This is a module to easily create custom SMTP servers and clients - use SMTP as a first class protocol in Node.JS!
If you are using node v0.6, then the last usable version of simplesmtp is v0.2.7
Current version of simplesmtp is fully supported for Node v0.8+
For a simple inbound only, no authentication SMTP server you can use
simplesmtp.createSimpleServer([options], requestListener).listen(port);
Example
simplesmtp.createSimpleServer({SMTPBanner:"My Server"}, function(req){
req.pipe(process.stdout);
req.accept();
}).listen(port);
Properties
- req.from - From address
- req.to - an array of To addresses
- req.host - hostname reported by the client
- req.remodeAddress - client IP address
Methods
- req.accept ([id]) - Accept the message with the selected ID
- req.reject ([message]) - Reject the message with the selected message
- req.pipe (stream) - Pipe the incoming data to a writable stream
Events
- 'data' (chunk) - A chunk (Buffer) of the message.
- 'end' - The message has been transferred
Create a new SMTP server instance with
var smtp = simplesmtp.createServer([options]);
And start listening on selected port
smtp.listen(25, [function(err){}]);
SMTP options can include the following:
- name - the hostname of the server, will be used for informational messages
- debug - if set to true, print out messages about the connection
- timeout - client timeout in milliseconds, defaults to 60 000 (60 sec.)
- secureConnection - start a server on secure connection
- SMTPBanner - greeting banner that is sent to the client on connection
- requireAuthentication - if set to true, require that the client must authenticate itself
- enableAuthentication - if set to true, client may authenticate itself but don't have to (as opposed to
requireAuthentication
that explicitly requires clients to authenticate themselves) - maxSize - maximum size of an e-mail in bytes (currently informational only)
- credentials - TLS credentials (
{key:'', cert:'', ca:['']}
) for the server - authMethods - allowed authentication methods, defaults to
["PLAIN", "LOGIN"]
- disableEHLO - if set to true, support HELO command only
- ignoreTLS - if set to true, allow client do not use STARTTLS
- disableDNSValidation - if set, do not validate sender domains
var simplesmtp = require("simplesmtp"),
fs = require("fs");
var smtp = simplesmtp.createServer();
smtp.listen(25);
smtp.on("startData", function(connection){
console.log("Message from:", connection.from);
console.log("Message to:", connection.to);
connection.saveStream = fs.createWriteStream("/tmp/message.txt");
});
smtp.on("data", function(connection, chunk){
connection.saveStream.write(chunk);
});
smtp.on("dataReady", function(connection, callback){
connection.saveStream.end();
console.log("Incoming message saved to /tmp/message.txt");
callback(null, "ABC1"); // ABC1 is the queue id to be advertised to the client
// callback(new Error("Rejected as spam!")); // reported back to the client
});
- startData (connection) - DATA stream is opened by the client (
connection
is an object withfrom
,to
,host
andremoteAddress
properties) - data (connection, chunk) - e-mail data chunk is passed from the client
- dataReady (connection, callback) - client is finished passing e-mail data,
callback
returns the queue id to the client - authorizeUser (connection, username, password, callback) - will be emitted if
requireAuthentication
option is set to true.callback
has two parameters (err, success) wheresuccess
is Boolean and should be true, if user is authenticated successfully - validateSender (connection, email, callback) - will be emitted if
validateSender
listener is set up - validateRecipient (connection, email, callback) - will be emitted it
validataRecipients
listener is set up - close (connection) - emitted when the connection to client is closed
SMTP client can be created with simplesmtp.connect(port[,host][, options])
where
- port is the port to connect to
- host is the hostname to connect to (defaults to "localhost")
- options is an optional options object (see below)
The following connection options can be used with simplesmtp.connect
:
- secureConnection - use SSL
- name - the name of the client server
- auth - authentication object
{user:"...", pass:"..."}
or{XOAuthToken:"base64data"}
- ignoreTLS - ignore server support for STARTTLS
- tls - optional options object for
tls.connect
, also applies to STARTTLS. For examplerejectUnauthorized
is set tofalse
by default. You can override this option by settingtls: {rejectUnauthorized: true}
- debug - output client and server messages to console
- logFile - optional filename where communication with remote server has to be logged
- instanceId - unique instance id for debugging (will be output console with the messages)
- localAddress - local interface to bind to for network connections (needs Node.js >= 0.11.3 for working with tls)
- greetingTimeout (defaults to 10000) - Time to wait in ms until greeting message is received from the server
- connectionTimeout (system default if not set) - Time to wait in ms until the socket is opened to the server
- rejectUnathorized (defaults to false) - if set to true accepts only valid server certificates. You can override this option with the
tls
option, this is just a shorthand - dsn - An object with methods
success
,failure
anddelay
. If any of these are set to true, DSN will be used
Once a connection is set up the following events can be listened to:
- 'idle' - the connection to the SMTP server has been successfully set up and the client is waiting for an envelope
- 'message' - the envelope is passed successfully to the server and a message stream can be started
- 'ready'
(success)
- the message was sent - 'rcptFailed'
(addresses)
- not all recipients were accepted (invalid addresses are included as an array) - 'error'
(err, stage)
- An error occurred. The connection is closed and an 'end' event is emitted shortly. Second argument indicates on which SMTP session stage an error occured. - 'end' - connection to the client is closed
When an 'idle'
event is emitted, an envelope object can be sent to the server.
