I want to send out one off emails from a linux server. The server does not need to receive emails back.
Is there a simpler solution than sendmail for sending outgoing emails only?
I would prefer to use Perl to send the email.
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Sendmail is not the only choice. you can use Postfix, Qmail, and many others my Perl scripts call the mailx command. to know how to use it, type 'man mailx' However this require to have a MTA correclty configured. Or you can just use the Net::SMTP perl library and use your smtp server of choice |
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Calling out to Alternatively you can send directly through a SMTP relay using a package like Net::SMTP but be extra sure to correctly cater for delivery problems. |
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I have used msmtp successfully, ie it supports great authentication TJ Luoma did a nice writeup of it on TUAW |
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You do not need a mail transport agent (MTA) instance on the machine doing the sending if you have another mailserver already running in your organization: you can make Perl deliver the email through SMTP to that server, so there's no need for having (another) MTA like sendmail on "your" machine. |
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I'm fond of creating a gmail or other free account and then using the java mail api in J2EE to send messages (from your new gmail account) to whoever... Typically i'll create a Mailer class which can be constructed with a default constructor and then give it a send(String dest, String subj, String body[, Obj attach...if you want]) and then in your case you might wrap the thing in a main method so that you can call it from else with some command line args, or call from within some java program. If you interested i'll shoot you the code. |
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I find nullmailer a very useful solution for the described scenario. Nullmailer is a sendmail/qmail/etc replacement MTA which relays to a fixed set of mail servers. It is very simple to configure and consumes little resources. One important advantage of nullmailer over other mentioned solutions like mstmp and ssmtp is that it maintains a queue of emails to be sent. The application sending the mail is blocked only a very short time while the mail is queued (milliseconds). The sending of the mail happens in the context of a another process. Solutions like mstmp and ssmtp don't maintain a queue of email. The sending happens in the context of the application, thereby blocking the application. Sending an email this way can easily take 1 to 2 seconds or longer. This may not be a problem in many cases but can become a problem if the email is sent by a web application. |
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I know you said perl, but the simplest cross-platform email sending library I have used is python's smtplib. Certainly worth a look. |
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