Why not adopt me?
NAME
Email::Send::SMTP - Send Messages using SMTP
SYNOPSIS
use Email::Send;
my $mailer = Email::Send->new({mailer => 'SMTP'});
$mailer->mailer_args([Host => 'smtp.example.com:465', ssl => 1])
if $USE_SSL;
$mailer->send($message);
DESCRIPTION
This mailer for Email::Send
uses Net::SMTP
to send a message with an SMTP server. The first invocation of send
requires an SMTP server arguments. Subsequent calls will remember the the first setting until it is reset.
Any arguments passed to send
will be passed to Net::SMTP->new()
, with some exceptions. username
and password
, if passed, are used to invoke Net::SMTP->auth()
for SASL authentication support. ssl
, if set to true, turns on SSL support by using Net::SMTP::SSL
.
SMTP can fail for a number of reasons. All return values from this package are true or false. If false, sending has failed. If true, send succeeded. The return values are Return::Value
objects, however, and contain more information on just what went wrong.
Here is an example of dealing with failure.
my $return = send SMTP => $message, 'localhost';
die "$return" if ! $return;
The stringified version of the return value will have the text of the error. In a conditional, a failure will evaluate to false.
Here's an example of dealing with success. It is the case that some email addresses may not succeed but others will. In this case, the return value's bad
property is set to a list of bad addresses.
my $return = send SMTP => $message, 'localhost';
if ( $return ) {
my @bad = @{ $return->prop('bad') };
warn "Failed to send to: " . join ', ', @bad
if @bad;
}
For more information on these return values, see Return::Value.
SEE ALSO
Email::Send, Net::SMTP, Net::SMTP::SSL, Email::Address, Return::Value, perl.
AUTHOR
Casey West, <casey@geeknest.com>.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2004 Casey West. All rights reserved.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.