mailcomposer is a Node.JS module for generating e-mail messages that can be streamed to SMTP or file.
This is a standalone module that only generates raw e-mail source, you need to write your own or use an existing transport mechanism (SMTP client, Amazon SES, SendGrid etc). mailcomposer frees you from the tedious task of generating rfc2822 compatible messages.
mailcomposer supports:
- Unicode to use any characters ✔
- HTML content as well as plain text alternative
- Attachments and streaming for larger files (use strings, buffers, files or binary streams as attachments)
- Embedded images in HTML
- DKIM signing
- usage of your own transport mechanism
Install through NPM
npm install mailcomposer
var MailComposer = require("mailcomposer").MailComposer;
var mailcomposer = new MailComposer([options]);
Where options
is an optional options object with the following possible properties:
- escapeSMTP - if set replaces dots in the beginning of a line with double dots
- encoding - sets transfer encoding for the textual parts (defaults to
"quoted-printable"
) - charset - sets output character set for strings (defaults to
"utf-8"
) - keepBcc - if set to true, includes
Bcc:
field in the message headers. Useful for sendmail command. - forceEmbeddedImages - convert image urls and absolute paths in HTML to embedded attachments.
The following example generates a simple e-mail message with plaintext and html body.
var MailComposer = require("mailcomposer").MailComposer;
mailcomposer = new MailComposer(),
fs = require("fs");
// add additional header field
mailcomposer.addHeader("x-mailer", "Nodemailer 1.0");
// setup message data
mailcomposer.setMessageOption({
from: "andris@tr.ee",
to: "andris@node.ee",
body: "Hello world!",
html: "<b>Hello world!</b>"
});
mailcomposer.streamMessage();
// pipe the output to a file
mailcomposer.pipe(fs.createWriteStream("test.eml"));
The output for such a script (the contents for "test.eml") would look like:
MIME-Version: 1.0
X-Mailer: Nodemailer 1.0
From: andris@tr.ee
To: andris@node.ee
Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
boundary="----mailcomposer-?=_1-1328088797399"
------mailcomposer-?=_1-1328088797399
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
Hello world!
------mailcomposer-?=_1-1328088797399
Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
<b>Hello world!</b>
------mailcomposer-?=_1-1328088797399--
Headers can be added with mailcomposer.addHeader(key, value[, formatted])
where formatted
indicates if the value should be kept as is. If the value is missing or falsy, header value is sanitized and folded. If true, the value is passed to output as is.
var mailcomposer = new MailComposer();
mailcomposer.addHeader("x-mailer", "Nodemailer 1.0");
If you add an header value with the same key several times, all of the values will be used in the generated header. For example:
mailcomposer.addHeader("x-mailer", "Nodemailer 1.0");
mailcomposer.addHeader("x-mailer", "Nodemailer 2.0");
Will be generated into
...
X-Mailer: Nodemailer 1.0
X-Mailer: Nodemailer 2.0
...
The contents of the field value is not edited in any way (except for the folding), so if you want to use unicode symbols you need to escape these to mime words by yourself. Exception being object values - in this case the object is automatically JSONized and mime encoded.
// using objects as header values is allowed (will be converted to JSON)
var apiOptions = {};
apiOptions.category = "newuser";
apiOptions.tags = ["user", "web"];
mailcomposer.addHeader("X-SMTPAPI", apiOptions)
You can set message sender, receiver, subject line, message body etc. with
mailcomposer.setMessageOption(options)
where options is an object with the
data to be set. This function overwrites any previously set values with the
same key
The following example creates a simple e-mail with sender being andris@tr.ee
,
receiver andris@node.ee
and plaintext part of the message as Hello world!
:
mailcomposer.setMessageOption({
from: "andris@tr.ee",
to: "andris@node.ee",
body: "Hello world!"
});
Possible options that can be used are (all fields accept unicode):
- from (alias
sender
) - the sender of the message. If several addresses are given, only the first one will be used - to - receivers for the
To:
field - cc - receivers for the
Cc:
field - bcc - receivers for the
Bcc:
field - replyTo (alias
reply_to
) - e-mail address for theReply-To:
field - inReplyTo - The message-id this message is replying
- references - Message-id list
- subject - the subject line of the message
- body (alias
text
) - the plaintext part of the message - html - the HTML part of the message
- envelope - optional SMTP envelope, if auto generated envelope is not suitable
This method can be called several times
mailcomposer.setMessageOption({from: "andris@tr.ee"});
mailcomposer.setMessageOption({to: "andris@node.ee"});
mailcomposer.setMessageOption({body: "Hello world!"});
Trying to set the same key several times will yield in overwrite
mailcomposer.setMessageOption({body: "Hello world!"});
mailcomposer.setMessageOption({body: "Hello world?"});
// body contents will be "Hello world?"
All e-mail address fields take structured e-mail lists (comma separated) as the input. Unicode is allowed for all the parts (receiver name, e-mail username and domain) of the address. If the domain part contains unicode symbols, it is automatically converted into punycode, user part will be converted into UTF-8 mime word.
