NAME

Net::SMTPS - SSL/STARTTLS support for Net::SMTP

SYNOPSYS

use Net::SMTPS;

my $ssl = 'starttls';   # 'ssl' / 'starttls' / undef

my $smtp = Net::SMTPS->new("smtp.example.com", Port => 587, doSSL => $ssl);

DESCRIPTION

This module implements a wrapper for Net::SMTP, enabling over-SSL/STARTTLS support. This module inherits most of all the methods from Net::SMTP(2.X). You may use all the friendly options that came bundled with Net::SMTP. You can control the SSL usage with the options of new() constructor method. 'doSSL' option is the switch, and, If you would like to control detailed SSL settings, you can set SSL_* options that are brought from IO::Socket::SSL. Please see the document of IO::Socket::SSL about these options detail.

Just one method difference from the Net::SMTP, you can select SMTP AUTH mechanism as the third option of auth() method.

As of Version 3.10 of Net::SMTP(libnet) includes SSL/STARTTLS capabilities, so this wrapper module's significance disappareing.

CONSTRUCTOR

new ( [ HOST ] [, OPTIONS ] )

A few options added to Net::SMTP(2.X).

doSSL { ssl | starttls | undef } - to specify SSL connection type. ssl makes connection wrapped with SSL, starttls uses SMTP command STARTTLS.

SSL { 0 | 1 } - 1 means the same as doSSL to ssl, 0 is just initialize SSL libraries internally for using starttls later.

METHODS

Most of all methods of Net::SMTP are inherited as is, except auth().

auth ( USERNAME, PASSWORD [, AUTHMETHOD])

Attempt SASL authentication through Authen::SASL module. AUTHMETHOD is your required method of authentication, like 'CRAM-MD5', 'LOGIN', ... etc. If your selection does not match the server-offerred AUTH mechanism, authentication negotiation may fail.

starttls ( SSLARGS )

Upgrade existing plain connection to SSL. If you use this, you must create instance like,

$smtp = Net::SMTPS->new($host, SSL => 0, ...);

SEE ALSO

Net::SMTP, IO::Socket::SSL, Authen::SASL

AUTHOR

Tomo.M <tomo at cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 2017 Tomo.M All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.