compatibility with prior behavior. Please consider
keeping it false, and just using Type 'AUTO' when you build() or
attach().
- $MIME::Lite::AUTO_ENCODE
- If true, automatically choose the encoding from the content type. Default
is true.
- $MIME::Lite::AUTO_VERIFY
- If true, check paths to attachments right before printing, raising an
exception if any path is unreadable. Default is true.
- $MIME::Lite::PARANOID
- If true, we won't attempt to use MIME::Base64, MIME::QuotedPrint, or
MIME::Types, even if they're available. Default is false. Please
consider keeping it false, and trusting these other packages to do the
right thing.
- new [PARAMHASH]
- Class method, constructor. Create a new message object.
If any arguments are given, they are passed into
"build()"; otherwise, just the empty
object is created.
- attach PART
- attach PARAMHASH...
- Instance method. Add a new part to this message, and return the new
part.
If you supply a single PART argument, it will be regarded as a
MIME::Lite object to be attached. Otherwise, this method assumes that
you are giving in the pairs of a PARAMHASH which will be sent into
"new()" to create the new part.
One of the possibly-quite-useful hacks thrown into this is the
"attach-to-singlepart" hack: if you attempt to attach a part
(let's call it "part 1") to a message that doesn't have a
content-type of "multipart" or "message", the
following happens:
- A new part (call it "part 0") is made.
- The MIME attributes and data (but not the other headers) are cut
from the "self" message, and pasted into "part
0".
- The "self" is turned into a "multipart/mixed"
message.
- The new "part 0" is added to the "self", and
then "part 1" is added.
One of the nice side-effects is that you can create a text message
and then add zero or more attachments to it, much in the same way that a
user agent like Netscape allows you to do.
- build [PARAMHASH]
- Class/instance method, initializer. Create (or initialize) a MIME
message object. Normally, you'll use the following keys in PARAMHASH:
* Data, FH, or Path (either one of these, or none if multipart)
* Type (e.g., "image/jpeg")
* From, To, and Subject (if this is the "top level" of a message)
The PARAMHASH can contain the following keys:
- (fieldname)
- Any field you want placed in the message header, taken from the standard
list of header fields (you don't need to worry about case):
Approved Encrypted Received Sender
Bcc From References Subject
Cc Keywords Reply-To To
Comments Message-ID Resent-* X-*
Content-* MIME-Version Return-Path
Date Organization
To give experienced users some veto power, these fields will
be set after the ones I set... so be careful: don't set any
MIME fields (like "Content-type")
unless you know what you're doing!
To specify a fieldname that's not in the above list,
even one that's identical to an option below, just give it with a
trailing ":", like
"My-field:". When in doubt, that
always signals a mail field (and it sort of looks like one
too).
- Data
- Alternative to "Path" or "FH". The actual
message data. This may be a scalar or a ref to an array of strings; if the
latter, the message consists of a simple concatenation of all the strings
in the array.
- Datestamp
- Optional. If given true (or omitted), we force the creation of a
"Date:" field stamped with the current
date/time if this is a top-level message. You may want this if using
send_by_smtp(). If you don't want this to be done, either provide
your own Date or explicitly set this to false.
- Disposition
- Optional. The content disposition,
"inline" or
"attachment". The default is
"inline".
- Encoding
- Optional. The content transfer encoding that should be used to
encode your data:
Use encoding: | If your message contains:
------------------------------------------------------------
7bit | Only 7-bit text, all lines <1000 characters
8bit | 8-bit text, all lines <1000 characters
quoted-printable | 8-bit text or long lines (more reliable than "8bit")
base64 | Largely non-textual data: a GIF, a tar file, etc.
The default is taken from the Type; generally it is
"binary" (no encoding) for text/*, message/*, and multipart/*,
and "base64" for everything else. A value of
"binary" is generally not
suitable for sending anything but ASCII text files with lines under 1000
characters, so consider using one of the other values instead.
In the case of "7bit"/"8bit", long lines
are automatically chopped to legal length; in the case of
"7bit", all 8-bit characters are automatically removed.
This may not be what you want, so pick your encoding well! For more
info, see "A MIME PRIMER".
- FH
- Alternative to "Data" or "Path". Filehandle
containing the data, opened for reading. See "ReadNow"
also.
- Filename
- Optional. The name of the attachment. You can use this to supply a
recommended filename for the end-user who is saving the attachment to
disk. You only need this if the filename at the end of the
"Path" is inadequate, or if you're using "Data"
instead of "Path". You should not put path information in
here (e.g., no "/" or "\" or ":" characters
should be used).
- Id
- Optional. Same as setting "content-id".
- Length
- Optional. Set the content length explicitly. Normally, this header
is automatically computed, but only under certain circumstances (see
"Benign limitations").
