1 \input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
2 @setfilename ../../info/smtpmail
3 @settitle Emacs SMTP Library
6 Copyright @copyright{} 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008
7 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
10 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
11 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or
12 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
13 Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts being ``A GNU Manual'',
14 and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license
15 is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''
18 (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have freedom to copy and modify
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22 This document is part of a collection distributed under the GNU Free
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25 license to the document, as described in section 6 of the license.
31 * SMTP: (smtpmail). Emacs library for sending mail via SMTP.
35 @title{Emacs SMTP Library}
36 @subtitle{An Emacs package for sending mail via SMTP}
37 @author{Simon Josefsson, Alex Schroeder}
39 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
47 @top Emacs SMTP Library
53 * How Mail Works:: Brief introduction to mail concepts.
54 * Emacs Speaks SMTP:: How to use the SMTP library in Emacs.
55 * Authentication:: Authenticating yourself to the server.
56 * Queued delivery:: Sending mail without an internet connection.
57 * Server workarounds:: Mail servers with special requirements.
58 * Debugging:: Tracking down problems.
59 * GNU Free Documentation License:: The license for this documentation.
63 * Index:: Index over variables and functions.
67 @chapter How Mail Works
71 On the internet, mail is sent from mail host to mail host using the
72 simple mail transfer protocol (SMTP). To send and receive mail, you
73 must get it from and send it to a mail host. Every mail host runs a
74 mail transfer agent (MTA) such as Exim that accepts mails and passes
75 them on. The communication between a mail host and other clients does
76 not necessarily involve SMTP, however. Here is short overview of what
80 The mail program --- also called a mail user agent (MUA) ---
81 usually sends outgoing mail to a mail host. When your computer is
82 permanently connected to the internet, it might even be a mail host
83 itself. In this case, the MUA will pipe mail to the
84 @file{/usr/lib/sendmail} application. It will take care of your mail
85 and pass it on to the next mail host.
88 When you are only connected to the internet from time to time, your
89 internet service provider (ISP) has probably told you which mail host
90 to use. You must configure your MUA to use that mail host. Since you
91 are reading this manual, you probably want to configure Emacs to use
92 SMTP to send mail to that mail host. More on that in the next
96 Things are different when reading mail. The mail host responsible
97 for your mail keeps it in a file somewhere. The messages get into the
98 file by way of a mail delivery agent (MDA) such as procmail. These
99 delivery agents often allow you to filter and munge your mails before
100 you get to see it. When your computer is that mail host, this file is
101 called a spool, and sometimes located in the directory
102 @file{/var/spool/mail/}. All your MUA has to do is read mail from the
107 When your computer is not always connected to the internet, you
108 must get the mail from the remote mail host using a protocol such as
109 POP3 or IMAP. POP3 essentially downloads all your mail from the mail
110 host to your computer. The mail is stored in some file on your
111 computer, and again, all your MUA has to do is read mail from the
114 When you read mail from various machines, downloading mail from the
115 mail host to your current machine is not convenient. In that case,
116 you will probably want to use the IMAP protocol. Your mail is kept on
117 the mail host, and you can read it while you are connected via IMAP to
121 So how does reading mail via the web work, you ask. In that case,
122 the web interface just allows you to remote-control a MUA on the web
123 host. Whether the web host is also a mail host, and how all the
124 pieces interact is completely irrelevant. You usually cannot use
125 Emacs to read mail via the web, unless you use software that parses
126 the ever-changing HTML of the web interface.
128 @node Emacs Speaks SMTP
129 @chapter Emacs Speaks SMTP
131 Emacs includes a package for sending your mail to a SMTP server and
132 have it take care of delivering it to the final destination, rather
133 than letting the MTA on your local system take care of it. This can
134 be useful if you don't have a MTA set up on your host, or if your
135 machine is often disconnected from the internet.
137 Sending mail via SMTP requires configuring your mail user agent
138 (@pxref{Mail Methods,,,emacs}) to use the SMTP library. How to do
139 this should be described for each mail user agent; for the default
140 mail user agent the variable @code{send-mail-function} (@pxref{Mail
141 Sending,,,emacs}) is used; for the Message and Gnus user agents the
142 variable @code{message-send-mail-function} (@pxref{Mail
143 Variables,,,message}) is used.
146 ;; If you use the default mail user agent.
147 (setq send-mail-function 'smtpmail-send-it)
148 ;; If you use Message or Gnus.
