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问题:
I need to send email with html format. I have only linux command line and command "mail".
Currently have used:
echo "To: address@example.com" > /var/www/report.csv
echo "Subject: Subject" >> /var/www/report.csv
echo "Content-Type: text/html; charset=\"us-ascii\"" >> /var/www/report.csv
echo "<html>" >> /var/www/report.csv
mysql -u ***** -p***** -H -e "select * from users LIMIT 20" dev >> /var/www/report.csv
echo "</html>" >> /var/www/report.csv
mail -s "Built notification" address@example.com < /var/www/report.csv
But in my mail-agent i get only plain/text.
回答1:
This worked for me:
echo "<b>HTML Message goes here</b>" | mail -s "$(echo -e "This is the subject\nContent-Type: text/html")" foo@example.com
回答2:
My version of mail does not have --append
and it too smart for the echo -e \n
-trick (it simply replaces \n with space). It does, however, have -a
:
mail -a "Content-type: text/html" -s "Built notification" address@example.com < /var/www/report.html
回答3:
Make a file called tmp.html and put the following line in it:
<b>my bold message</b>
Then paste all this into the commandline: (with the parenthesis and all).
(
echo To: youremail@blah.com
echo From: el@defiant.com
echo "Content-Type: text/html; "
echo Subject: a logfile
echo
cat tmp.html
) | sendmail -t
The mail will be dispatched. And the message appeared as bold instead of with the <b>
tags.
Source:
How to send a html email with the bash command "sendmail"?
回答4:
The problem is that when redirecting a file into 'mail' like that, it's used for the message body only. Any headers you embed in the file will go into the body instead.
Try:
mail --append="Content-type: text/html" -s "Built notification" address@example.com < /var/www/report.csv
--append lets you add arbitrary headers to the mail, which is where you should specify the content-type and content-disposition. There's no need to embed the To
and Subject
headers in your file, or specify them with --append, since you're implicitly setting them on the command line already (-s is the subject, and address@example.com automatically becomes the To
).
回答5:
On OS X (10.9.4), cat
works, and is easier if your email is already in a file:
cat email_template.html | mail -s "$(echo -e "Test\nContent-Type: text/html")" karl@marx.com
回答6:
With heirloom-mailx you can change sendmail program to your hook script, replace headers there and then use sendmail.
The script I use (~/bin/sendmail-hook
):
#!/bin/bash
sed '1,/^$/{
s,^\(Content-Type: \).*$,\1text/html; charset=utf-8,g
s,^\(Content-Transfer-Encoding: \).*$,\18bit,g
}' | sendmail $@
This script changes the values in the mail header as follows:
Content-Type:
to text/html; charset=utf-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding:
to 8bit
(not sure if this is really needed).
To send HTML email:
mail -Ssendmail='~/bin/sendmail-hook' \
-s "Built notification" address@example.com < /var/www/report.csv
回答7:
you should use "append" mode redirection >>
instead of >
回答8:
Very old question, however it ranked high when I googled a question about this.
Find the answer here:
Sending HTML mail using a shell script
回答9:
I found a really easy solution: add to the mail command the modifier -aContent-Type:text/html.
In your case would be:
mail -aContent-Type:text/html -s "Built notification" address@example.com < /var/www/report.csv
回答10:
Try with :
echo "To: address@example.com" > /var/www/report.csv
echo "Subject: Subject" >> /var/www/report.csv
echo "MIME-Version: 1.0" >> /var/www/report.csv
echo "Content-Type: text/html; charset=\"us-ascii\"" >> /var/www/report.csv
echo "Content-Disposition: inline" >> /var/www/report.csv
echo "<html>" >> /var/www/report.csv
mysql -u ***** -p***** -H -e "select * from users LIMIT 20" dev >> /var/www/report.csv
echo "</html>" >> /var/www/report.csv
mail -s "Built notification" address@example.com < /var/www/report.csv
回答11:
I was struggling with similar problem (with mail) in one of my git's post_receive hooks and finally I found out, that sendmail actually works better for that kind of things, especially if you know a bit of how e-mails are constructed (and it seems like you know). I know this answer comes very late, but maybe it will be of some use to others too. I made use of heredoc operator and use of the feature, that it expands variables, so it can also run inlined scripts. Just check this out (bash script):
#!/bin/bash
recipients=(
'john@example.com'
'marry@not-so-an.example.com'
# 'naah@not.this.one'
);
sender='highly-automated-reporter@example.com';
subject='Oh, who really cares, seriously...';
sendmail -t <<-MAIL
From: ${sender}
`for r in "${recipients[@]}"; do echo "To: ${r}"; done;`
Subject: ${subject}
Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8
<html><head><meta charset="UTF-8"/></head>
<body><p>Ladies and gents, here comes the report!</p>
<pre>`mysql -u ***** -p***** -H -e "SELECT * FROM users LIMIT 20"`</pre>
</body></html>
MAIL
Note of backticks in the MAIL part to generate some output and remember, that <<-
operator strips only tabs (not spaces) from the beginning of lines, so in that case copy-paste will not work (you need to replace indentation with proper tabs). Or use <<
operator and make no indentation at all. Hope this will help someone. Of course you can use backticks outside o MAIL part and save the output into some variable, that you can later use in the MAIL part — matter of taste and readability. And I know, #!/bin/bash
does not always work on every system.