- Path
- Alternative to "Data" or "FH". Path to a file
containing the data... actually, it can be any open()able
expression. If it looks like a path, the last element will automatically
be treated as the filename. See "ReadNow" also.
- ReadNow
- Optional, for use with "Path". If true, will open the
path and slurp the contents into core now. This is useful if the Path
points to a command and you don't want to run the command over and over if
outputting the message several times. Fatal exception raised if the
open fails.
- Top
- Optional. If defined, indicates whether or not this is a
"top-level" MIME message. The parts of a multipart message are
not top-level. Default is true.
- Type
- Optional. The MIME content type, or one of these special values
(case-sensitive):
"TEXT" means "text/plain"
"BINARY" means "application/octet-stream"
"AUTO" means attempt to guess from the filename, falling back
to 'application/octet-stream'. This is good if you have
MIME::Types on your system and you have no idea what
file might be used for the attachment.
The default is "TEXT", but
it will be "AUTO" if you set
$AUTO_CONTENT_TYPE to true (sorry, but you have
to enable it explicitly, since we don't want to break code which depends
on the old behavior).
A picture being worth 1000 words (which is of course 2000 bytes,
so it's probably more of an "icon" than a "picture", but
I digress...), here are some examples:
$msg = MIME::Lite->build(
From => 'yelling@inter.com',
To => 'stocking@fish.net',
Subject => "Hi there!",
Type => 'TEXT',
Encoding => '7bit',
Data => "Just a quick note to say hi!"
);
$msg = MIME::Lite->build(
From => 'dorothy@emerald-city.oz',
To => 'gesundheit@edu.edu.edu',
Subject => "A gif for U"
Type => 'image/gif',
Path => "/home/httpd/logo.gif"
);
$msg = MIME::Lite->build(
From => 'laughing@all.of.us',
To => 'scarlett@fiddle.dee.de',
Subject => "A gzipp'ed tar file",
Type => 'x-gzip',
Path => "gzip < /usr/inc/somefile.tar |",
ReadNow => 1,
Filename => "somefile.tgz"
);
To show you what's really going on, that last example could also
have been written:
$msg = new MIME::Lite;
$msg->build(
Type => 'x-gzip',
Path => "gzip < /usr/inc/somefile.tar |",
ReadNow => 1,
Filename => "somefile.tgz"
);
$msg->add(From => "laughing@all.of.us");
$msg->add(To => "scarlett@fiddle.dee.de");
$msg->add(Subject => "A gzipp'ed tar file");
- add TAG,VALUE
- Instance method. Add field TAG with the given VALUE to the end of
the header. The TAG will be converted to all-lowercase, and the VALUE will
be made "safe" (returns will be given a trailing space).
Beware: any MIME fields you "add" will
override any MIME attributes I have when it comes time to output those
fields. Normally, you will use this method to add non-MIME
fields:
$msg->add("Subject" => "Hi there!");
Giving VALUE as an arrayref will cause all those values to be
added. This is only useful for special multiple-valued fields like
"Received":
$msg->add("Received" => ["here", "there", "everywhere"]
Giving VALUE as the empty string adds an invisible placeholder
to the header, which can be used to suppress the output of the
"Content-*" fields or the special "MIME-Version"
field. When suppressing fields, you should use replace() instead
of add():
$msg->replace("Content-disposition" => "");
Note: add() is probably going to be more
efficient than "replace()", so you're
better off using it for most applications if you are certain that you
don't need to delete() the field first.
Note: the name comes from Mail::Header.
- attr ATTR,[VALUE]
- Instance method. Set MIME attribute ATTR to the string VALUE. ATTR
is converted to all-lowercase. This method is normally used to set/get
MIME attributes:
$msg->attr("content-type" => "text/html");
$msg->attr("content-type.charset" => "US-ASCII");
$msg->attr("content-type.name" => "homepage.html");
This would cause the final output to look something like
this:
Content-type: text/html; charset=US-ASCII; name="homepage.html"
Note that the special empty sub-field tag indicates the
anonymous first sub-field.
Giving VALUE as undefined will cause the contents of the named
subfield to be deleted.
Supplying no VALUE argument just returns the attribute's
value:
$type = $msg->attr("content-type"); ### returns "text/html"
$name = $msg->attr("content-type.name"); ### returns "homepage.html"
- delete TAG
- Instance method. Delete field TAG with the given VALUE to the end
of the header. The TAG will be converted to all-lowercase.
$msg->delete("Subject");
Note: the name comes from Mail::Header.
- field_order FIELD,...FIELD
- Class/instance method. Change the order in which header fields are
output for this object:
$msg->field_order('from', 'to', 'content-type', 'subject');
When used as a class method, changes the default settings for
all objects:
MIME::Lite->field_order('from', 'to', 'content-type', 'subject');
Case does not matter: all field names will be coerced to
lowercase. In either case, supply the empty array to restore the default
ordering.
