smtp-cli
is a powerful SMTP command line client with a support for advanced features, such as STARTTLS, SMTP-AUTH, or IPv6 and with a scriptable message composition capabilities supporting anything from simple plain-text messages right up to building complex HTML emails with alternative plain-text part, attachments and inline images. The MIME-Type of the attachments can either be guessed automatically or alternatively set on the command line, separately for each attachment if required.
It's also a convenient tool for testing and debugging SMTP servers setups. Even the hardcore mail admins used to typing the SMTP protocol over telnet need a specialised tool when it comes to verifying encryption settings of their TLS enabled server with a subsequent user authentication. Such things are pretty hard to type into a telnet session by hand :-)
The name smtp-cli
stands for:
- smtp-client
- Smtp-command Line Interface
Use smtp-cli
if you want to:
- check mail server capabilities
- test the server setup
- create and send complex emails from scripts or cron-jobs
The smtp-cli
usage is intuitive, everything is scriptable and can run in a completely non-interactive mode from various scripts or cron jobs. It is also ideal for shipping log files from remote machines, running periodical mail delivery test loops, etc. Also if you ever needed to send a complex email with attachments from a command line, this script is all you need.
Download the latest release from smtp-cli on GitHub and make it executable:
~ $ wget -o smtp-cli https://github.com/mludvig/smtp-cli/releases/{LATEST_RELEASE}
~ $ chmod +x smtp-cli
Some features of smtp-cli are optional and available only when the appropriate perl modules are installed:
-
RedHat Enterprise (RHEL), Fedora, Oracle Linux and CentOS users may want to install the following packages:
$ sudo yum install perl-IO-Socket-SSL perl-Digest-HMAC perl-TermReadKey \ perl-MIME-Lite perl-File-LibMagic perl-IO-Socket-INET6
If
yum
can't find them all try to enable EPEL repository. -
openSUSE and SUSE Enterprise (SLES) users should install these packages:
$ sudo zypper install perl-IO-Socket-SSL perl-Digest-HMAC perl-TermReadKey \ perl-MIME-Lite perl-File-LibMagic perl-IO-Socket-INET6
-
Users of Debian, Ubuntu and derivates should install these packages:
$ sudo apt install libio-socket-ssl-perl libdigest-hmac-perl libterm-readkey-perl \ libmime-lite-perl libfile-libmagic-perl libio-socket-inet6-perl
Users of other Linux distributions will have to find the appropriate packages by themselves, or install the modules directly from CPAN.
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These examples are for testing and verifying mail servers configurations:
The simplest example - it will not actually send anything. Only connect to a server, do some SMTP chatting and disconnect.
$ ./smtp-cli --verbose --server localhost
[220] 'localhost ESMTP Postfix'
> EHLO localhost
[250] 'localhost'
[250] 'PIPELINING'
[250] 'SIZE 20480000'
[250] 'ETRN'
[250] '8BITMIME'
> QUIT
[221] 'Bye'
Things are getting more interesting. We will use --server smtp.example.com:587
to connect to port 587
that is usually used by email clients (port 25 is usually for server-to-server communication). Port 587
also usually requires authentication.
For that we'll supply --user test
and optional --password ...
to supply the credentials.
If the password is not supplied we will be asked interactively.
To actually send something we will also supply --from
and --to
parameters and also --data message.txt
.
Note tat this message.txt
must contain both the headers and the message body. If you don't want to
bother with creating the message headers yourself use --body
instead, see the next example for details.
$ ./smtp-cli --verbose --host smtp.example.com:587 --enable-auth --user test \
--from test@example.com --to user@another.example.org --data message.txt
[220] 'smtp.example.com ESMTP Postfix'
> EHLO localhost
[250] 'smtp.example.com'
[250] 'PIPELINING'
[250] 'SIZE 10240000'
[250] 'VRFY'
[250] 'ETRN'
[250] 'STARTTLS'
[250] 'XVERP'
[250] '8BITMIME'
Starting TLS...
