On Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 7:07 PM, Jeremy Shaw <[email protected]> wrote: > On Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 10:14 AM, Michael Snoyman <[email protected]> wrote: > >> I'm sure people would love to see built-in support for serving over >> SMTP, but I think that's more appropriate for a different package. >> Proper SMTP support will also include SSL/TLS support, which will >> require even more dependencies. > > SMTPClient, > > http://hackage.haskell.org/package/SMTPClient-1.0.3 > > can be used to send mail via SMTP to a smart host. It is still based > on 'String', but it is a start. To send a simple message you can do: > > import Network.SMTP.Simple > import System.IO > > main :: IO () > main = do > sendSimpleMessages (hPutStrLn stderr) "10.2.23.11" "example.com" [message] > where message = SimpleMessage > [NameAddr (Just "John Doe") "[email protected]"] > [NameAddr (Just "Team") "[email protected]"] > "My test email using Network.SMTP.Simple" > "Hi, this is a test email which uses SMTPClient." > > I wonder what it would take to make it so that the message body could > be multipart mime...
Currently, the idea in mime-mail is to produce fully-formed messages, complete with headers, encoded as UTF-8 lazy bytestrings. To address the headers issue, we would need to do one of: * Allow SMTPClient to accept messages with the headers already attached. * Modify mime-mail to produce a list of headers separate from the message content. I'm not opposed to this. Regarding the String/ByteString issue, there are three choices I believe: * Switch mime-mail to use Strings. I *am* opposed to this ;). * Switch SMTPClient to use ByteStrings. I think this is the right answer. * Leave the libraries as-is, and just use a Lazy.Char8.unpack to bridge the two. Am I leaving anything out? I'd be happy to try and get mime-mail to work with SMTPClient. Michael _______________________________________________ Haskell-Cafe mailing list [email protected] http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe
