If I want to send mail not via SMTP, but rather via sendmail, is there a library for python that encapsulates this process?
Better yet, is there a good library that abstracts the whole 'sendmail -versus- smtp' choice?
I'll be running this script on a bunch of unix hosts, only some of which are listening on localhost:25; a few of these are part of embedded systems and can't be set up to accept SMTP.
As part of Good Practice, I'd really like to have the library take care of header injection vulnerabilities itself -- so just dumping a string to popen('/usr/bin/sendmail', 'w')
is a little closer to the metal than I'd like.
If the answer is 'go write a library,' so be it ;-)
I was just searching around for the same thing and found a good example on the Python website: http://docs.python.org/2/library/email-examples.html
From the site mentioned:
Note that this requires that you have sendmail/mailx set up correctly to accept connections on "localhost". This works on my Mac, Ubuntu and Redhat servers by default, but you may want to double-check if you run into any issues.
The easiest answer is the smtplib, you can find docs on it here.
All you need to do is configure your local sendmail to accept connection from localhost, which it probably already does by default. Sure, you're still using SMTP for the transfer, but it's the local sendmail, which is basically the same as using the commandline tool.
This question is very old, but it's worthwhile to note that there is a message construction and e-mail delivery system called Marrow Mailer (previously TurboMail) which has been available since before this message was asked.
It's now being ported to support Python 3 and updated as part of the Marrow suite.
It's quite common to just use the sendmail command from Python using os.popen
Personally, for scripts i didn't write myself, I think just using the SMTP-protocol is better, since it wouldn't require installing say an sendmail clone to run on windows.
https://docs.python.org/library/smtplib.html
This is a simple python function that uses the unix sendmail to deliver a mail.
Header injection isn't a factor in how you send the mail, it's a factor in how you construct the mail. Check the email package, construct the mail with that, serialise it, and send it to
/usr/sbin/sendmail
using the subprocess module: