1 / 38

Java Mail API

Java Mail API. Sending and Receiving Emails. Mail API. Java Mail API is an easy and standard way of sending and receiving emails Java Mail API supports following Protocols: SMTP POP IMAP MIME. SMTP. Simple Mail Transfer Protocol Usually used for sending emails from clients

emccomas
Download Presentation

Java Mail API

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Java Mail API Sending and Receiving Emails

  2. Mail API • Java Mail API is an easy and standard way of sending and receiving emails • Java Mail API supports following Protocols: • SMTP • POP • IMAP • MIME

  3. SMTP • Simple Mail Transfer Protocol • Usually used for sending emails from clients • Also used for relaying emails from one server to another

  4. SMTP

  5. POP • Post office protocol • Currently Version 3 in use (Pop3 RFC1939) • Used at client side to check the emails that are received in the mailbox for a user

  6. IMAP • Stands for Internet Message Access Protocol • Currently IMAP4 (RFC2060) in use • More advanced protocol for email access that allows multiple folder management on server, periodic backups and several other advanced features.

  7. MIME • Multi-purpose Internet Mail Extention • Defines the contents that are to be transferred in an email

  8. What do you need to use Java Mail? • You should have following two APIs • Java Mail API • JavaBeans Activation Framework(JAF) • JAF is included in JDK6

  9. Mail API • As the name says, is used for sending and receiving emails. • Mail API requires JavaBeans Activation Framework

  10. JAF • JavaBeans Activation Framework • Helps programmers to Determine the type of an arbitrary piece of data • Encapsulates access to it • Discovers operations that can be performed on it

  11. Where to get? • Both APIs can be downloaded from http://java.sun.com • Also placed on \\shares\teachers\basit\shared docs\aip\APIs

  12. How to Install? • Un-zip the javamail.zip and jaf.zip into some folder • Put mail.jar from javamail folder to the classpath • Put activation.jar from jaf folder to classpath

  13. Java Mail classes • You must know following classes before you start • Session • Message • Address • Transport • Store • Folder

  14. javax.mail.Session • Defines a basic mail session • Everything in mail api works due to this session

  15. javax.mail.Message • Represents an email message that is either created to be sent to the recipient or is received from someone. • Message is an Abstract class • MimeMessage is the sub-class of message that understands most MIME types and is most commonly used for email handling

  16. javax.mail.Address • Represents an email addres • Address is an abstract class • javax.mail.Internet.InternetAddress is the sub-class of Address

  17. Message Representation

  18. Transport • This class speaks the protocol specific language to send messages. (Usually SMTP)

  19. Store and Folder • When receiving email • We create a session • Connect to a store with our username and password • Get specific folders (usually inbox) • And start receiving Message objects

  20. Sending an Email //Create properties object Properties p = System.getProperties(); p.put("mail.smtp.host", "202.125.140.71"); // Get session Session s = Session.getDefaultInstance(p,null);

  21. Sending an Email (cont) Message m = new MimeMessage(s); InternetAddress to = new InternetAddress("basit@ucp.edu.pk"); InternetAddress from = new InternetAddress("bill_gates@microsoft.com", "Bill Gates"); m.setContent("yeah this is the body", "text/plain"); m.setFrom(from); m.setRecipient(Message.RecipientType.TO, to); m.setSubject("de subject"); Transport.send(m);

  22. Checking Mails Properties props = new Properties(); Session session = Session.getDefaultInstance(props, null); Store store = session.getStore("pop3"); store.connect(host, username, password); Folder folder = store.getFolder("INBOX"); folder.open(Folder.READ_ONLY);

  23. Checking Mails(cont) Message message[] = folder.getMessages(); for (int i=0, n=message.length; i<n; i++) { System.out.println(i + ": " + message[i].getFrom()[0] + "\t\t" + message[i].getSubject()); } folder.close(false); store.close();

  24. Output 0: Syed Basit <basit@ucp.edu.pk> test 1 1: basit@cnn.com de subject 2: basit@microsoft.com de subject 3: basit@dell.com de subject 4: basit@hell.com de subject 5: Bill Gates <bill_gates@microsoft.com> de subject

  25. Let’s Try it out!!! • Send email using Gmail SMTP server • Set Mail content type (text/plain)

  26. HTML Email • You can also send HTML email with JavaMail. HTML email can be used to • Use different size fonts • imbed images into your email • Use different colored text, bold, italic, etc.