- fields
- Instance method. Return the full header for the object, as a ref to
an array of "[TAG, VALUE]" pairs, where
each TAG is all-lowercase. Note that any fields the user has explicitly
set will override the corresponding MIME fields that we would otherwise
generate. So, don't say...
$msg->set("Content-type" => "text/html; charset=US-ASCII");
unless you want the above value to override the
"Content-type" MIME field that we would normally generate.
Note: I called this "fields" because the
header() method of Mail::Header returns something different, but
similar enough to be confusing.
You can change the order of the fields: see
"field_order". You really shouldn't need to do this, but some
people have to deal with broken mailers.
- filename [FILENAME]
- Instance method. Set the filename which this data will be reported
as. This actually sets both "standard" attributes.
With no argument, returns the filename as dictated by the
content-disposition.
- get TAG,[INDEX]
- Instance method. Get the contents of field TAG, which might have
been set with set() or replace(). Returns the text of the
field.
$ml->get('Subject', 0);
If the optional 0-based INDEX is given, then we return the
INDEX'th occurrence of field TAG. Otherwise, we look at the context: In
a scalar context, only the first (0th) occurrence of the field is
returned; in an array context, all occurrences are returned.
Warning: this should only be used with non-MIME fields.
Behavior with MIME fields is TBD, and will raise an exception for
now.
- get_length
- Instance method. Recompute the content length for the message if
the process is trivial, setting the "content-length"
attribute as a side-effect:
$msg->get_length;
Returns the length, or undefined if not set.
Note: the content length can be difficult to compute,
since it involves assembling the entire encoded body and taking the
length of it (which, in the case of multipart messages, means freezing
all the sub-parts, etc.).
This method only sets the content length to a defined value if
the message is a singlepart with
"binary" encoding, and the body
is available either in-core or as a simple file. Otherwise, the content
length is set to the undefined value.
Since content-length is not a standard MIME field anyway
(that's right, kids: it's not in the MIME RFCs, it's an HTTP thing),
this seems pretty fair.
- parts
- Instance method. Return the parts of this entity, and this entity
only. Returns empty array if this entity has no parts.
This is not recursive! Parts can have sub-parts; use
parts_DFS() to get everything.
- parts_DFS
- Instance method. Return the list of all MIME::Lite objects included
in the entity, starting with the entity itself, in depth-first-search
order. If this object has no parts, it alone will be returned.
- preamble [TEXT]
- Instance method. Get/set the preamble string, assuming that this
object has subparts. Set it to undef for the default string.
- replace TAG,VALUE
- Instance method. Delete all occurrences of fields named TAG, and
add a new field with the given VALUE. TAG is converted to all-lowercase.
Beware the special MIME fields (MIME-version,
Content-*): if you "replace" a MIME field, the replacement
text will override the actual MIME attributes when it comes time
to output that field. So normally you use attr() to change MIME
fields and add()/replace() to change non-MIME
fields:
$msg->replace("Subject" => "Hi there!");
Giving VALUE as the empty string will effectively
prevent that field from being output. This is the correct way to
suppress the special MIME fields:
$msg->replace("Content-disposition" => "");
Giving VALUE as undefined will just cause all explicit
values for TAG to be deleted, without having any new values added.
Note: the name of this method comes from
Mail::Header.
- scrub
- Instance method. This is Alpha code. If you use it, please let
me know how it goes. Recursively goes through the "parts"
tree of this message and tries to find MIME attributes that can be
removed. With an array argument, removes exactly those attributes; e.g.:
$msg->scrub(['content-disposition', 'content-length']);
Is the same as recursively doing:
$msg->replace('Content-disposition' => '');
$msg->replace('Content-length' => '');
- binmode [OVERRIDE]
- Instance method. With no argument, returns whether or not it thinks
that the data (as given by the "Path" argument of
"build()") should be read using
binmode() (for example, when
"read_now()" is invoked).
The default behavior is that any content type other than
"text/*" or
"message/*" is binmode'd; this should
in general work fine.
With a defined argument, this method sets an explicit
"override" value. An undefined argument unsets the override.
The new current value is returned.
- data [DATA]
- Instance method. Get/set the literal DATA of the message. The DATA
may be either a scalar, or a reference to an array of scalars (which will
simply be joined).
Warning: setting the data causes the
"content-length" attribute to be recomputed (possibly to
nothing).
- fh [FILEHANDLE]
- Instance method. Get/set the FILEHANDLE which contains the message
data.
Takes a filehandle as an input and stores it in the object.
This routine is similar to path(); one important difference is
that no attempt is made to set the content length.
