Unknwon 2fd69f13d9 vendor: check in vendors | 7 years ago | |
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CHANGELOG.md | 7 years ago | |
CONTRIBUTING.md | 7 years ago | |
LICENSE | 7 years ago | |
README.md | 7 years ago | |
auth.go | 7 years ago | |
doc.go | 7 years ago | |
message.go | 7 years ago | |
mime.go | 7 years ago | |
mime_go14.go | 7 years ago | |
send.go | 7 years ago | |
smtp.go | 7 years ago | |
writeto.go | 7 years ago |
Gomail is a simple and efficient package to send emails. It is well tested and documented.
Gomail can only send emails using an SMTP server. But the API is flexible and it is easy to implement other methods for sending emails using a local Postfix, an API, etc.
It is versioned using gopkg.in so I promise there will never be backward incompatible changes within each version.
It requires Go 1.2 or newer. With Go 1.5, no external dependencies are used.
Gomail supports:
https://godoc.org/gopkg.in/gomail.v2
go get gopkg.in/gomail.v2
See the examples in the documentation.
If you get this error it means the certificate used by the SMTP server is not
considered valid by the client running Gomail. As a quick workaround you can
bypass the verification of the server's certificate chain and host name by using
SetTLSConfig
:
package main
import (
"crypto/tls"
"gopkg.in/gomail.v2"
)
func main() {
d := gomail.NewDialer("smtp.example.com", 587, "user", "123456")
d.TLSConfig = &tls.Config{InsecureSkipVerify: true}
// Send emails using d.
}
Note, however, that this is insecure and should not be used in production.
Contributions are more than welcome! See CONTRIBUTING.md for more info.
See CHANGELOG.md.
You can ask questions on the Gomail thread in the Go mailing-list.