Python Sending Email using SMTP

Python Sending Email using SMTP

Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) is a protocol, which handles sending e-mail and routing e-mail between mail servers.

Python provides smtplib module, which defines an SMTP client session object that can be used to send mail to any Internet machine with an SMTP or ESMTP listener daemon.

Here is a simple syntax to create one SMTP object, which can later be used to send an e-mail:

import smtplib

 

smtpObj = smtplib.SMTP( [host [, port [, local_hostname]]] )

 

Here is the detail of the parameters:

host: This is the host running your SMTP server. You can specifiy IP address of the host or a domain name like tutorialspoint.com. This is optional argument.

port: If you are providing host argument, then you need to specify a port, where SMTP server is listening. Usually this port would be 25.

local_hostname: If your SMTP server is running on your local machine, then you can specify just localhost as of this option.

An SMTP object has an instance method calledsendmail, which will typically be used to do the work of mailing a message. It takes three parameters:

The sender - A string with the address of the sender.

The receivers - A list of strings, one for each recipient.

The message - A message as a string formatted as specified in the various RFCs.

Example:

Here is a simple way to send one e-mail using Python script. Try it once:

#!/usr/bin/python

 

import smtplib

 

sender = 'from@fromdomain.com'

receivers = ['to@todomain.com']

 

message = """From: From Person <from@fromdomain.com>

To: To Person <to@todomain.com>

Subject: SMTP e-mail test

 

This is a test e-mail message.

"""

 

try:

   smtpObj = smtplib.SMTP('localhost')

   smtpObj.sendmail(sender, receivers, message)        

   print "Successfully sent email"

except SMTPException:

   print "Error: unable to send email"

Here, you have placed a basic e-mail in message, using a triple quote, taking care to format the headers correctly. An e-mail requires a From,To, and Subject header, separated from the body of the e-mail with a blank line.

To send the mail you use smtpObj to connect to the SMTP server on the local machine and then use the sendmail method along with the message, the from address, and the destination address as parameters (even though the from and to addresses are within the e-mail itself, these aren't always used to route mail).

If you're not running an SMTP server on your local machine, you can use smtplib client to communicate with a remote SMTP server. Unless you're using a webmail service (such as Hotmail or Yahoo! Mail), your e-mail provider will have provided you with outgoing mail server details that you can supply them, as follows:

smtplib.SMTP('mail.your-domain.com', 25)

Sending an HTML e-mail using Python:

When you send a text message using Python, then all the content will be treated as simple text. Even if you will include HTML tags in a text message, it will be displayed as simple text and HTML tags will not be formatted according to HTML syntax. But Python provides option to send an HTML message as actual HTML message.

While sending an e-mail message, you can specify a Mime version, content type and character set to send an HTML e-mail.

Example:

Following is the example to send HTML content as an e-mail. Try it once:

#!/usr/bin/python

 

import smtplib

 

message = """From: From Person <from@fromdomain.com>

To: To Person <to@todomain.com>

MIME-Version: 1.0

Content-type: text/html

Subject: SMTP HTML e-mail test

 

This is an e-mail message to be sent in HTML format

 

<b>This is HTML message.</b>

<h1>This is headline.</h1>

"""

 

try:

   smtpObj = smtplib.SMTP('localhost')

   smtpObj.sendmail(sender, receivers, message)        

   print "Successfully sent email"

except SMTPException:

   print "Error: unable to send email"

Sending Attachments as an e-mail:

To send an e-mail with mixed content requires to set Content-type header to multipart/mixed. Then, text and attachment sections can be specified within boundaries.

A boundary is started with two hyphens followed by a unique number, which can notappear in the message part of the e-mail. A final boundary denoting the e-mail's final section must also end with two hyphens.

Attached files should be encoded with thepack("m") function to have base64 encoding before transmission.

Example:

Following is the example, which will send a file/tmp/test.txt as an attachment. Try it once:

#!/usr/bin/python

 

import smtplib

import base64

 

filename = "/tmp/test.txt"

 

# Read a file and encode it into base64 format

fo = open(filename, "rb")

filecontent = fo.read()

encodedcontent = base64.b64encode(filecontent)  # base64

 

sender = 'webmaster@tutorialpoint.com'

reciever = 'amrood.admin@gmail.com'

 

marker = "AUNIQUEMARKER"

 

body ="""

This is a test email to send anattachement.

"""

# Define the main headers.

part1 = """From: From Person <me@fromdomain.net>

To: To Person <amrood.admin@gmail.com>

Subject: Sending Attachement

MIME-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=%s

--%s

""" % (marker, marker)

 

# Define the message action

part2 = """Content-Type: text/plain

Content-Transfer-Encoding:8bit

 

%s

--%s

""" % (body,marker)

 

# Define the attachment section

part3 = """Content-Type: multipart/mixed; name=\"%s\"

Content-Transfer-Encoding:base64

Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=%s

 

%s

--%s--

""" %(filename, filename,encodedcontent, marker)

message = part1 + part2 + part3

 

try:

   smtpObj = smtplib.SMTP('localhost')

   smtpObj.sendmail(sender, reciever, message)

   print "Successfully sent email"

except Exception:

   print "Error: unable to send email"

 

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