- path [PATH]
- Instance method. Get/set the PATH to the message data.
Warning: setting the path recomputes any existing
"content-length" field, and re-sets the "filename"
(to the last element of the path if it looks like a simple path, and to
nothing if not).
- resetfh [FILEHANDLE]
- Instance method. Set the current position of the filehandle back to
the beginning. Only applies if you used "FH" in build()
or attach() for this message.
Returns false if unable to reset the filehandle (since not all
filehandles are seekable).
- read_now
- Instance method. Forces data from the path/filehandle (as specified
by "build()") to be read into core
immediately, just as though you had given it literally with the
"Data" keyword.
Note that the in-core data will always be used if
available.
Be aware that everything is slurped into a giant scalar: you
may not want to use this if sending tar files! The benefit of not
reading in the data is that very large files can be handled by this
module if left on disk until the message is output via
"print()" or
"print_body()".
- sign PARAMHASH
- Instance method. Sign the message. This forces the message to be
read into core, after which the signature is appended to it.
- Data
- As in "build()": the literal signature
data. Can be either a scalar or a ref to an array of scalars.
- Path
- As in "build()": the path to the
file.
If no arguments are given, the default is:
Path => "$ENV{HOME}/.signature"
The content-length is recomputed.
- verify_data
- Instance method. Verify that all "paths" to attached data
exist, recursively. It might be a good idea for you to do this before a
print(), to prevent accidental partial output if a file might be
missing. Raises exception if any path is not readable.
- print [OUTHANDLE]
- Instance method. Print the message to the given output handle, or
to the currently-selected filehandle if none was given.
All OUTHANDLE has to be is a filehandle (possibly a glob ref),
or any object that responds to a print() message.
- print_body [OUTHANDLE] [IS_SMTP]
- Instance method. Print the body of a message to the given output
handle, or to the currently-selected filehandle if none was given.
All OUTHANDLE has to be is a filehandle (possibly a glob ref),
or any object that responds to a print() message.
Fatal exception raised if unable to open any of the
input files, or if a part contains no data, or if an unsupported
encoding is encountered.
IS_SMPT is a special option to handle SMTP mails a little more
intelligently than other send mechanisms may require. Specifically this
ensures that the last byte sent is NOT '\n' (octal \012) if the last two
bytes are not '\r\n' (\015\012) as this will cause some SMTP servers to
hang.
- print_header [OUTHANDLE]
- Instance method. Print the header of the message to the given
output handle, or to the currently-selected filehandle if none was given.
All OUTHANDLE has to be is a filehandle (possibly a glob ref),
or any object that responds to a print() message.
- as_string
- Instance method. Return the entire message as a string, with a
header and an encoded body.
- body_as_string
- Instance method. Return the encoded body as a string. This is the
portion after the header and the blank line.
Note: actually prepares the body by
"printing" to a scalar. Proof that you can hand the
"print*()" methods any blessed object
that responds to a "print()"
message.
- header_as_string
- Instance method. Return the header as a string.
- send
- send HOW, HOWARGS...
- Class/instance method. This is the principal method for sending
mail, and for configuring how mail will be sent.
As a class method with a HOW argument and optional
HOWARGS, it sets the default sending mechanism that the no-argument
instance method will use. The HOW is a facility name (see below),
and the HOWARGS is interpreted by the facility. The class method returns
the previous HOW and HOWARGS as an array.
MIME::Lite->send('sendmail', "d:\\programs\\sendmail.exe");
...
$msg = MIME::Lite->new(...);
$msg->send;
As an instance method with arguments (a HOW argument
and optional HOWARGS), sends the message in the requested manner;
e.g.:
$msg->send('sendmail', "d:\\programs\\sendmail.exe");
As an instance method with no arguments, sends the
message by the default mechanism set up by the class method. Returns
whatever the mail-handling routine returns: this should be true on
success, false/exception on error:
$msg = MIME::Lite->new(From=>...);
$msg->send || die "you DON'T have mail!";
On Unix systems (or rather non-Win32 systems), the default
setting is equivalent to:
MIME::Lite->send("sendmail", "/usr/lib/sendmail -t -oi -oem");
On Win32 systems the default setting is equivalent to:
MIME::Lite->send("smtp");
The assumption is that on Win32 your site/lib/Net/libnet.cfg
file will be preconfigured to use the appropriate SMTP server. See below
for configuring for authentication.
There are three facilities:
- "sendmail", ARGS...
- Send a message by piping it into the "sendmail" command. Uses
the send_by_sendmail() method, giving it the ARGS. This usage
implements (and deprecates) the
"sendmail()" method.
- "smtp", [HOSTNAME, [NAMEDPARMS] ]
- Send a message by SMTP, using optional HOSTNAME as SMTP-sending host.