E-mail addresses can be a plain e-mail addresses
username@example.com
or with a formatted name
'Ноде Майлер' <username@example.com>
Or in case of comma separated lists, the formatting can be mixed
username@example.com, 'Ноде Майлер' <username@example.com>, "Name, User" <username@example.com>
SMTP envelope is usually auto generated from from
, to
, cc
and bcc
fields but
if for some reason you want to specify it yourself, you can do it with envelope
property.
envelope
is an object with the following params: from
, to
, cc
and bcc
just like
with regular mail options. You can also use the regular address format.
mailOptions = {
...,
from: "mailer@node.ee",
to: "daemon@node.ee",
envelope: {
from: "Daemon <deamon@node.ee>",
to: "mailer@node.ee, Mailer <mailer2@node.ee>"
}
}
Attachments can be added with mailcomposer.addAttachment(attachment)
where
attachment
is an object with attachment (meta)data with the following possible
properties:
- fileName (alias
filename
) - filename to be reported as the name of the attached file, use of unicode is allowed - cid - content id for using inline images in HTML message source
- contents - String or a Buffer contents for the attachment
- filePath - path to a file or an URL if you want to stream the file instead of including it (better for larger attachments)
- streamSource - Stream object for arbitrary binary streams if you want to stream the contents (needs to support pause/resume)
- contentType - content type for the attachment, if not set will be derived from the
fileName
property - contentDisposition - content disposition type for the attachment, defaults to "attachment"
- userAgent - User-Agent string to be used if the fileName points to an URL
One of contents
, filePath
or streamSource
must be specified, if none is
present, the attachment will be discarded. Other fields are optional.
Attachments can be added as many as you want.
Using embedded images in HTML
Attachments can be used as embedded images in the HTML body. To use this
feature, you need to set additional property of the attachment - cid
(unique identifier of the file) which is a reference to the attachment file.
The same cid
value must be used as the image URL in HTML (using cid:
as
the URL protocol, see example below).
NB! the cid value should be as unique as possible!
var cid_value = Date.now() + '.image.jpg';
var html = 'Embedded image: <img src="cid:' + cid_value + '" />';
var attachment = {
fileName: "image.png",
filePath: "/static/images/image.png",
cid: cid_value
};
Automatic embedding images
If you want to convert images in the HTML to embedded images automatically, you can
set mailcomposer option forceEmbeddedImages
to true. In this case all images in
the HTML that are either using an absolute URL (http://...) or absolute file path
(/path/to/file) are replaced with embedded attachments.
For example when using this code
var mailcomposer = new MailComposer({forceEmbeddedImages: true});
mailcomposer.setMessageOption({
html: 'Embedded image: <img src="http://example.com/image.png">'
});
The image linked is fetched and added automatically as an attachment and the url
in the HTML is replaced automatically with a proper cid:
string.
In addition to text and HTML, any kind of data can be inserted as an alternative content of the main body - for example a word processing document with the same text as in the HTML field. It is the job of the e-mail client to select and show the best fitting alternative to the reader.
Alternatives to text and HTML can be added with mailcomposer.addAlternative(alternative)
where
alternative
is an object with alternative (meta)data with the following possible
properties:
- contents - String or a Buffer contents for the attachment
- contentType - optional content type for the attachment, if not set will be set to "application/octet-stream"
- contentEncoding - optional value of how the data is encoded, defaults to "base64"
If contents
is empty, the alternative will be discarded. Other fields are optional.
Usage example:
// add HTML "alternative"
mailcomposer.setMessageOption({
html: "<b>Hello world!</b>"
});
// add Markdown alternative
mailcomposer.addAlternative({
contentType: "text/x-web-markdown",
contents: "**Hello world!**"
});
If the receiving e-mail client can render messages in Markdown syntax as well, it could prefer to display this alternative as the main content of the message.
Alternatives can be added as many as you want.
mailcomposer supports DKIM signing with very simple setup. Use this with caution
though since the generated message needs to be buffered entirely before it can be
signed - in this case the streaming capability offered by mailcomposer is illusionary,
there will only be one 'data'
event with the entire message. Not a big deal with
small messages but might consume a lot of RAM when using larger attachments.
Set up the DKIM signing with useDKIM
method:
mailcomposer.useDKIM(dkimOptions)
Where dkimOptions
includes necessary options for signing
- domainName - the domainname that is being used for signing
- keySelector - key selector. If you have set up a TXT record with DKIM public key at zzz._domainkey.example.com then
zzz
is the selector - privateKey - DKIM private key that is used for signing as a string
- headerFieldNames - optional colon separated list of header fields to sign, by default all fields suggested by RFC4871 #5.5 are used
NB! Currently if several header fields with the same name exists, only the last one (the one in the bottom) is signed.
Example:
mailcomposer.setMessageOption({from: "andris@tr.ee"});
mailcomposer.setMessageOption({to: "andris@node.ee"});
mailcomposer.setMessageOption({body: "Hello world!"});
mailcomposer.useDKIM({
domainName: "node.ee",
keySelector: "dkim",
privateKey: fs.readFileSync("private_key.pem")
});
When the message data is setup, streaming can be started. After this it is not possible to add headers, attachments or change body contents.
mailcomposer.streamMessage();
This generates 'data'
events for the message headers and body and final 'end'
event.
As MailComposer
objects are Stream instances, these can be piped
// save the output to a file
mailcomposer.streamMessage();
mailcomposer.pipe(fs.createWriteStream("out.txt"));
If you do not want to use the streaming possibilities, you can compile the entire
message into a string in one go with buildMessage
.
mailcomposer.buildMessage(function(err, messageSource){
console.log(err || messageSource);
});
The function is actually just a wrapper around streamMessage
and emitted events.
Envelope can be generated with an getEnvelope()
which returns an object
that includes a from
address (string) and a list of to
addresses (array of
strings) suitable for forwarding to a SMTP server as MAIL FROM:
and RCPT TO:
.
console.log(mailcomposer.getEnvelope());
// {from:"sender@example.com", to:["receiver@example.com"]}
NB! both from
and to
properties might be missing from the envelope object
if corresponding addresses were not detected from the e-mail.
Tests are run with nodeunit
Run
npm test
MIT