in reply to Re: How to send mail (with attachments) from a Winx64 box
in thread How to send mail (with attachments) from a Winx64 box

I've previously sent mail with attachments from Perl using MIME::Lite.

I don't really know what MTAs are for. I don't think I used one.

Given Corion's comment and my own ignorance, I recommend that you (the OP) try to go ahead with the MIME::Lite module.

(I would post some of the code to show what I did, but it was in a previous job and I just don't have it any more.)

--
use JAPH;
print JAPH::asString();

  • Comment on Re^2: How to send mail (with attachments) from a Winx64 box

Replies are listed 'Best First'.
Re^3: How to send mail (with attachments) from a Winx64 box
by afoken (Chancellor) on Nov 04, 2009 at 20:58 UTC
    I don't really know what MTAs are for. I don't think I used one.

    I'm sure you have used a Mail Transport Agent before, even multiple times. In fact, you use it every time you send an e-mail. It is what is commonly known as "mail server". The other thing commonly found in the E-Mail RFCs is a Mail User Agent, commonly known as "mail client". MIME::Lite is one of those clients when it uses SMTP to connect to a mail server. The system's sendmail program can also work as MUA / mail client, this happens when MIME::Lite calls sendmail.

    The examples shown in the MIME::Lite documentation are pretty good, they should get the OP started within a few minutes. The only problem of MIME::Lite is the sendmail mode, there is really no need to use sendmail at all, even on a Unix system. Unfortunately, some old versions of MIME::Lite insist on having a sendmail binary somewhere except on Windows, and they default to using sendmail instead of sending via SMTP.

    Whenever I use MIME::Lite, my code starts with something like MIME::Lite->send('smtp', $mailserver, Timeout=>60, AuthUser=>$user, AuthPass=>$pass); to switch to authenticated SMTP mode. Most times, I use a tiny wrapper around MIME::Lite that reads the application's configuration file for mail server, login and password, switches to SMTP, and sometimes adds some extra features to MIME::Lite. Last time I looked, MIME::Lite had some internal helper functions (not methods), so clean inheritance did not work too well, runtime patching was required for some extra features.

    Alexander

    --
    Today I will gladly share my knowledge and experience, for there are no sweeter words than "I told you so". ;-)