Net::SMTP will be required. Uses the send_by_smtp() method. Any
additional arguments passed in will also be passed through to
send_by_smtp. This is useful for things like mail servers requiring
authentication where you can say something like the following
MIME::Lite->send('smtp', $host, AuthUser=>$user, AuthPass=>$pass);
which will configure things so future uses of
$msg->send();
do the right thing.
- "sub", \&SUBREF, ARGS...
- Sends a message MSG by invoking the subroutine SUBREF of your choosing,
with MSG as the first argument, and ARGS following.
For example: let's say you're on an OS which lacks the
usual Unix "sendmail" facility, but you've installed something a
lot like it, and you need to configure your Perl script to use this
"sendmail.exe" program. Do this following in your script's
setup:
MIME::Lite->send('sendmail', "d:\\programs\\sendmail.exe");
Then, whenever you need to send a message
$msg, just say:
$msg->send;
That's it. Now, if you ever move your script to a Unix box, all
you need to do is change that line in the setup and you're done. All of your
$msg->send invocations will work as expected.
After sending, the method last_send_successful() can be
used to determine if the send was successful or not.
- send_by_sendmail SENDMAILCMD
- send_by_sendmail PARAM=>VALUE, ARRAY, HASH...
- Instance method. Send message via an external "sendmail"
program (this will probably only work out-of-the-box on Unix systems).
Returns true on success, false or exception on error.
You can specify the program and all its arguments by giving a
single string, SENDMAILCMD. Nothing fancy is done; the message is simply
piped in.
However, if your needs are a little more advanced, you can
specify zero or more of the following PARAM/VALUE pairs (or a reference
to hash or array of such arguments as well as any combination thereof);
a Unix-style, taint-safe "sendmail" command will be
constructed for you:
- Sendmail
- Full path to the program to use. Default is
"/usr/lib/sendmail".
- BaseArgs
- Ref to the basic array of arguments we start with. Default is
"["-t", "-oi",
"-oem"]".
- SetSender
- Unless this is explicitly given as false, we attempt to
automatically set the "-f" argument to
the first address that can be extracted from the "From:" field
of the message (if there is one).
What is the -f, and why do we use it? Suppose we did
not use "-f", and you gave an
explicit "From:" field in your message: in this case, the
sendmail "envelope" would indicate the real user your
process was running under, as a way of preventing mail forgery. Using
the "-f" switch causes the sender to
be set in the envelope as well.
So when would I NOT want to use it? If sendmail doesn't
regard you as a "trusted" user, it will permit the
"-f" but also add an
"X-Authentication-Warning" header to the message to indicate a
forged envelope. To avoid this, you can either (1) have SetSender be
false, or (2) make yourself a trusted user by adding a
"T" configuration
command to your sendmail.cf file
(e.g.: "Teryq" if the script is running
as user "eryq").
- FromSender
- If defined, this is identical to setting SetSender to true, except that
instead of looking at the "From:" field we use the address given
by this option. Thus:
FromSender => 'me@myhost.com'
After sending, the method last_send_successful() can be
used to determine if the send was successful or not.
- send_by_smtp HOST, ARGS...
- send_by_smtp REF, HOST, ARGS
- Instance method. Send message via SMTP, using Net::SMTP -- which
will be required for this feature.
HOST is the name of SMTP server to connect to, or undef to
have Net::SMTP use the defaults in Libnet.cfg.
ARGS are a list of key value pairs which may be selected from
the list below. Many of these are just passed through to specific
Net::SMTP commands and you should review that module for details.
Please see Good-vs-bad email addresses with
send_by_smtp()
- Hello
- LocalAddr
- LocalPort
- Timeout
- Port
- ExactAddresses
- Debug
- See Net::SMTP::new() for details.
- Size
- Return
- Bits
- Transaction
- Envelope
- See Net::SMTP::mail() for details.
- SkipBad
- If true doesn't throw an error when multiple email addresses are provided
and some are not valid. See Net::SMTP::recipient() for
details.
- AuthUser
- Authenticate with Net::SMTP::auth() using this username.
- AuthPass
- Authenticate with Net::SMTP::auth() using this password.
- NoAuth
- Normally if AuthUser and AuthPass are defined MIME::Lite will attempt to
use them with the Net::SMTP::auth() command to authenticate the
connection, however if this value is true then no authentication
occurs.
- To
- Sets the addresses to send to. Can be a string or a reference to an array
of strings. Normally this is extracted from the To: (and Cc: and Bcc:
fields if $AUTO_CC is true).
This value overrides that.
- From
- Sets the email address to send from. Normally this value is extracted from
the Return-Path: or From: field of the mail itself (in that order).
This value overrides that.
Returns: True on success, croaks with an error message on
failure.
After sending, the method last_send_successful() can be
used to determine if the send was successful or not.
