Mail::Transport::Send - send a message
Mail::Transport::Send is a Mail::Transport is a Mail::Reporter Mail::Transport::Send is extended by Mail::Transport::Exim Mail::Transport::Mailx Mail::Transport::Qmail Mail::Transport::SMTP Mail::Transport::Sendmail
my $message = Mail::Message->new(...); # Some extensions implement sending: $message->send; $message->send(via => 'sendmail'); my $sender = L<Mail::Transport::SMTP|Mail::Transport::SMTP>->new(...); $sender->send($message);
Send a message to the destinations as specified in the header. The Mail::Transport::Send module is capable of autodetecting which of the following modules work on your system; you may simply call send without via options to get a message transported.
Mail::Transport::Send
send
via
Mail::Transport::Sendmail
Use sendmail to process and deliver the mail. This requires the sendmail program to be installed on your system. Whether this is an original sendmail, or a replacement from Postfix does matter.
sendmail
Mail::Transport::Exim
Use exim to distribute the message.
exim
Mail::Transport::Qmail
Use qmail-inject to distribute the message.
qmail-inject
Mail::Transport::SMTP
In this case, Perl is handling mail transport on its own. This is less desired but more portable than sending with sendmail or qmail. The advantage is that this sender is environment independent, and easier to configure. However, there is no daemon involved which means that your program will wait until the message is delivered, and the message is lost when your program is interrupted during delivery (which may take hours to complete).
Mail::Transport::Mailx
Use the external mail, mailx, or Mail programs to send the message. Usually, the result is poor, because some versions of these programs do not support MIME headers. Besides, these programs are known to have exploitable security breaches.
mail
mailx
Mail
Mail::Transport::Send->new(OPTIONS)
Option Defined in Default executable L<Mail::Transport> C<undef> hostname L<Mail::Transport> C<'localhost'> interval L<Mail::Transport> C<30> log L<Mail::Reporter> C<'WARNINGS'> password L<Mail::Transport> undef port L<Mail::Transport> undef proxy L<Mail::Transport> undef retry L<Mail::Transport> <false> timeout L<Mail::Transport> C<120> trace L<Mail::Reporter> C<'WARNINGS'> username L<Mail::Transport> undef via L<Mail::Transport> C<'sendmail'>
. executable FILENAME
. hostname HOSTNAME|ARRAY-OF-HOSTNAMES
. interval SECONDS
. log LEVEL
. password STRING
. port INTEGER
. proxy PATH
. retry NUMBER|undef
. timeout SECONDS
. trace LEVEL
. username STRING
. via CLASS|NAME
$obj->destinations(MESSAGE, [ADDRESS|ARRAY-OF-ADDRESSES])
Determine the destination for this message. If a valid ADDRESS is defined, this is used to overrule the addresses within the message. If the ADDRESS is undef it is ignored.
undef
If no ADDRESS is specified, the message is scanned for resent groups (see Mail::Message::Head::Complete::resentGroups()). The addresses found in the first (is latest added) group are used. If no resent groups are found, the normal To, Cc, and Bcc lines are taken.
To
Cc
Bcc
$obj->putContent(MESSAGE, FILEHANDLE, OPTIONS)
Print the content of the MESSAGE to the FILEHANDLE.
Option Defined in Default body_only <false> undisclosed <false>
. body_only BOOLEAN
Print only the body of the message, not the whole.
. undisclosed BOOLEAN
Do not print the Bcc and Resent-Bcc lines. Default false, which means that they are printed.
Resent-Bcc
$obj->send(MESSAGE, OPTIONS)
Transmit the MESSAGE, which may be anything what can be coerced into a Mail::Message, so including Mail::Internet and MIME::Entity messages. It returns true when the transmission was successfully completed.
Option Defined in Default interval L<new(interval)|Mail::Transport/"METHODS"> retry L<new(retry)|Mail::Transport/"METHODS">
. retry INTEGER
$obj->trySend(MESSAGE, OPTIONS)
Try to send the message. This will return true if successful, and false in case some problems where detected. The $? contains the exit status of the command which was started.
$?
$obj->findBinary(NAME [, DIRECTORIES])
See "Server connection" in Mail::Transport
$obj->remoteHost
$obj->retry
$obj->AUTOLOAD
See "Error handling" in Mail::Reporter
$obj->defaultTrace([LEVEL, [LEVEL])
Mail::Transport::Send->defaultTrace([LEVEL, [LEVEL])
$obj->errors
$obj->log([LEVEL [,STRINGS]])
Mail::Transport::Send->log([LEVEL [,STRINGS]])
$obj->logPriority(LEVEL)
Mail::Transport::Send->logPriority(LEVEL)
$obj->logSettings
$obj->notImplemented
$obj->report([LEVEL])
$obj->reportAll([LEVEL])
$obj->trace([LEVEL])
$obj->warnings
$obj->DESTROY
See "Cleanup" in Mail::Reporter
$obj->inGlobalDestruction
Error: Package $package does not implement $method.
Fatal error: the specific package (or one of its superclasses) does not implement this method where it should. This message means that some other related classes do implement this method however the class at hand does not. Probably you should investigate this and probably inform the author of the package.
Error: Transporters of type $class cannot send.
The Mail::Transport object of the specified type can not send messages, but only receive message.
See the Mail::Box website at http://perl.overmeer.net/mailbox/ for more details.
Module version 2.042. Written by Mark Overmeer (mark@overmeer.net). See the ChangeLog for other contributors.
Copyright (c) 2001-2003 by the author(s). All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
To install Mail::Box, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm Mail::Box
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install Mail::Box
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.