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I'm a bit perplexed on how to manage SmtpClient now that it is disposable, especially if I make calls using SendAsync. Presumably I should not call Dispose until SendAsync completes. But should I ever call it (e.g., using "using"). The scenario is a WCF service which mails out email periodically when calls are made. Most of the computation is fast, but the sending of email can take a second or so, so Async would be preferable.

Should I create a new SmtpClient each time I send mail? Should I create one for the entire WCF? Help!

Update In case it makes a difference, each email is always customized to the user. The WCF is hosted on Azure and Gmail is used as the mailer.

1

6 Answers 6

190

The original question was asked for .NET 4, but if it helps as of .NET 4.5 SmtpClient implements async awaitable method SendMailAsync.

As a result, to send email asynchronously is as the following:

public async Task SendEmail(string toEmailAddress, string emailSubject, string emailMessage)
{
    using (var message = new MailMessage())
    {
        message.To.Add(toEmailAddress);

        message.Subject = emailSubject;
        message.Body = emailMessage;

        using (var smtpClient = new SmtpClient())
        {
            await smtpClient.SendMailAsync(message);
        }
    }
}

It's better to avoid using SendAsync method.

8
  • Why is it better to avoid it? I think it depends on the requirements.
    – Jowen
    May 12, 2014 at 8:45
  • 14
    SendMailAsync() is a wrapper around SendAsync() method anyway. async/await is way neater and more elegant. It would achieve exactly the same requirements. May 14, 2014 at 4:27
  • 2
    @RodHartzell you can always use .ContinueWith() Nov 13, 2014 at 22:57
  • 2
    Is it better to use using - or dispose - or no practical difference? Isn't it possible in that last 'using' block that smtpClient could be disposed before SendMailAsync has executed?
    – niico
    Jan 10, 2015 at 5:22
  • 7
    MailMessage should also be Disposed. Jan 10, 2015 at 11:08
150

Note: .NET 4.5 SmtpClient implements async awaitable method SendMailAsync. For lower versions, use SendAsync as described below.


You should always dispose of IDisposable instances at the earliest possibility. In the case of async calls, this is on the callback after the message is sent.

var message = new MailMessage("from", "to", "subject", "body"))
var client = new SmtpClient("host");
client.SendCompleted += (s, e) => {
                           client.Dispose();
                           message.Dispose();
                        };
client.SendAsync(message, null);

It's a bit annoying the SendAsync doesn't accept a callback.

4
  • 2
    shouldn't the last line have 'await'?
    – niico
    Jan 10, 2015 at 7:04
  • 25
    No this code was written before await was available. This is a traditional callback using event handlers. await should be used if using the newer SendMailAsync. Jan 10, 2015 at 11:05
  • 3
    SmtpException:Failure sending mail.-->System.InvalidOperationException: An asynchronous operation cannot be started at this time. Asynchronous operations may only be started within an asynchronous handler or module or during certain events in the Page lifecycle. If this exception occurred while executing a Page, ensure that the Page is marked <%@ Page Async="true" %>. This exception may also indicate an attempt to call an "async void" method, which is generally unsupported within ASP.NET request processing. Instead, the asynchronous method should return a Task, and the caller should await it.
    – Mrchief
    Sep 2, 2015 at 3:42
  • 2
    Is it safe to provide null as the second parameter to SendAsync(...)?
    – jocull
    Jan 8, 2018 at 20:05
16

In general, IDisposable objects should be disposed as soon as possible; implementing IDisposable on an object is intended to communicate the fact that the class in question holds expensive resources that should be deterministically released. However, if creating those resources is expensive and you need to construct a lot of these objects, it may be better (performance wise) to keep one instance in memory and reuse it. There's only one way to know if that makes any difference: profile it!

Re: disposing and Async: you can't use using obviously. Instead you typically dispose the object in the SendCompleted event:

var smtpClient = new SmtpClient();
smtpClient.SendCompleted += (s, e) => smtpClient.Dispose();
smtpClient.SendAsync(...);
6

Ok, old question I know. But I stumbled upon this myself when I was in need of implementing something similar. I just wanted to share some code.

