Python: email

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Sumber: https://docs.python.org/2/library/email-examples.html


Here are a few examples of how to use the email package to read, write, and send simple email messages, as well as more complex MIME messages.

First, let’s see how to create and send a simple text message:

# Import smtplib for the actual sending function
import smtplib

# Import the email modules we'll need
from email.mime.text import MIMEText

# Open a plain text file for reading.  For this example, assume that
# the text file contains only ASCII characters.
fp = open(textfile, 'rb')
# Create a text/plain message
msg = MIMEText(fp.read())
fp.close()

# me == the sender's email address
# you == the recipient's email address
msg['Subject'] = 'The contents of %s' % textfile
msg['From'] = me
msg['To'] = you

# Send the message via our own SMTP server, but don't include the
# envelope header.
s = smtplib.SMTP('localhost')
s.sendmail(me, [you], msg.as_string())
s.quit()

And parsing RFC822 headers can easily be done by the parse(filename) or parsestr(message_as_string) methods of the Parser() class:

# Import the email modules we'll need
from email.parser import Parser

#  If the e-mail headers are in a file, uncomment this line:
#headers = Parser().parse(open(messagefile, 'r')) 

#  Or for parsing headers in a string, use:
headers = Parser().parsestr('From: <user@example.com>\n'
        'To: <someone_else@example.com>\n'
        'Subject: Test message\n'
        '\n'
        'Body would go here\n') 

#  Now the header items can be accessed as a dictionary:
print 'To: %s' % headers['to']
print 'From: %s' % headers['from']
print 'Subject: %s' % headers['subject']

Here’s an example of how to send a MIME message containing a bunch of family pictures that may be residing in a directory:

  1. Import smtplib for the actual sending function

import smtplib

  1. Here are the email package modules we'll need

from email.mime.image import MIMEImage from email.mime.multipart import MIMEMultipart

COMMASPACE = ', '

  1. Create the container (outer) email message.

msg = MIMEMultipart() msg['Subject'] = 'Our family reunion'

  1. me == the sender's email address
  2. family = the list of all recipients' email addresses

msg['From'] = me msg['To'] = COMMASPACE.join(family) msg.preamble = 'Our family reunion'

  1. Assume we know that the image files are all in PNG format

for file in pngfiles:

   # Open the files in binary mode.  Let the MIMEImage class automatically
   # guess the specific image type.
   fp = open(file, 'rb')
   img = MIMEImage(fp.read())
   fp.close()
   msg.attach(img)
  1. Send the email via our own SMTP server.

s = smtplib.SMTP('localhost') s.sendmail(me, family, msg.as_string()) s.quit()

Here’s an example of how to send the entire contents of a directory as an email message: [1]

  1. !/usr/bin/env python

"""Send the contents of a directory as a MIME message."""

import os import sys import smtplib

  1. For guessing MIME type based on file name extension

import mimetypes

from optparse import OptionParser

from email import encoders from email.message import Message from email.mime.audio import MIMEAudio from email.mime.base import MIMEBase from email.mime.image import MIMEImage from email.mime.multipart import MIMEMultipart from email.mime.text import MIMEText

COMMASPACE = ', '


def main():

   parser = OptionParser(usage="""\

Send the contents of a directory as a MIME message.

Usage: %prog [options]

Unless the -o option is given, the email is sent by forwarding to your local SMTP server, which then does the normal delivery process. Your local machine must be running an SMTP server. """)