> STARTTLS
[220] 'Ready to start TLS'
Using cipher: EDH-RSA-DES-CBC3-SHA
Subject Name: /C=XX/CN=smtp.example.com/Email=info@example.com
Issuer Name: /C=XX/CN=Example.COM Root CA/Email=ca@example.com
> EHLO localhost
[250] 'smtp.example.com'
[250] 'PIPELINING'
[250] 'SIZE 10240000'
[250] 'VRFY'
[250] 'ETRN'
[250] 'AUTH PLAIN LOGIN DIGEST-MD5 CRAM-MD5'
[250] 'AUTH=PLAIN LOGIN DIGEST-MD5 CRAM-MD5'
[250] 'XVERP'
[250] '8BITMIME'
AUTH method (PLAIN LOGIN DIGEST-MD5 CRAM-MD5): using CRAM-MD5
> AUTH CRAM-MD5
[334] 'PDE0OTQyOTcxOC4yNjAwOTYwQHNlcnZlci5kb21haW4udG9wPg=='
> dGVzdCBmOTUyY2RkM2VlODBiMzk1YjYxNDI4NjBlYzg2Y2ExZnJvb3Q=
[235] 'Authentication successful'
Authentication of test@localhost succeeded
> MAIL FROM: <test@example.com>
[250] 'Ok'
> RCPT TO: <user@another.example.org>
[250] 'Ok'
> DATA
[354] 'End data with <CR><LF>.<CR><LF>'
[250] 'Ok: queued as C5C3A299D7'
> QUIT
[221] 'Bye'
For composing emails you will need an optional MIME::Lite
perl module. See the Optional dependencies section above for details.
$ ./smtp-cli [--server / --auth / --verbose flags] \
--from test@domain.com --to user@another.domain.org \
--subject "Simple test with attachments" \
--body-plain "Log files are attached." \
--attach /var/log/some.log@text/plain \
--attach /var/log/other.log
This example composes a standard plain text email with two attachments. The interesting part is the syntax used for enforcing MIME-Type of the first attachment.
The syntax some.log@text/plain
will make some.log
attached as text/plain part, while the MIME-Type of other.log
will be guessed by the script and eventually default to application/octet-stream.
$ ./smtp-cli [--server / --auth / --verbose flags] \
--from test@domain.com --to user@another.domain.org \
--subject "Image as a mail body" \
--attach /path/to/tux.png
If there is only one text or image file to be sent, the file itself could be the message body. At the same time it will be accessible as an attachment with a file name for easy saving. Best to show a screenshot I guess...
There is no Text or HTML body part and the email is not multipart/mixed. All that is in the email is Tux the Penguin image. You can immediately see it in your mailer but also can easily save it with its provided name tux.png. The same way it works with text files (or files forced to be text/plain, to be precise).
Example 5 - Compose a multipart/alternative email with both HTML and Plain text part and inline images
Sending HTML emails is popular, especially among non-technical people. They like to change font colours, backgrounds, embed images and apply all sorts of other useless effects to their one short line of text. Indeed, me and you are more than happy with plain text and we both know that some mail readers can't even display colours and graphics at all (our office manager wouldn't believe!). Therefore it is a good practice for HTML messages to use multipart/alternative MIME format with both HTML and TEXT parts. In this example we're going to go wild and even embed an inlined image or two into the HTML part.
First of all prepare the message body. Or bodies, actually. The HTML one is body.html
:
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
<html>
<head></head>
<body bgcolor="#ffffff" text="#000000">
<div align="center">
Here comes embedded <font color="#006600"><b>Mr Tux</b></font><br>
<img src="cid:tux.png"><br>
<i>Nice, isn't it?</i><br>
<img src="cid:smiley.png"><br>
</div>
</body>
</html>
Note the <img>
tags with cid:filename.xyz
source — that's the way to refer inlined attachments from inside the message. We will obviously have to inline-attach tux.png
and smiley.png
to the message to make it work.
The second body file is a plain text representation of the above, call it body.txt
:
Here comes embedded Mr Tux
... actually it doesn't ...
Not in a text-only mail reader.
Sorry
That's it. Here comes the magic command line that puts it all together:
$ ./smtp-cli --from test@domain.com --to user@another.domain.org \
--subject "HTML with embedded image" \
--body-html body.html --body-plain body.txt \
--attach-inline tux.png --attach-inline smiley.png
And this is what we get:
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Michael Ludvig - get in touch through the Issues section above.