For local people.
Localmail is an SMTP and IMAP server that stores all messages into a single in-memory mailbox. It is designed to be used to speed up running test suites on systems that send email, such as new account sign up emails with confirmation codes. It can also be used to test SMTP/IMAP client code.
Features:
- Fast and robust IMAP/SMTP implementations, including multipart messages and unicode support.
- Includes simple HTTP interface for reading messages, which is useful for checking html emails.
- Compatible with python's stdlib client, plus clients like mutt and thunderbird.
- Authentication is supported but completely ignored, all message go in single mailbox.
- Messages not persisted by default, and will be lost on shutdown. Optionally, you can log messages to disk in mbox format.
Missing features/TODO:
- SSL support
WARNING: not a real SMTP/IMAP server - not for production usage.
twistd localmail
This will run localmail in the background, SMTP on port 2025 and IMAP on 2143, It will log to a file ./twistd.log. Use the -n option if you want to run in the foreground, like so.
twistd -n localmail
You can pass in arguments to control parameters.
twistd localmail --imap <port> --smtp <port> --http <port> --file localmail.mbox
You can have localmail use random ports if you like. The port numbers will be logged. TODO: enable writing random port numbers to a file.
twisted -n localmail --random
If you want to embed localmail in another non-twisted program, such as test runner, do the following.
import threading
import localmail
thread = threading.Thread(
target=localmail.run,
args=(2025, 2143, 8880, 'localmail.mbox')
)
thread.start()
...
localmail.shutdown_thread(thread)
This will run the twisted reactor in a separate thread, and shut it down on exit.
If you want to use random ports, you can pass a callback that will have the ports the service is listening on.
import threading
import localmail
def report(smtp, imap, http):
"""do stuff with ports"""
thread = threading.Thread(
target=localmail.run,
args=(0, 0, 0, None, report)
)
thread.start()