   parser.add_option('-d', '--directory',
                     type='string', action='store',
                     help="""Mail the contents of the specified directory,
                     otherwise use the current directory.  Only the regular
                     files in the directory are sent, and we don't recurse to
                     subdirectories.""")
   parser.add_option('-o', '--output',
                     type='string', action='store', metavar='FILE',
                     help="""Print the composed message to FILE instead of
                     sending the message to the SMTP server.""")
   parser.add_option('-s', '--sender',
                     type='string', action='store', metavar='SENDER',
                     help='The value of the From: header (required)')
   parser.add_option('-r', '--recipient',
                     type='string', action='append', metavar='RECIPIENT',
                     default=[], dest='recipients',
                     help='A To: header value (at least one required)')
   opts, args = parser.parse_args()
   if not opts.sender or not opts.recipients:
       parser.print_help()
       sys.exit(1)
   directory = opts.directory
   if not directory:
       directory = '.'
   # Create the enclosing (outer) message
   outer = MIMEMultipart()
   outer['Subject'] = 'Contents of directory %s' % os.path.abspath(directory)
   outer['To'] = COMMASPACE.join(opts.recipients)
   outer['From'] = opts.sender
   outer.preamble = 'You will not see this in a MIME-aware mail reader.\n'
   for filename in os.listdir(directory):
       path = os.path.join(directory, filename)
       if not os.path.isfile(path):
           continue
       # Guess the content type based on the file's extension.  Encoding
       # will be ignored, although we should check for simple things like
       # gzip'd or compressed files.
       ctype, encoding = mimetypes.guess_type(path)
       if ctype is None or encoding is not None:
           # No guess could be made, or the file is encoded (compressed), so
           # use a generic bag-of-bits type.
           ctype = 'application/octet-stream'
       maintype, subtype = ctype.split('/', 1)
       if maintype == 'text':
           fp = open(path)
           # Note: we should handle calculating the charset
           msg = MIMEText(fp.read(), _subtype=subtype)
           fp.close()
       elif maintype == 'image':
           fp = open(path, 'rb')
           msg = MIMEImage(fp.read(), _subtype=subtype)
           fp.close()
       elif maintype == 'audio':
           fp = open(path, 'rb')
           msg = MIMEAudio(fp.read(), _subtype=subtype)
           fp.close()
       else:
           fp = open(path, 'rb')
           msg = MIMEBase(maintype, subtype)
           msg.set_payload(fp.read())
           fp.close()
           # Encode the payload using Base64
           encoders.encode_base64(msg)
       # Set the filename parameter
       msg.add_header('Content-Disposition', 'attachment', filename=filename)
       outer.attach(msg)
   # Now send or store the message
   composed = outer.as_string()
   if opts.output:
       fp = open(opts.output, 'w')
       fp.write(composed)
       fp.close()
   else:
       s = smtplib.SMTP('localhost')
       s.sendmail(opts.sender, opts.recipients, composed)
       s.quit()


if __name__ == '__main__':

   main()

Here’s an example of how to unpack a MIME message like the one above, into a directory of files:

  1. !/usr/bin/env python

"""Unpack a MIME message into a directory of files."""

import os import sys import email import errno import mimetypes

from optparse import OptionParser


def main():

   parser = OptionParser(usage="""\

Unpack a MIME message into a directory of files.

Usage: %prog [options] msgfile """)

   parser.add_option('-d', '--directory',
                     type='string', action='store',
                     help="""Unpack the MIME message into the named
                     directory, which will be created if it doesn't already
                     exist.""")
   opts, args = parser.parse_args()
   if not opts.directory:
       parser.print_help()
       sys.exit(1)
   try:
       msgfile = args[0]
   except IndexError:
       parser.print_help()
       sys.exit(1)
   try:
       os.mkdir(opts.directory)
   except OSError as e:
       # Ignore directory exists error
       if e.errno != errno.EEXIST:
           raise
   fp = open(msgfile)
   msg = email.message_from_file(fp)
   fp.close()
   counter = 1
   for part in msg.walk():
       # multipart/* are just containers
       if part.get_content_maintype() == 'multipart':
           continue
       # Applications should really sanitize the given filename so that an
       # email message can't be used to overwrite important files
       filename = part.get_filename()
       if not filename:
           ext = mimetypes.guess_extension(part.get_content_type())
           if not ext:
               # Use a generic bag-of-bits extension
               ext = '.bin'
           filename = 'part-%03d%s' % (counter, ext)
       counter += 1
       fp = open(os.path.join(opts.directory, filename), 'wb')
       fp.write(part.get_payload(decode=True))
       fp.close()


if __name__ == '__main__':

   main()

Here’s an example of how to create an HTML message with an alternative plain text version: [2]

#!/usr/bin/env python

import smtplib

from email.mime.multipart import MIMEMultipart
from email.mime.text import MIMEText

# me == my email address
# you == recipient's email address
me = "my@email.com"
you = "your@email.com"

# Create message container - the correct MIME type is multipart/alternative.
msg = MIMEMultipart('alternative')
msg['Subject'] = "Link"
msg['From'] = me
msg['To'] = you

# Create the body of the message (a plain-text and an HTML version).
text = "Hi!\nHow are you?\nHere is the link you wanted:\nhttps://www.python.org"
html = """\
<html>
  <head></head>
  <body>

Hi!
How are you?
Here is the <a href="https://www.python.org">link</a> you wanted.

  </body>
</html>
"""

# Record the MIME types of both parts - text/plain and text/html.
part1 = MIMEText(text, 'plain')
part2 = MIMEText(html, 'html')

# Attach parts into message container.
# According to RFC 2046, the last part of a multipart message, in this case
# the HTML message, is best and preferred.
msg.attach(part1)
msg.attach(part2)  

# Send the message via local SMTP server.
s = smtplib.SMTP('localhost')
# sendmail function takes 3 arguments: sender's address, recipient's address
# and message to send - here it is sent as one string.
s.sendmail(me, you, msg.as_string())
s.quit()

Footnotes [1] Thanks to Matthew Dixon Cowles for the original inspiration and examples. [2] Contributed by Martin Matejek.



Referensi