$ npm install react-native-smtp-mailer --save
If you use RN version less than 0.60, then you need to link the native modules, either automatically or manually
Link Instructions for RN versions less than 0.60
$ react-native link react-native-smtp-mailer
- In XCode, in the project navigator, right click
Libraries
➜Add Files to [your project's name]
- Go to
node_modules
➜react-native-smtp-mailer
and addRNSmtpMailer.xcodeproj
- In XCode, in the project navigator, select your project. Add
libRNSmtpMailer.a
to your project'sBuild Phases
➜Link Binary With Libraries
- Run your project (
Cmd+R
)<
Inside ios folder, if Podfile doesn't exist, create a Podfile with pod init
.
And add the following inside your Podfile:
pod 'mailcore2-ios'
Then run:
pod install
- Open up
android/app/src/main/java/[...]/MainApplication.java
- Add
import com.rnsmtpmailer.RNSmtpMailerPackage;
to the imports at the top of the file - Add
new RNSmtpMailerPackage()
to the list returned by thegetPackages()
method
- Append the following lines to
android/settings.gradle
:include ':react-native-smtp-mailer' project(':react-native-smtp-mailer').projectDir = new File(rootProject.projectDir, '../node_modules/react-native-smtp-mailer/android')
- Insert the following lines inside the dependencies block in
android/app/build.gradle
:implementation project(':react-native-smtp-mailer')
Maybe you need to add (if you encounter error with mimetypes during build), in android/app/build.gradle:
android {
...
packagingOptions {
exclude 'META-INF/mimetypes.default'
exclude 'META-INF/mailcap.default'
}
}
import RNSmtpMailer from "react-native-smtp-mailer";
RNSmtpMailer.sendMail({
mailhost: "smtp.gmail.com",
port: "465",
ssl: true, // optional. if false, then TLS is enabled. Its true by default in android. In iOS TLS/SSL is determined automatically, and this field doesn't affect anything
username: "usernameEmail",
password: "password",
fromName: "Some Name", // optional
replyTo: "usernameEmail", // optional
recipients: "toEmail1,toEmail2",
bcc: ["bccEmail1", "bccEmail2"], // optional
subject: "subject",
htmlBody: "<h1>header</h1><p>body</p>",
attachmentPaths: [
RNFS.ExternalDirectoryPath + "/image.jpg",
RNFS.DocumentDirectoryPath + "/test.txt",
RNFS.DocumentDirectoryPath + "/test2.csv",
RNFS.DocumentDirectoryPath + "/pdfFile.pdf",
RNFS.DocumentDirectoryPath + "/zipFile.zip",
RNFS.DocumentDirectoryPath + "/image.png"
], // optional
attachmentNames: [
"image.jpg",
"firstFile.txt",
"secondFile.csv",
"pdfFile.pdf",
"zipExample.zip",
"pngImage.png"
], // required in android, these are renames of original files. in ios filenames will be same as specified in path. In a ios-only application, no need to define it
})
.then(success => console.log(success))
.catch(err => console.log(err));
RNFS is from react-native-fs library, used just to demonstrate a way of accessing files in phone filesystem.
The smtp provider host. i.e: "smtp.gmail.com"
The port that the smtp provider listens to, i.e: "465"
The username to authenticate with stmp host, i.e: "foo@foobar.com"
The password to authenticate with stmp host
Comma separated values if want to add multiple recipients i.e: "foo@bar.com,bar@foo.com"
The subject of the email
The body of the email. i.e: "<h1>Sample Header</h1><p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet...</p>"
Alias of the username email address, to be shown in the recipients as the sender's name. By default it's the same as the username field i.e: "foo.alias@foobar.com"
Note: This is different than the reply-to email address. If reply-to is not specified, the reply-to will still use the username email
If not specified, the reply-to email is the username one i.e: "fooReply@foobar.com"
In iOS TLS/SSL is determined automatically, so either true or false, it doesn't affect it
By default it is true in android. If false then TLS is enabled.
Optional list of bcc emails i.e: ["foo@bar.com", "bar@foo.com"]
Optional path URIs of files that exist to the filesystem in the specified path, and want to be send as attachments i.e: [RNFS.DocumentDirectoryPath + "/sample_test.txt"]
Required if attachmentPaths are set, Only for android
The sending attachments filenames, will be renamed by these. It's important to set these, otherwise they are not always shown in the received email i.e: ["renamed_sample_test.txt"]
or ["sample_test.txt"]
etc
Add the following into android/app/proguard-rules.pro
-dontshrink
-keep class javax.** {*;}
-keep class com.sun.** {*;}
-keep class myjava.** {*;}
-keep class org.apache.harmony.** {*;}
-dontwarn java.awt.**
-dontwarn java.beans.Beans
-dontwarn javax.security.**
-dontwarn javax.activation.**