- send_by_testfile FILENAME
- Instance method. Print message to a file (namely FILENAME), which
will default to mailer.testfile If file exists, message will be
appended.
- last_send_successful
- This method will return TRUE if the last send() or
send_by_XXX() method call was successful. It will return defined
but false if it was not successful, and undefined if the object had not
been used to send yet.
- sendmail COMMAND...
- Class method, DEPRECATED. Declare the sender to be
"sendmail", and set up the "sendmail" command. You
should use send() instead.
- quiet ONOFF
- Class method. Suppress/unsuppress all warnings coming from this
module.
MIME::Lite->quiet(1); ### I know what I'm doing
I recommend that you include that comment as well. And while
you type it, say it out loud: if it doesn't feel right, then maybe you
should reconsider the whole line.
";-)"
Apparently, some people are using mail readers which display the MIME headers
like "Content-disposition", and they want MIME::Lite not to generate
them "because they look ugly".
Sigh.
Y'know, kids, those headers aren't just there for cosmetic
purposes. They help ensure that the message is understood correctly
by mail readers. But okay, you asked for it, you got it... here's how you
can suppress the standard MIME headers. Before you send the message, do
this:
$msg->scrub;
You can scrub() any part of a multipart message
independently; just be aware that it works recursively. Before you scrub,
note the rules that I follow:
- Content-type
- You can safely scrub the "content-type" attribute if, and only
if, the part is of type "text/plain" with charset
"us-ascii".
- Content-transfer-encoding
- You can safely scrub the "content-transfer-encoding" attribute
if, and only if, the part uses "7bit", "8bit", or
"binary" encoding. You are far better off doing this if your
lines are under 1000 characters. Generally, that means you can
scrub it for plain text, and you can not scrub this for images,
etc.
- Content-disposition
- You can safely scrub the "content-disposition" attribute if you
trust the mail reader to do the right thing when it decides whether to
show an attachment inline or as a link. Be aware that scrubbing both the
content-disposition and the content-type means that there is no way to
"recommend" a filename for the attachment!
Note: there are reports of brain-dead MUAs out there
that do the wrong thing if you provide the content-disposition.
If your attachments keep showing up inline or vice-versa, try scrubbing
this attribute.
- Content-length
- You can always scrub "content-length" safely.
By using the Filename option (which is different from Path!):
$msg->attach(Type => "image/gif",
Path => "/here/is/the/real/file.GIF",
Filename => "logo.gif");
You should not put path information in the Filename.
All text that is added to your mail message should be properly encoded.
MIME::Lite doesn't do this for you. For instance, if you want to send your
mail in UTF-8, where $to,
$subject and $text have these
values:
- To: "Ramón Nuñez <foo@bar.com>"
- Subject: "¡Aquí está!"
- Text: "¿Quieres ganar muchos €'s?"
use MIME::Lite;
use Encode qw(encode encode_utf8 );
my $to = "Ram\363n Nu\361ez <foo\@bar.com>";
my $subject = "\241Aqu\355 est\341!";
my $text = "\277Quieres ganar muchos \x{20ac}'s?";
### Create a new message encoded in UTF-8:
my $msg = MIME::Lite->new(
From => 'me@myhost.com',
To => encode( 'MIME-Header', $to ),
Subject => encode( 'MIME-Header', $subject ),
Data => encode_utf8($text)
);
$msg->attr( 'content-type' => 'text/plain; charset=utf-8' );
$msg->send;
Note:
- The above example assumes that the values you want to encode are in Perl's
"internal" form, i.e. the strings contain decoded UTF-8
characters, not the bytes that represent those characters.
See perlunitut, perluniintro, perlunifaq and Encode for
more.
- If, for the body of the email, you want to use a character set other than
UTF-8, then you should encode appropriately, and set the correct
"content-type", eg:
...
Data => encode('iso-8859-15',$text)
...
$msg->attr( 'content-type' => 'text/plain; charset=iso-8859-15' );
- For the message headers, Encode::MIME::Header only support UTF-8, but most
modern mail clients should be able to handle this. It is not a problem to
have your headers in a different encoding from the message body.
This is "lite", after all...
- There's no parsing. Get MIME-tools if you need to parse MIME
messages.
- MIME::Lite messages are currently not interchangeable with either
Mail::Internet or MIME::Entity objects. This is a completely separate
module.
- A content-length field is only inserted if the encoding is binary, the
message is a singlepart, and all the document data is available at
"build()" time by virtue of residing in
a simple path, or in-core. Since content-length is not a standard MIME
field anyway (that's right, kids: it's not in the MIME RFCs, it's an HTTP
thing), this seems pretty fair.
- MIME::Lite alone cannot help you lose weight. You must supplement your use
of MIME::Lite with a healthy diet and exercise.
