Reputation: 61
I made a simple application to send e-mails using Java API and have a question:
Is there any way to find out the SMTP host knowing the e-mail address of the one who will login to send an e-mail? And also the port?
For example, if the sender's e-mail address is [email protected], the SMTP host is smtp.gmail.com and the port 465. If the sender's e-mail address is [email protected], the SMTP host is smtp.yahoomail.com and the port 25.
Supposing I don't know this, is there any way to find this information using Java API classes? Please note that I'm new to java :)
Thanks in advance,
Andreea
Thanks for your answers. I've tried to do the following:
public static String getMXRecordsForEmailAddress(String eMailAddress) {
String returnValue = null;
try {
String hostName = getHostNameFromEmailAddress(eMailAddress);
Record[] records = new Lookup(hostName, Type.MX).run();
if (records == null) {
throw new RuntimeException("No MX records found for domain " + hostName + ".");
}
// return first entry (not the best solution)
if (records.length > 0) {
MXRecord mx = (MXRecord) records[0];
returnValue = mx.getTarget().toString();
}
} catch (TextParseException e) {
throw new RuntimeException(e);
}
System.out.println("return value = "+returnValue);
return returnValue;
}
But, regardless of the value of hostName (eg. gmail.com, yahoo.com ) Record[] records = new Lookup(hostName, Type.MX).run(); always return null.
I'm pretty sure that I missed something, but I don't know what. Will you please help me with this? Can you tell me what I'm doing wrong?
Thank you very much,
Andreea
Upvotes: 6
Views: 14304
Reputation: 849
It seems you are trying to let the user type only the email and password to connect. If so, we had this same issue and the best way we've found was to get the domain name and:
If it is public like Gmail, Yahoo or Outlook then try their specific configuration for them.
If it is privte domain or something like it. Loop through outgoing servers smtp.domain.com and mail.domain.com using ports 587, 465 and 25. You'll probably have to check for TLS and authentication.
The process is a bit long, but if you have a couple of public emails and a dozend private ones you should be able to test most of the scenarios.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 27900
Unfortunately, there's no standard way to identify the correct outgoing SMTP server for an arbitrary email address, assuming what you're trying to do is let the user specify an email address/password and then send the mail using that account.
That's why email clients (e.g. Thunderbird, Outlook, etc.) generally require the user to configure the outgoing SMTP server name/port manually. You could assist in that process by recognizing a few popular ISPs (Google, Yahoo, etc.) and pre-configuring the proper values, but there's no general-purpose way to do that automatically.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1
You typically talk to an smtp server you own and it handles routing mail to the yahoo Gmail some random isp to server.
The normal API to use is http://javamail.kenai.com/nonav/javadocs/ javamail.
If you were writing your own smtp server: 1 please don't 2 the smtp info is stored in the DNS mxrecord http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/MX_record
Upvotes: 0