NAME

Email::Sender::Transport::SMTP::TLS - Email::Sender with Net::SMTP::TLS (Eg. Gmail)

VERSION

version 0.15

SYNOPSIS

use Email::Sender::Simple qw(sendmail);
use Email::Sender::Transport::SMTP::TLS;
use Try::Tiny;

my $transport = Email::Sender::Transport::SMTP::TLS->new(
    host => 'smtp.gmail.com',
    port => 587,
    username => 'username@gmail.com',
    password => 'password',
    helo => 'fayland.org',
);

# my $message = Mail::Message->read($rfc822)
#         || Email::Simple->new($rfc822)
#         || Mail::Internet->new([split /\n/, $rfc822])
#         || ...
#         || $rfc822;
# read L<Email::Abstract> for more details

use Email::Simple::Creator; # or other Email::
my $message = Email::Simple->create(
    header => [
        From    => 'username@gmail.com',
        To      => 'to@mail.com',
        Subject => 'Subject title',
    ],
    body => 'Content.',
);

try {
    sendmail($message, { transport => $transport });
} catch {
    die "Error sending email: $_";
};

DESCRIPTION

If you have never used it before, please try Email::Sender::Transport::SMTPS instead. it's recommended.

Email::Sender replaces the old and sometimes problematic Email::Send library, while this module replaces the Email::Send::SMTP::TLS.

It is still alpha, but it works. use it at your own risk!

ATTRIBUTES

The following attributes may be passed to the constructor:

host - the name of the host to connect to; defaults to localhost
port - port to connect to; defaults to 587
username - the username to use for auth; required
password - the password to use for auth; required
helo - what to say when saying HELO; no default
allow_partial_success - if true, will send data even if some recipients were rejected

PARTIAL SUCCESS

If allow_partial_success was set when creating the transport, the transport may return Email::Sender::Success::Partial objects. Consult that module's documentation.

AUTHOR

Fayland Lam <fayland@gmail.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is copyright (c) 2013 by Fayland Lam.

This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.