I thought putting in a default "sendmail" invocation wasn't too bad an
idea, since a lot of Perlers are on UNIX systems. (As of version 3.02 this is
default only on Non-Win32 boxen. On Win32 boxen the default is to use SMTP and
the defaults specified in the site/lib/Net/libnet.cfg)
The out-of-the-box configuration is:
MIME::Lite->send('sendmail', "/usr/lib/sendmail -t -oi -oem");
By the way, these arguments to sendmail are:
-t Scan message for To:, Cc:, Bcc:, etc.
-oi Do NOT treat a single "." on a line as a message terminator.
As in, "-oi vey, it truncated my message... why?!"
-oem On error, mail back the message (I assume to the
appropriate address, given in the header).
When mail returns, circle is complete. Jai Guru Deva -oem.
Note that these are the same arguments you get if you configure to
use the smarter, taint-safe mailing:
MIME::Lite->send('sendmail');
If you get "X-Authentication-Warning" headers from this,
you can forgo diddling with the envelope by instead specifying:
MIME::Lite->send('sendmail', SetSender=>0);
And, if you're not on a Unix system, or if you'd just rather send
mail some other way, there's always SMTP, which these days probably requires
authentication so you probably need to say
MIME::Lite->send('smtp', "smtp.myisp.net",
AuthUser=>"YourName",AuthPass=>"YourPass" );
Or you can set up your own subroutine to call. In any case, check
out the send() method.
If using send_by_smtp(), be aware that unless you explicitly provide the
email addresses to send to and from you will be forcing MIME::Lite to extract
email addresses out of a possible list provided in the
"To:",
"Cc:", and
"Bcc:" fields. This is tricky stuff, and as
such only the following sorts of addresses will work reliably:
username
full.name@some.host.com
"Name, Full" <full.name@some.host.com>
Disclaimer: MIME::Lite was never intended to be a Mail User
Agent, so please don't expect a full implementation of RFC-822. Restrict
yourself to the common forms of Internet addresses described herein, and you
should be fine. If this is not feasible, then consider using MIME::Lite to
prepare your message only, and using Net::SMTP explicitly to
send your message.
Note: As of MIME::Lite v3.02 the mail name extraction
routines have been beefed up considerably. Furthermore if Mail::Address if
provided then name extraction is done using that. Accordingly the above
advice is now less true than it once was. Funky email names should
work properly now. However the disclaimer remains. Patches welcome. :-)
This class treats a MIME header in the most abstract sense, as being a
collection of high-level attributes. The actual RFC-822-style header fields
are not constructed until it's time to actually print the darn thing.
When you specify message bodies (in build() or attach()) --
whether by FH, Data, or Path -- be warned that we don't
attempt to open files, read filehandles, or encode the data until
print() is invoked.
In the past, this created some confusion for users of sendmail who
gave the wrong path to an attachment body, since enough of the
print() would succeed to get the initial part of the message out.
Nowadays, $AUTO_VERIFY is used to spot-check the
Paths given before the mail facility is employed. A whisker slower, but tons
safer.
Note that if you give a message body via FH, and try to
print() a message twice, the second print() will not do the
right thing unless you explicitly rewind the filehandle.
You can get past these difficulties by using the ReadNow
option, provided that you have enough memory to handle your messages.
Important: the MIME attributes are stored and manipulated separately from
the message header fields; when it comes time to print the header out, any
explicitly-given header fields override the ones that would be created
from the MIME attributes. That means that this:
### DANGER ### DANGER ### DANGER ### DANGER ### DANGER ###
$msg->add("Content-type", "text/html; charset=US-ASCII");
will set the exact
"Content-type" field in the header I
write, regardless of what the actual MIME attributes are.
This feature is for experienced users only, as an escape
hatch in case the code that normally formats MIME header fields isn't doing
what you need. And, like any escape hatch, it's got an alarm on it:
MIME::Lite will warn you if you attempt to
"set()" or
"replace()" any MIME header field. Use
"attr()" instead.
Julian Haight noted that MIME::Lite allows you to compose messages with lines in
the body consisting of a single ".". This is true: it should be
completely harmless so long as "sendmail" is used with the -oi
option (see "Cheap and easy mailing").
However, I don't know if using Net::SMTP to transfer such a
message is equally safe. Feedback is welcomed.
My perspective: I don't want to magically diddle with a user's
message unless absolutely positively necessary. Some users may want to send
files with "." alone on a line; my well-meaning tinkering could
seriously harm them.
Stefan Sautter noticed a bug in 2.106 where a m//gc match was failing due to
tainted data, leading to an infinite loop inside MIME::Lite.
I am attempting to correct for this, but be advised that my fix
will silently untaint the data (given the context in which the problem
occurs, this should be benign: I've labelled the source code with UNTAINT
comments for the curious).
