... Microsoft has officially marked a .NET class as being replaced by an open source library.
The documentation for SmtpClient
now reads,
Obsolete("SmtpClient and its network of types are poorly designed, we
strongly recommend you use https://github.com/jstedfast/MailKit and
https://github.com/jstedfast/MimeKit instead")
The main problem with SmtpClient is that it has a confusing connection lifecycle.
Connecting to a SMTP server can be time-consuming, especially if authentication is enabled, so each SmtpClient
object has an internal connection pool.
This is a rather strange design. Consider for a moment a typical database connection. When you call Dispose on a SqlClient
, the underlying connection is returned to the pool. When you create a new SqlClient
, the pool is checked for an active connection with the same connection string.
With SmtpClient
, calling Dispose
closes all of the connections and drains that object's connection pool. This means you can't use it with the typical using
block pattern.
A well-known approach of the shared instance like HttpClient
cannot be used in SmtpClient
.
Unlike HttpClient
, the Send
/SendAsync
methods are not thread thread-safe. So unless you want to introduce your own synchronization scheme, you can't use it that way either. In fact, the documentation for SmtpClient
warns,
There is no way to determine when an application is finished using the SmtpClient object and it should be cleaned up.
By contrast, the SMTP client in MailKit represents a simple
connection to a single server. By eliminating the complexity caused
by internal connection pools, it actually makes it easier to create an
application-specific pool for MailKit's connection object.
Ref: MailKit Officially Replaces .NET's SmtpClient