diff -r 51a74ef9ed63 -r ae94777fff8f Symbian3/SDK/Source/GUID-2E253B30-2611-546D-AE5B-1752556FC8E8.dita --- a/Symbian3/SDK/Source/GUID-2E253B30-2611-546D-AE5B-1752556FC8E8.dita Wed Mar 31 11:11:55 2010 +0100 +++ b/Symbian3/SDK/Source/GUID-2E253B30-2611-546D-AE5B-1752556FC8E8.dita Fri Jun 11 12:39:03 2010 +0100 @@ -1,62 +1,62 @@ - - - - - -SMTP -Concepts -

This section section describes the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) -and its implementation on Symbian platform.

-
SMTP protocol

SMTP -is the most widely used protocol for sending emails. It is a text-based and push protocol -that cannot pull messages from a remote server on demand.

One -or more recipients of a message are specified in a message along with the -message text and other encoded objects. The message is then transferred to -a remote server using a procedure of queries and responses between the client -and server. Either an end-user's email client (Mail User Agent (MUA)) or a -relaying server's Mail Transport Agents (MTA) can act as an SMTP client. The -SMTP client initiates a TCP connection to SMTP server on port 25 (unless overridden -by configuration).

SMTP is more suitable for a machine permanently -connected to the Internet. To retrieve messages only on demand, which is the -most common requirement on a single-user computer, a mail client must use -POP3 or IMAP4. POP3 is mostly preferred when single-user computers connected -to the Internet only intermittently.

-
Symbian platform implementation of SMTP

SMTP is -a Mail Transfer Agent (MTA) used to transfer emails to a SMTP server which -then forwards them on to a specified destination.

Sending an email -generally consists of three phases: connect and authorise to server, send -emails and quit.

The SMTP component is responsible for sending email -messages composed and stored in the Message Server’s Message Store.

    -
  1. The SMTP client initiates -a connection with the SMTP server. Depending on the user’s email settings, -this may have been initiated over a secure SSL/TLS socket on port 465.

  2. -
  3. Depending on how the -user has configured the email settings and the capabilities of the SMTP server, -SMTP authentication may also be required.

  4. -
  5. Mail From and -recipient To are sent.

  6. -
  7. The message header fields -for the email message stored in the Message Store are then transmitted, each -one separated by a CRLF.

  8. -
  9. The last CRLF is sent -to indicate the end of the RFC 2822 header.

  10. -
  11. The message body and -encoded attachments are sent.

    The encoding format (uuencode or MIME, -character sets) depends on the user’s email settings and locale.

  12. -
  13. Finally, the body is -terminated by a CRLF.

    CRLF sequence, and the email is queued by the -SMTP server for sending.

  14. -
-
SMTP example

For more details on implementing the -IMAP4 MTM functions, see example -code.

-
-SMTP MTM - + + + + + +SMTP +Concepts +

This section section describes the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) +and its implementation on Symbian platform.

+
SMTP protocol

SMTP +is the most widely used protocol for sending emails. It is a text-based and push protocol +that cannot pull messages from a remote server on demand.

One +or more recipients of a message are specified in a message along with the +message text and other encoded objects. The message is then transferred to +a remote server using a procedure of queries and responses between the client +and server. Either an end-user's email client (Mail User Agent (MUA)) or a +relaying server's Mail Transport Agents (MTA) can act as an SMTP client. The +SMTP client initiates a TCP connection to SMTP server on port 25 (unless overridden +by configuration).

SMTP is more suitable for a machine permanently +connected to the Internet. To retrieve messages only on demand, which is the +most common requirement on a single-user computer, a mail client must use +POP3 or IMAP4. POP3 is mostly preferred when single-user computers connected +to the Internet only intermittently.

+
Symbian platform implementation of SMTP

SMTP is +a Mail Transfer Agent (MTA) used to transfer emails to a SMTP server which +then forwards them on to a specified destination.

Sending an email +generally consists of three phases: connect and authorise to server, send +emails and quit.

The SMTP component is responsible for sending email +messages composed and stored in the Message Server’s Message Store.

    +
  1. The SMTP client initiates +a connection with the SMTP server. Depending on the user’s email settings, +this may have been initiated over a secure SSL/TLS socket on port 465.

  2. +
  3. Depending on how the +user has configured the email settings and the capabilities of the SMTP server, +SMTP authentication may also be required.

  4. +
  5. Mail From and +recipient To are sent.

  6. +
  7. The message header fields +for the email message stored in the Message Store are then transmitted, each +one separated by a CRLF.

  8. +
  9. The last CRLF is sent +to indicate the end of the RFC 2822 header.

  10. +
  11. The message body and +encoded attachments are sent.

    The encoding format (uuencode or MIME, +character sets) depends on the user’s email settings and locale.

  12. +
  13. Finally, the body is +terminated by a CRLF.

    CRLF sequence, and the email is queued by the +SMTP server for sending.

  14. +
+
SMTP example

For more details on implementing the +IMAP4 MTM functions, see example +code.

+
+SMTP MTM +
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