So: don't depend on taint-checking to save you from outputting
tainted data in a message.
Global configuration variables are bad, and should go away. Until they do,
please follow the hints with each setting on how not to change it.
The "Type" parameter of "build()" is
a content type. This is the actual type of data you are sending.
Generally this is a string of the form
"majortype/minortype".
Here are the major MIME types. A more-comprehensive listing may be
found in RFC-2046.
- application
- Data which does not fit in any of the other categories, particularly data
to be processed by some type of application program.
"application/octet-stream",
"application/gzip",
"application/postscript"...
- audio
- Audio data. "audio/basic"...
- image
- Graphics data. "image/gif",
"image/jpeg"...
- message
- A message, usually another mail or MIME message.
"message/rfc822"...
- multipart
- A message containing other messages.
"multipart/mixed",
"multipart/alternative"...
- text
- Textual data, meant for humans to read.
"text/plain",
"text/html"...
- video
- Video or video+audio data.
"video/mpeg"...
The "Encoding" parameter of
"build()". This is how the message body is
packaged up for safe transit.
Here are the 5 major MIME encodings. A more-comprehensive listing
may be found in RFC-2045.
- 7bit
- Basically, no real encoding is done. However, this label guarantees
that no 8-bit characters are present, and that lines do not exceed 1000
characters in length.
- 8bit
- Basically, no real encoding is done. The message might contain
8-bit characters, but this encoding guarantees that lines do not exceed
1000 characters in length.
- binary
- No encoding is done at all. Message might contain 8-bit characters, and
lines might be longer than 1000 characters long.
The most liberal, and the least likely to get through mail
gateways. Use sparingly, or (better yet) not at all.
- base64
- Like "uuencode", but very well-defined. This is how you should
send essentially binary information (tar files, GIFs, JPEGs, etc.).
- quoted-printable
- Useful for encoding messages which are textual in nature, yet which
contain non-ASCII characters (e.g., Latin-1, Latin-2, or any other 8-bit
alphabet).
MIME::Lite works nicely with other certain other modules if they are present.
Good to have installed are the latest MIME::Types, Mail::Address,
MIME::Base64, MIME::QuotedPrint, and Net::SMTP. Email::Date::Format is
strictly required.
If they aren't present then some functionality won't work, and
other features wont be as efficient or up to date as they could be.
Nevertheless they are optional extras.
MIME::Lite comes with a number of extra files in the distribution bundle. This
includes examples, and utility modules that you can use to get yourself
started with the module.
The ./examples directory contains a number of snippets in prepared
form, generally they are documented, but they should be easy to
understand.
The ./contrib directory contains a companion/tool modules that
come bundled with MIME::Lite, they don't get installed by default. Please
review the POD they come with.
The whole reason that version 3.0 was released was to ensure that MIME::Lite is
up to date and patched. If you find an issue please report it.
As far as I know MIME::Lite doesn't currently have any serious
bugs, but my usage is hardly comprehensive.
Having said that there are a number of open issues for me, mostly
caused by the progress in the community as whole since Eryq last released.
The tests are based around an interesting but non standard test framework.
I'd like to change it over to using Test::More.
Should tests fail please review the ./testout directory, and in
any bug reports please include the output of the relevant file. This is the
only redeeming feature of not using Test::More that I can see.
Bug fixes / Patches / Contribution are welcome, however I probably
won't apply them unless they also have an associated test. This means that
if I don't have the time to write the test the patch wont get applied, so
please, include tests for any patches you provide.
Moved to ./changes.pod
NOTE: Users of the "advanced features" of 3.01_0x smtp
sending should take care: These features have been REMOVED as they never
really fit the purpose of the module. Redundant SMTP delivery is a task that
should be handled by another module.
Copyright (c) 1997 by Eryq.
Copyright (c) 1998 by ZeeGee Software Inc.
Copyright (c) 2003,2005 Yves Orton. (demerphq)
All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can
redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
This software comes with NO WARRANTY of any kind. See the
COPYING file in the distribution for details.
For some reason, the US FDA says that this is now required by law on any
products that bear the name "Lite"...
Version 3.0 is now new and improved! The distribution is now 30%
smaller!
MIME::Lite |
------------------------------------------------------------
Serving size: | 1 module
Servings per container: | 1
Calories: | 0
Fat: | 0g
Saturated Fat: | 0g
Warning: for consumption by hardware only! May produce indigestion
in humans if taken internally.
Eryq (eryq@zeegee.com). President, ZeeGee Software Inc.
(http://www.zeegee.com).
Go to http://www.cpan.org for the latest downloads and
on-line documentation for this module. Enjoy.
Patches And Maintenance by Yves Orton and many others. Consult
./changes.pod
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