Email::Send(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Email::Send(3)NAMEEmail::Send - Simply Sending Email
WAIT! ACHTUNG!Email::Send is going away... well, not really going away, but it's
being officially marked "out of favor." It has API design problems
that make it hard to usefully extend and rather than try to deprecate
features and slowly ease in a new interface, we've released
Email::Sender which fixes these problems and others. As of today,
2008-12-19, Email::Sender is young, but it's fairly well-tested.
Please consider using it instead for any new work.
SYNOPSIS
use Email::Send;
my $message = <<'__MESSAGE__';
To: recipient@example.com
From: sender@example.com
Subject: Hello there folks
How are you? Enjoy!
__MESSAGE__
my $sender = Email::Send->new({mailer => 'SMTP'});
$sender->mailer_args([Host => 'smtp.example.com']);
$sender->send($message);
# more complex
my $bulk = Email::Send->new;
for ( qw[SMTP Sendmail Qmail] ) {
$bulk->mailer($_) and last if $bulk->mailer_available($_);
}
$bulk->message_modifier(sub {
my ($sender, $message, $to) = @_;
$message->header_set(To => qq[$to\@geeknest.com])
});
my @to = qw[casey chastity evelina casey_jr marshall];
my $rv = $bulk->send($message, $_) for @to;
DESCRIPTION
This module provides a very simple, very clean, very specific interface
to multiple Email mailers. The goal of this software is to be small and
simple, easy to use, and easy to extend.
Constructors
new
my $sender = Email::Send->new({
mailer => 'NNTP',
mailer_args => [ Host => 'nntp.example.com' ],
});
Create a new mailer object. This method can take parameters for any
of the data properties of this module. Those data properties, which
have their own accessors, are listed under "Properties".
Properties
mailer
The mailing system you'd like to use for sending messages with this
object. This is not defined by default. If you don't specify a
mailer, all available plugins will be tried when the "send" method
is called until one succeeds.
mailer_args
Arguments passed into the mailing system you're using.
message_modifier
If defined, this callback is invoked every time the "send" method
is called on an object. The mailer object will be passed as the
first argument. Second, the actual "Email::Simple" object for a
message will be passed. Finally, any additional arguments passed to
"send" will be passed to this method in the order they were
recieved.
This is useful if you are sending in bulk.
METHODS
send
my $result = $sender->send($message, @modifier_args);
Send a message using the predetermined mailer and mailer arguments.
If you have defined a "message_modifier" it will be called prior to
sending.
The first argument you pass to send is an email message. It must be
in some format that "Email::Abstract" can understand. If you don't
have "Email::Abstract" installed then sending as plain text or an
"Email::Simple" object will do.
Any remaining arguments will be passed directly into your defined
"message_modifier".
all_mailers
my @available = $sender->all_mailers;
Returns a list of availabe mailers. These are mailers that are
installed on your computer and register themselves as available.
mailer_available
# is SMTP over SSL avaialble?
$sender->mailer('SMTP')
if $sender->mailer_available('SMTP', ssl => 1);
Given the name of a mailer, such as "SMTP", determine if it is
available. Any additional arguments passed to this method are
passed directly to the "is_available" method of the mailer being
queried.
Writing Mailers
package Email::Send::Example;
sub is_available {
eval { use Net::Example }
}
sub send {
my ($class, $message, @args) = @_;
use Net::Example;
Net::Example->do_it($message) or return;
}
1;
Writing new mailers is very simple. If you want to use a short name
when calling "send", name your mailer under the "Email::Send"
namespace. If you don't, the full name will have to be used. A mailer
only needs to implement a single function, "send". It will be called
from "Email::Send" exactly like this.
Your::Sending::Package->send($message, @args);
$message is an Email::Simple object, @args are the extra arguments
passed into "Email::Send::send".
Here's an example of a mailer that sends email to a URL.
package Email::Send::HTTP::Post;
use strict;
use vars qw[$AGENT $URL $FIELD];
use Return::Value;
sub is_available {
eval { use LWP::UserAgent }
}
sub send {
my ($class, $message, @args);
require LWP::UserAgent;
if ( @args ) {
my ($URL, $FIELD) = @args;
$AGENT = LWP::UserAgent->new;
}
return failure "Can't send to URL if no URL and field are named"
unless $URL && $FIELD;
$AGENT->post($URL => { $FIELD => $message->as_string });
return success;
}
1;
This example will keep a UserAgent singleton unless new arguments are
passed to "send". It is used by calling "Email::Send::send".
my $sender = Email::Send->new({ mailer => 'HTTP::Post' });
$sender->mailer_args([ 'http://example.com/incoming', 'message' ]);
$sender->send($message);
$sender->send($message2); # uses saved $URL and $FIELD
SEE ALSO
Email::Simple, Email::Abstract, Email::Send::IO, Email::Send::NNTP,
Email::Send::Qmail, Email::Send::SMTP, Email::Send::Sendmail, perl.
PERL EMAIL PROJECT
This module is maintained by the Perl Email Project.
<http://emailproject.perl.org/wiki/Email::Send>
AUTHOR
Current maintainer: Ricardo SIGNES, <rjbs@cpan.org>.
Original author: Casey West, <casey@geeknest.com>.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2005 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.
perl v5.14.1 2009-07-12 Email::Send(3)