This includes a string from
and an array of strings to
property.
Envelope can be sent with client.useEnvelope(envelope)
// run only once as 'idle' is emitted again after message delivery
client.once("idle", function(){
client.useEnvelope({
from: "me@example.com",
to: ["receiver1@example.com", "receiver2@example.com"]
});
});
The to
part of the envelope includes all recipients from To:
, Cc:
and Bcc:
fields.
If setting the envelope up fails, an error is emitted. If only some (not all)
recipients are not accepted, the mail can still be sent but an rcptFailed
event is emitted.
client.on("rcptFailed", function(addresses){
console.log("The following addresses were rejected: ", addresses);
});
If the envelope is set up correctly a 'message'
event is emitted.
When 'message'
event is emitted, it is possible to send mail. To do this
you can pipe directly a message source (for example an .eml file) to the client
or alternatively you can send the message with client.write
calls (you also
need to call client.end()
once the message is completed.
If you are piping a stream to the client, do not leave the 'end'
event out,
this is needed to complete the message sequence by the client.
client.on("message", function(){
fs.createReadStream("test.eml").pipe(client);
});
Once the message is delivered a 'ready'
event is emitted. The event has an
parameter which indicates if the message was transmitted( (true) or not (false)
and another which includes the last received data from the server.
client.on("ready", function(success, response){
if(success){
console.log("The message was transmitted successfully with "+response);
}
});
simplesmtp supports XOAUTH2 and XOAUTH authentication.
To use this feature you can set XOAuth2
param as an auth
option
var mailOptions = {
...,
auth:{
XOAuth2: {
user: "example.user@gmail.com",
clientId: "8819981768.apps.googleusercontent.com",
clientSecret: "{client_secret}",
refreshToken: "1/xEoDL4iW3cxlI7yDbSRFYNG01kVKM2C-259HOF2aQbI",
accessToken: "vF9dft4qmTc2Nvb3RlckBhdHRhdmlzdGEuY29tCg==",
timeout: 3600
}
}
}
accessToken
and timeout
values are optional. If login fails a new access token is generated automatically.
To use this feature you can set XOAuthToken
param as an auth
option
var mailOptions = {
...,
auth:{
XOAuthToken: "R0VUIGh0dHBzOi8vbWFpbC5nb29...."
}
}
Alternatively it is also possible to use XOAuthToken generators (supported by Nodemailer) - this
needs to be an object with a mandatory method generate
that takes a callback function for
generating a XOAUTH token string. This is better for generating tokens only when needed -
there is no need to calculate unique token for every e-mail request, since a lot of these
might share the same connection and thus the cleint needs not to re-authenticate itself
with another token.
var XOGen = {
token: "abc",
generate: function(callback){
if(1 != 1){
return callback(new Error("Tokens can't be generated in strange environments"));
}
callback(null, new Buffer(this.token, "utf-8").toString("base64"));
}
}
var mailOptions = {
...,
auth:{
XOAuthToken: XOGen
}
}
Emitted errors include the reason for failing in the name
property
- UnknowAuthError - the client tried to authenticate but the method was not supported
- AuthError - the username/password used were rejected
- TLSError - STARTTLS failed
- SenderError - the sender e-mail address was rejected
- RecipientError - all recipients were rejected (if only some of the recipients are rejected, a
'rcptFailed'
event is raised instead
There's also an additional property in the error object called data
that includes
the last response received from the server (if available for the current error type).
You can reuse the same connection several times but you can't send a mail
through the same connection concurrently. So if you catch and 'idle'
event
lock the connection to a message process and unlock after 'ready'
.
On 'error'
events you should reschedule the message and on 'end'
events
you should recreate the connection.
By default the client tries to keep the connection up. If you want to close it,
run client.quit()
- this sends a QUIT
command to the server and closes the
connection
client.quit();
simplesmtp has the option for connection pooling if you want to reuse a bulk of connections.
Create a connection pool of SMTP clients with
simplesmtp.createClientPool(port[,host][, options])
where
- port is the port to connect to
- host is the hostname to connect to (defaults to "localhost")
- options is an optional options object (see below)
The following connection options can be used with simplesmtp.connect
:
- secureConnection - use SSL
- name - the name of the client server
- auth - authentication object
{user:"...", pass:"..."}
or{XOAuthToken:"base64data"}
- ignoreTLS - ignore server support for STARTTLS
- debug - output client and server messages to console
- logFile - optional filename where communication with remote server has to be logged
- maxConnections - how many connections to keep in the pool (defaults to 5)
- localAddress - local interface to bind to for network connections (needs Node.js >= 0.11.3 for working with tls)
- maxMessages - limit the count of messages to send through a single connection (no limit by default)
E-mails can be sent through the pool with
pool.sendMail(mail[, callback])
where
- mail is a MailComposer compatible object
- callback
(error, responseObj)
- is the callback function to run after the message is delivered or an error occured.responseObj
may includefailedRecipients
which is an array with e-mail addresses that were rejected andmessage
which is the last response from the server.
In addition to SMTP client errors another error name is used
- DeliveryError - used if the message was not accepted by the SMTP server
MIT