  27. HTML Email • With HTML email, • you set the mime message content type to "text/html" • call the setContent() method to set your html content • It helps to know a little HTML!

  28. Mail Security • Virtually all mail servers require a username and password to receive email • Some mail servers require a username and password to send an email (by default, James does not). • This prevents spammers from hijacking the mail server to send unauthorized email • JavaMail supports this username/password authorization and authentication • To implement this, you get a transport object from the mail session and call the connect() method with the mail host, username, and password • See next slide for code example

  29. HTML Email Example • Example of sending html message with an imbedded image using username/password authorization MimeMessage msg = new MimeMessage(mailSession); msg.setFrom(new InternetAddress("bill@msn.com")); msg.addRecipient(Message.RecipientType.TO, new InternetAddress(“tom@msn.com")); msg.setSubject(subject); String html = "<html><body><b>MY SPAM</b><br><img src='http://www.wrfportal.org/images/NOAA_logo.jpg'> </body></html>"; msg.setContent(html, "text/html"); Transport transport = mailSession.getTransport("smtp"); transport.connect("localhost","user", "passwd"); msg.saveChanges(); transport.sendMessage(msg, msg.getAllRecipients()); transport.close();

  30. MultiPart Representation

  31. javax.Activation.DataSource • Interface that allows access to file type and to streams that can manipulate the file • public String getContentType() returns the name of the MIME file type • Implemented by javax.Activation.FileDataSource • Used by JavaMail to create and retrieve e-mail attachments • Constructors • FileDataSource(File file) • FileDataSource(String filename)

  32. javax.Activation.DataHandler • Wrapper for DataSource objects so that the user does not need to manipulate the bytes for each file • Constructors • DataHandler(DataSource ds) • DataHandler(Object obj, String mimeType) • Public Object getContent() Returns the data as the object that represents its content type (ie runing this method on a text message returns a String)

  33. javax.mail.Part Revisited • Allows manipulation of DataHandlers • public void setDataHandler(DataHandler dh) • public DataHandler getDataHandler() • Other methods abstract user away from need to directly manipulate DataHandler • public void setContent(Object object, String contentType) • public Object getContent()

  34. javax.mail.MimeBodyPart • Implements the Part interface (indirectly through a few abstract classes) • Contains the content for a single part of an e-mail message • Uses several methods to manipulate content directly or through DataHandler or streams • Key Methods • public void setText(String text): for text/plain content, makes a String into the message content • public void setDataHandler(DataHandler dh) sets the content using a DataHandler (which may be text or any other permitted content) • public void setFileName(String filename) sets the filename associated with the content, if the content represents a file

  35. Javax.mail.Multipart • Container that holds multiple parts • Each part is indexed, starting with 0 • A Multipart object may be a part within another Multipart object • Key Methods • public void addBodyPart(BodyPart part) • public void addBodyPart(BodyPart part, int index) • public int getCount() returns the number of BodyPart objects

  36. Email attachments -1 • To append an email attachment, you need to send a "multipart" message • Create your MimeMessage object as usual, setting the from address, to address, subject, etc... • Create a MimeBodyPart object for your main message and set its text (or content) to be your message • Create a MimeBodyPart object for your attachment and call its setContent() method to attach your file • Create a Multipart object and add both body parts to it. • Call your MimeMessage's setContent() method, passing in your Multipart object • Call Transport.send() to send the message • Whew!!!

  37. Email attachment Example-1 MimeMessage msg = new MimeMessage(getMailSession()); msg.setFrom(new InternetAddress("bill.gates@msn.com")); msg.addRecipient(Message.RecipientType.TO, new InternetAddress("larry.ellison@oracle.com")); msg.setSubject("RE: Oracle vs SQL Server"); //Create the main message (body) part for text MimeBodyPart mainBodyPart = new MimeBodyPart(); mainBodyPart.setText("Here is my message");

  38. Email attachment Example-2 //Create attachment body part MimeBodyPart attachBodyPart = new MimeBodyPart(); DataSource source = new FileDataSource("1.jpg"); attachBodyPart.setDataHandler(new DataHandler(source)); attachBodyPart.setFileName("1.jpg"); //Now create the multipart and add the parts Multipart multipart = new MimeMultipart(); multipart.addBodyPart(mainBodyPart); multipart.addBodyPart(attachBodyPart); //add the multipart to the original Mime message msg.setContent(multipart); Transport.send(msg);

More Related