Smtplib module
Sheila King
sheila at spamcop.net
Sat Oct 20 20:32:45 EDT 2001
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Sat Oct 20 20:32:45 EDT 2001
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On Sun, 21 Oct 2001 00:14:35 +0200, Gerhard Häring <gh_pythonlist at gmx.de> wrote in comp.lang.python in article <mailman.1003616181.19894.python-list at python.org>: :On Sat, Oct 20, 2001 at 11:41:34PM +0200, A wrote: :> Hi, :> I want to use smtplib module for sending emails. Is there any way how :> I can test a return code, generated by this module, to see if an email :> was accepting for delivery, for example? : :No, there is no way to do this. But this is a "feature" of SMTP, not of :Python's smtplib. I am very surprised at this response. This same inquiry was also posted to the Python Tutor mailing list, and I answered in the affirmative. Here is the message I posted (with a minor correction: > To: discuss at sendme.cz > Subject: Re: [Tutor] Smtplib module > From: Sheila King <sheila at thinkspot.net> > Date: Sat, 20 Oct 2001 15:00:22 -0700 > Cc: tutor at python.org > > On Sat, 20 Oct 2001 23:41:34 +0200, "A" <export at bmatrading.com> wrote > about [Tutor] Smtplib module: > > :Hi, > :I want to use smtplib module for sending emails. > :Is there any way how I can test a return code, generated by this > :module, to see if an email was accepting for delivery, for example? > :Thank you for help. > > Sure. > > import smtplib > > message = """\ > To: me at mydomain.com > From: me at mydomain.com > Subject: testing smtp response > Date: Sat, Oct 20 2001 15:00 -0700 > > Here is the message body. > """ > > SENDER = 'me at mydomain' > RECIPIENT = 'me at mydomain' > > server = smtplib.SMTP('localhost') > response = server.sendmail(SENDER, RECIPIENT, message) > server.close() > > print str(response) > > > # I think the above code is correct, but I didn't test-run it. Was I mistaken? I thought the above is a correct method for determining the server's response. And, in fact, I use this method in some scripts that I run. (I've written a moderator-approval bot for a Usenet newsgroup, and the bot is currently in production...despite a couple of bugs. It uses the smtplib and the nntplib, which employ similar methods for reporting server response.) -- Sheila King http://www.thinkspot.net/sheila/ http://www.k12groups.org/ :The only way smtplib is concerned is if the "RCPT TO" command fails with :550 "no such user". Then the sendmail method already returns the address :as not deliverable to. But at least my mailserver (Postfix) doesn't :return a 550 in such cases. : :There are some other possibilties, but these will only work in some :relatively rare cases, (finger, SMTP delivery receipts and possibly :others). But all of these are out of the scope of Python's smtplib. : :Gerhard
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