I'm iterating over several SmtpClients to send several mail asynchronously. My solution is similar to TheCodeKing, but I'm disposing the callback object instead. I'm also passing MailMessage as userToken to get it in the SendCompleted event so I can call dispose on that as well. Like this:

foreach (Customer customer in Customers)
{
    SmtpClient smtpClient = new SmtpClient(); //SmtpClient configuration out of this scope
    MailMessage message = new MailMessage(); //MailMessage configuration out of this scope

    smtpClient.SendCompleted += (s, e) =>
    {
        SmtpClient callbackClient = s as SmtpClient;
        MailMessage callbackMailMessage = e.UserState as MailMessage;
        callbackClient.Dispose();
        callbackMailMessage.Dispose();
    };

    smtpClient.SendAsync(message, message);
}
8
  • 2
    Is it the best practice to create a new SmtpClient for each email to send? Sep 12, 2014 at 13:39
  • 1
    Yes, for asynchronous sending, as long as you dispose of the client in the callback...
    – jmelhus
    Sep 15, 2014 at 9:41
  • 1
    thanks! and just for the sake of a brief explanation: www.codefrenzy.net/2012/01/30/how-asynchronous-is-smtpclient-sendasync Sep 15, 2014 at 12:29
  • 1
    This is one of the most simple and accurate answers that I found on stackoverflow for the smtpclient.sendAsync function and its related dispose handling. I wrote an asynchronous bulk mail sending library. As I send 50+ message every few minutes therefore executing dispose method was a very important step for me. This code exactly helped me to achieve that. I'll reply in case I found some bugs in this code during the multi threading environments.
    – vibs2006
    Jan 8, 2017 at 15:45
  • 1
    I can say that it is not a good approach when you are sending 100+ emails in a loop unless you have ability to configure the exchange server (if you use). Server might throw exception like 4.3.2 The maximum number of concurrent connections has exceeded a limit, closing trasmission channel . Instead try to use only one instance of SmtpClient
    – ibubi
    Mar 29, 2017 at 12:05
6

You can see why it is particularly important to dispose of SmtpClient by the following comment:

public class SmtpClient : IDisposable
   // Summary:
    //     Sends a QUIT message to the SMTP server, gracefully ends the TCP connection,
    //     and releases all resources used by the current instance of the System.Net.Mail.SmtpClient
    //     class.
    public void Dispose();

In my scenario sending multiple mails using Gmail without disposing the client, I used to get:

Message: Service not available, closing transmission channel. The server response was: 4.7.0 Temporary System Problem. Try again later (WS). oo3sm17830090pdb.64 - gsmtp

1
  • 1
    Thanks for sharing your exception here as I was sending SMTP Clients without disposing so far. Though I'm using my own SMTP Server but a good programming practice should be always considered. Looking from your error I have now got cautions and will rectify my code to include dispose functions to ensure platform reliability.
    – vibs2006
    Jan 8, 2017 at 15:57
1

I used this way in asp.net 5.0 core.

public async Task EmailSend(MessageModel messageModel)
    {
        using (MailMessage mailMessage = new MailMessage())
        {
            mailMessage.From = new MailAddress(_configuration.GetSection("EmailConfiguration").GetSection("FromEmail").Value.ToString(), _configuration.GetSection("EmailConfiguration").GetSection("FromName").Value.ToString(), Encoding.UTF8);
            mailMessage.Subject = messageModel.Subject;
            mailMessage.SubjectEncoding = Encoding.UTF8;
            mailMessage.Body = messageModel.Content;
            mailMessage.BodyEncoding = Encoding.UTF8;
            mailMessage.IsBodyHtml = true;
            mailMessage.BodyTransferEncoding = TransferEncoding.Base64;
            mailMessage.To.Add(new MailAddress(messageModel.To));
            NetworkCredential networkCredential = new NetworkCredential(_configuration.GetSection("EmailConfiguration").GetSection("Username").Value.ToString(), _configuration.GetSection("EmailConfiguration").GetSection("Password").Value.ToString());
            SmtpClient smtpClient = new SmtpClient();
            smtpClient.Host = _configuration.GetSection("EmailConfiguration").GetSection("SmtpServer").Value.ToString();
            smtpClient.EnableSsl = Convert.ToBoolean(_configuration.GetSection("EmailConfiguration").GetSection("SSL").Value);
            smtpClient.UseDefaultCredentials = Convert.ToBoolean(_configuration.GetSection("EmailConfiguration").GetSection("UseDefaultCredentials").Value);
            smtpClient.Port = Convert.ToInt32(_configuration.GetSection("EmailConfiguration").GetSection("Port").Value);
            smtpClient.Credentials = networkCredential;
            smtpClient.DeliveryMethod = SmtpDeliveryMethod.Network;
            await smtpClient.SendMailAsync(mailMessage);
        }
    }

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