Awesome
postal
Internet email library for Clojure
postal is a library for constructing and sending RFC822-compliant Internet email messages. It wraps the Jakarta Mail package for message and SMTP support. It supports sendmail natively. Supports STARTTLS & SSL.
Platforms
- Anything that can run Java should work
- sendmail support likely requires *nix, but
msmtp
, et al., are worthy substitutes - Untested on Windows
Dependencies
- Jakarta Mail (in
lib/
after build) - Java 8+
Install
Served by Clojars. In your Leiningen project.clj:
Likewise substitute any tag name from git.
Examples
Local
At a bare minimum, provide a map with :from
and :to
(and you'll
probably also be wanting :subject
and :body
, though they're
technically optional). Any other keys you supply will show up as
ancillary headers. This example will locally inject the message into
whatever sendmail-compatible interface your system provides.
user> (in-ns 'postal.core)
#<Namespace postal.core>
postal.core> (send-message {:from "me@draines.com"
:to ["mom@example.com" "dad@example.com"]
:cc "bob@example.com"
:subject "Hi!"
:body "Test."
:X-Tra "Something else"})
{:code 0, :error :SUCCESS, :message "message sent"}
postal.core>
SMTP
To use SMTP, add an argument map before the message with at least
:host
key.
postal.core> (send-message {:host "mail.isp.net"}
{:from "me@draines.com"
:to "foo@example.com"
:subject "Hi!"
:body "Test."})
{:code 0, :error :SUCCESS, :message "message sent"}
postal.core>
For legacy compatibility, you can also supply these connection
parameters as metadata on the message. (send-message ^{:host ...} {:from ...})
Authentication
Authenticate to SMTP server with :user
and :pass
.
postal.core> (send-message {:host "mail.isp.net"
:user "jsmith"
:pass "sekrat!!1"}
{:from "me@draines.com"
:to "foo@example.com"
:subject "Hi!"
:body "Test."})
{:code 0, :error :SUCCESS, :message "message sent"}
postal.core>
Encryption (Gmail example)
You probably do not want to do this in the clear, so add :ssl
to get
an encrypted connection. This will default to port 465
if you don't
specify one.
If your destination supports TLS instead, you can use :tls
. This
will default to port 25
, however, so if you need a different one
make sure you supply :port
. (It's common for ISPs to block outgoing
port 25 to relays that aren't theirs.)
postal.core> (send-message {:host "smtp.gmail.com"
:user "jsmith@gmail.com"
:pass "sekrat!!1"
:port 587
:tls true}
{:from "me@draines.com"
:to "foo@example.com"
:subject "Hi!"
:body "Test."})
{:code 0, :error :SUCCESS, :message "message sent"}
postal.core>
(Despite the documentation
mentioning SSL, your Google account is most likely restricted to TLS on port 587
and
furthermore you may have to configure your account to
"allow less secure apps" in order to send emails.)
Amazon
Since Amazon SES uses authenticated SMTP, postal can use it. Just make sure you use a verified address and your SMTP credentials (visit the AWS Console to set those up). Also, if you're just sandboxing, you can only send to a verified address as well. Example:
postal.core> (send-message {:user "AKIAIDTP........" :pass "AikCFhx1P......."
:host "email-smtp.us-east-1.amazonaws.com"
:port 587}
{:from "me@draines.com" :to "me@draines.com"
:subject "Test from Amazon SES" :body "Test!!!11"})
{:error :SUCCESS, :code 0, :message "messages sent"}
postal.core>
Attachments
Attachments and multipart messages can be added as sequences of maps:
postal.core> (send-message {:host "mail.isp.net"}
{:from "me@draines.com"
:to "foo@example.com"
:subject "Hi!"
:body [{:type "text/html"
:content "<b>Test!</b>"}
;;;; supports both dispositions:
{:type :attachment
:content (java.io.File. "/tmp/foo.txt")}
{:type :inline
:content (java.io.File. "/tmp/a.pdf")
:content-type "application/pdf"}]})
{:code 0, :error :SUCCESS, :message "message sent"}
postal.core>
If your attachment has a content-type that is not recognized by
Jakarta Mail, e.g., .pdf
or .doc
, you can set :content-type
. You
can also set :file-name
and :description
if you don't like the
filename that :content
uses.
If you want another multipart type than "mixed", you can specify it as a keyword as the first value in the map sequence. That way you can for example create an HTML-Email that displays a text message as fallback in email clients that do not support (or suppress) HTML-mails:
postal.core> (send-message {:host "localhost"
:port 2500
:user "user@localhost"
:pass "somePassword"}
{:from "jon-doe@example.com"
:to "jane-doe@example.com"
:subject "multipart/alternative test"
:body [:alternative
{:type "text/plain"
:content "This is a test."}
{:type "text/html"
:content "<html><head> </head><body>
<h1>Heading 1</h1><p>This is a test.</p>
</body></html>"}
]}))
UTF-8
Postal uses Jakarta Mail underneath, which defaults to charset
us-ascii
. To set the charset, set the :type
, like "text/html; charset=utf-8"
.
Message ID
Postal will supply a message ID by default that looks like
[random]@postal.[host]
. You can customize this by supplying a
:message-id
header with a function that takes no args. The included
postal.support/message-id
can be used if you'd like to make use of
its randomness and only customize the hostname.
{:from "foo@bar.dom"
:to "baz@bar.dom"
:subject "Message IDs!"
:body "Regards."
:message-id #(postal.support/message-id "foo.bar.dom")}
User Agent
You can customize the default User-Agent
header (by default
postal/VERSION
).
{:from "foo@bar.dom"
:to "baz@bar.dom"
:subject "Message IDs!"
:body "Regards."
:user-agent "MyMailer 1.0"}
Stress-testing
You can stress-test a server by:
postal.core> (stress ^{:host "localhost"
:num 1000
:delay 250 ;; msecs
:threads 5 ;; concurrent connections}
{:from "foo@lolz.dom"
:to "bar@lolz.dom"})
sent 1000 msgs to localhost:25
nil
postal.core>
Building
% lein deps && lein jar
Contributors
Alexander Kouznetsov
Allen Rohner
Andre Branco
Andres Cuervo
Andy Fingerhut
Camille Troillard
Christoph Henkelmann
Colin Jones
Dante Briones
Dimas Guardado
Gerrit Hentschel
J. David Lowe
Jeff Palmucci
Joe Gallo
Kevin DeJong
Kyle Kingsbury
Paul Biggar
Paul Stadig
Phil Hagelberg
Peter Onneby
Roman Flammer
Sam Ritchie
Stephen Nelson
License
Postal is (c) 2009-2019 Andrew A. Raines and released under the MIT license.