149 (setq message-send-mail-function 'smtpmail-send-it)
152 Before using SMTP you must find out the hostname of the SMTP server
153 to use. Your system administrator should provide you with this
154 information, but often it is the same as the server you receive mail
158 @item smtpmail-smtp-server
159 @vindex smtpmail-smtp-server
161 The variable @code{smtpmail-smtp-server} controls the hostname of
162 the server to use. It is a string with an IP address or hostname. It
163 defaults to the contents of the @env{SMTPSERVER} environment
164 variable, or, if empty, the contents of
165 @code{smtpmail-default-smtp-server}.
167 @item smtpmail-default-smtp-server
168 @vindex smtpmail-default-smtp-server
169 The variable @code{smtpmail-default-smtp-server} controls the
170 default hostname of the server to use. It is a string with an IP
171 address or hostname. It must be set before the SMTP library is
172 loaded. It has no effect if set after the SMTP library has been
173 loaded, or if @code{smtpmail-smtp-server} is defined. It is usually
174 set by system administrators in a site wide initialization file.
177 The following example illustrates what you could put in
178 @file{~/.emacs} to set the SMTP server name.
181 ;; Send mail using SMTP via mail.example.org.
182 (setq smtpmail-smtp-server "mail.example.org")
185 @cindex Mail Submission
186 SMTP is normally used on the registered ``smtp'' TCP service port 25.
187 Some environments use SMTP in ``Mail Submission'' mode, which uses
188 port 587. Using other ports is not uncommon, either for security by
189 obscurity purposes, port forwarding, or otherwise.
192 @item smtpmail-smtp-service
193 @vindex smtpmail-smtp-service
194 The variable @code{smtpmail-smtp-service} controls the port on the
195 server to contact. It is either a string, in which case it will be
196 translated into an integer using system calls, or an integer.
199 The following example illustrates what you could put in
200 @file{~/.emacs} to set the SMTP service port.
203 ;; Send mail using SMTP on the mail submission port 587.
204 (setq smtpmail-smtp-service 587)
208 @chapter Authentication
216 Many environments require SMTP clients to authenticate themselves
217 before they are allowed to route mail via a server. The two following
218 variables contains the authentication information needed for this.
220 The first variable, @code{smtpmail-auth-credentials}, instructs the
221 SMTP library to use a SASL authentication step, currently only the
222 CRAM-MD5 and LOGIN mechanisms are supported and will be selected in
223 that order if the server support both.
225 The second variable, @code{smtpmail-starttls-credentials}, instructs
226 the SMTP library to connect to the server using STARTTLS. This means
227 the protocol exchange may be integrity protected and confidential by
228 using the Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol, and optionally also
229 authentication of the client and server.
231 TLS is a security protocol that is also known as SSL, although
232 strictly speaking, SSL is an older variant of TLS. TLS is backwards
233 compatible with SSL. In most mundane situations, the two terms are
236 The TLS feature uses the elisp package @file{starttls.el} (see it for
237 more information on customization), which in turn require that at
238 least one of the following external tools are installed:
242 The GNUTLS command line tool @samp{gnutls-cli}, you can get it from
243 @url{http://www.gnu.org/software/gnutls/}. This is the recommended
244 tool, mainly because it can verify the server certificates.
247 The @samp{starttls} external program, you can get it from
248 @file{starttls-*.tar.gz} from @uref{ftp://ftp.opaopa.org/pub/elisp/}.
251 It is not uncommon to use both these mechanisms, e.g., to use STARTTLS
252 to achieve integrity and confidentiality and then use SASL for client
256 @item smtpmail-auth-credentials
257 @vindex smtpmail-auth-credentials
258 The variable @code{smtpmail-auth-credentials} contains a list of
259 hostname, port, username and password tuples. When the SMTP library
260 connects to a host on a certain port, this variable is searched to
261 find a matching entry for that hostname and port. If an entry is
262 found, the authentication process is invoked and the credentials are
265 The hostname field follows the same format as
266 @code{smtpmail-smtp-server} (i.e., a string) and the port field the
267 same format as @code{smtpmail-smtp-service} (i.e., a string or an
268 integer). The username and password fields, which either can be
269 @code{nil} to indicate that the user is prompted for the value
270 interactively, should be strings with the username and password,
271 respectively, information that is normally provided by system
274 @item smtpmail-starttls-credentials
275 @vindex smtpmail-starttls-credentials
276 The variable @code{smtpmail-starttls-credentials} contains a list of
277 tuples with hostname, port, name of file containing client key, and
278 name of file containing client certificate. The processing is similar
279 to the previous variable. The client key and certificate may be
280 @code{nil} if you do not wish to use client authentication.
283 The following example illustrates what you could put in
284 @file{~/.emacs} to enable both SASL authentication and STARTTLS. The
285 server name (@code{smtpmail-smtp-server}) is @var{hostname}, the
286 server port (@code{smtpmail-smtp-service}) is @var{port}, and the
287 username and password are @var{username} and @var{password}
291 ;; Authenticate using this username and password against my server.
292 (setq smtpmail-auth-credentials
293 '(("@var{hostname}" "@var{port}" "@var{username}" "@var{password}")))
295 ;; Note that if @var{port} is an integer, you must not quote it as a
296 ;; string. Normally @var{port} should be the integer 25, and the example
298 (setq smtpmail-auth-credentials
299 '(("@var{hostname}" 25 "@var{username}" "@var{password}")))
301 ;; Use STARTTLS without authentication against the server.
302 (setq smtpmail-starttls-credentials
303 '(("@var{hostname}" "@var{port}" nil nil)))
306 @node Queued delivery
307 @chapter Queued delivery
309 @cindex Dialup connection
310 If you connect to the internet via a dialup connection, or for some
311 other reason don't have permanent internet connection, sending mail
312 will fail when you are not connected. The SMTP library implements
313 queued delivery, and the following variable control its behavior.
316 @item smtpmail-queue-mail
317 @vindex smtpmail-queue-mail
318 The variable @code{smtpmail-queue-mail} controls whether a simple
319 off line mail sender is active. This variable is a boolean, and
320 defaults to @code{nil} (disabled). If this is non-@code{nil}, mail is
321 not sent immediately but rather queued in the directory
322 @code{smtpmail-queue-dir} and can be later sent manually by invoking
323 @code{smtpmail-send-queued-mail} (typically when you connect to the
326 @item smtpmail-queue-dir
327 @vindex smtpmail-queue-dir
328 The variable @code{smtpmail-queue-dir} specifies the name of the
329 directory to hold queued messages. It defaults to
330 @file{~/Mail/queued-mail/}.
333 @findex smtpmail-send-queued-mail
334 The function @code{smtpmail-send-queued-mail} can be used to send
335 any queued mail when @code{smtpmail-queue-mail} is enabled. It is
336 typically invoked interactively with @kbd{M-x
337 smtpmail-send-queued-mail RET} when you are connected to the internet.
339 @node Server workarounds
340 @chapter Server workarounds
342 Some SMTP servers have special requirements. The following variables
343 implement support for common requirements.
347 @item smtpmail-local-domain
348 @vindex smtpmail-local-domain
349 The variable @code{smtpmail-local-domain} controls the hostname sent
350 in the first @code{EHLO} or @code{HELO} command sent to the server.
351 It should only be set if the @code{system-name} function returns a
352 name that isn't accepted by the server. Do not set this variable
353 unless your server complains.
355 @item smtpmail-sendto-domain
356 @vindex smtpmail-sendto-domain
357 The variable @code{smtpmail-sendto-domain} makes the SMTP library
358 add @samp{@@} and the specified value to recipients specified in the
359 message when they are sent using the @code{RCPT TO} command. Some
360 configurations of sendmail requires this behavior. Don't bother to
361 set this unless you have get an error like:
364 Sending failed; SMTP protocol error
367 when sending mail, and the debug buffer (@pxref{Debugging})) contains
371 RCPT TO: @var{someone}
372 501 @var{someone}: recipient address must contain a domain
381 Sometimes delivery fails, often with the generic error message
382 @samp{Sending failed; SMTP protocol error}. Enabling one or both of
383 the following variables and inspecting a trace buffer will often give
384 clues to the reason for the error.
388 @item smtpmail-debug-info
389 @vindex smtpmail-debug-info
390 The variable @code{smtpmail-debug-info} controls whether to print
391 the SMTP protocol exchange in the minibuffer, and retain the entire
392 exchange in a buffer @samp{*trace of SMTP session to @var{server}*},
393 where @var{server} is the name of the mail server to which you send
396 @item smtpmail-debug-verb
397 @vindex smtpmail-debug-verb
398 The variable @code{smtpmail-debug-verb} controls whether to send the
399 @code{VERB} token to the server. The @code{VERB} server instructs the
400 server to be more verbose, and often also to attempt final delivery
401 while your SMTP session is still running. It is usually only useful
402 together with @code{smtpmail-debug-info}. Note that this may cause
403 mail delivery to take considerable time if the final destination
408 @node GNU Free Documentation License
409 @chapter GNU Free Documentation License
410 @include doclicense.texi
415 @section Concept Index
419 @section Function and Variable Index
427 arch-tag: 6316abdf-b366-4562-87a2-f37e8f894b6f