Reputation: 1751
I have used Java Mail API, for sending emails. I am using a contact formular to send the input, which has to be send to a specific email.
The email is send without problems, though I am a danish guy, and I am therefore in need of three danish characters which is 'æ', 'ø' and 'å', in the subject and the email text.
I have therefore seen that I can use UTF-8 character encoding, to provide these characters, but when my mail is send I only see some strange letters - 'ã¦', 'ã¸' and 'ã¥' - instead of the danish letters - 'æ', 'ø' and 'å'.
My method to send the email is looking like this:
public void sendEmail(String name, String fromEmail, String subject, String message) throws AddressException, MessagingException, UnsupportedEncodingException, SendFailedException
{
//Set Mail properties
Properties props = System.getProperties();
props.setProperty("mail.smtp.starttls.enable", "true");
props.setProperty("mail.smtp.host", "smtp.gmail.com");
props.setProperty("mail.smtp.socketFactory.port", "465");
props.setProperty("mail.smtp.socketFactory.class", "javax.net.ssl.SSLSocketFactory");
props.setProperty("mail.smtp.auth", "true");
props.setProperty("mail.smtp.port", "465");
Session session = Session.getDefaultInstance(props, new javax.mail.Authenticator() {
@Override
protected PasswordAuthentication getPasswordAuthentication() {
return new PasswordAuthentication("my_username", "my_password");
}
});
//Create the email with variable input
MimeMessage mimeMessage = new MimeMessage(session);
mimeMessage.setHeader("Content-Type", "text/plain; charset=UTF-8");
mimeMessage.setFrom(new InternetAddress(fromEmail, name));
mimeMessage.setRecipient(Message.RecipientType.TO, new InternetAddress("my_email"));
mimeMessage.setSubject(subject, "utf-8");
mimeMessage.setContent(message, "text/plain");
//Send the email
Transport.send(mimeMessage);
}
Please help me find out how I can correct this 'error'.
Upvotes: 69
Views: 104554
Reputation: 1
Maybe is too later, but there is a very simple method to fix this problem. Just call this constructor to create a MimeMessageHelper that encode UTF-8 as we escpect:
MimeMessage **mimeMessage** = mailSender.createMimeMessage();
MimeMessageHelper **helper** = new MimeMessageHelper(mimeMessage, false(or true if you want include Multipart), "UTF-8");
No more actions are needed, continue the mail sending flow as you wish.
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 21
mimeMessage.setContent(mail.getBody(), "text/html; charset=UTF-8");
maybe iam wrong, but this work for me. :) any ööö, äää, üüü character will shown correctly in my outlook.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 19
Before sending your String to the send method, you must convert the String into UTF-8
If you are receiving a "request" parameter, you can use "setCharacterEncoding":
request.setCharacterEncoding("utf-8");
String subject = request.getParameter("subject");
String content = request.getParameter("content");
...
MimeMessage mineMessage = new MimeMessage(session);
mineMessage.setFrom(new InternetAddress(myAccountEmail));
mineMessage.setRecipient(Message.RecipientType.TO, new InternetAddress(recepient));
mineMessage.setSubject(subject, "UTF-8");
mineMessage.setContent(content, "text/plain;charset=UTF-8");
Otherwise, convert your String into UTF-8 format with the following method:
String subject = new String(subject.getBytes(Charset.forName("ISO-8859-1")), Charset.forName("UTF-8"));
String content = new String(content.getBytes(Charset.forName("ISO-8859-1")), Charset.forName("UTF-8"));
...
MimeMessage mineMessage = new MimeMessage(session);
mineMessage.setFrom(new InternetAddress(myAccountEmail));
mineMessage.setRecipient(Message.RecipientType.TO, new InternetAddress(recepient));
mineMessage.setSubject(subject, "UTF-8");
mineMessage.setContent(content, "plain/plain;charset=UTF-8");
This is the result in Spanish.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 153
I know I'm late to this question, but I had a similar problem just now.
It may be worth it to check your source encodings too! I was using a test class, with hardcoded subject/text containing some special characters, which kept coming garbled when sending the email. Even though I had set the charset UTF-8 wherever applicable (mimeMessage.setSubject(subject, charset), mimeMessage.setContent(content, "text/plain; charset=UTF-8")).
Then I noted that the source encoding of this class was windows-1252. From my understanding, when a java file is compiled, any source texts are converted to UTF-8. But in this case, in the maven pom.xml for this project, the project.build.sourceEncoding property was missing - so I'm actually not sure which encoding maven was using during compilation (by default) since none was specified.
Changing the source encoding was not possible here, but as soon as I changed the special characters to Unicode code literals (e.g. "ü" to "\u00fc"), the whole thing worked fine.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 47
It's easy, run your project with parameter -Dfile.encoding=UTF-8 ex: java -Dfile.encoding=UTF-8 -jar MyProject.jar
//Fix a typo
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 24770
There are a couple of system properties related to mailing, that can probably simplify your code. I am talking about this specific property actually: "mail.mime.charset"
.
The
mail.mime.charset
System property can be used to specify the default MIME charset to use for encoded words and text parts that don't otherwise specify a charset. Normally, the default MIME charset is derived from the default Java charset, as specified in thefile.encoding
System property. Most applications will have no need to explicitly set the default MIME charset. In cases where the default MIME charset to be used for mail messages is different than the charset used for files stored on the system, this property should be set.
As you can read above, by default there is no value for the mail.mime.charset
and the file encoding (file.encoding
property) is used.
However, if you want to specify a specific encoding for a specific e-mail, then you should probably use the 2 parameter setSubject(subject,charset)
and setText(text,charset)
methods.
If that doesn't work, then probably your input is already corrupted before it reached this point. In other words, you probably used the wrong encoding to collect your data.
The setContent(content, "UTF-8")
(as other sources claim) will just not work. Just look at the signature of this method: setContent(Object content, String mimetype)
. Mime type and charset are 2 totally different things. Imho, you should really be using one of the setText(...)
methods with a charset parameter.
But if you persist in using a mimetype to set the charset setContent(content,mimetype)
, then use the correct format. (not just "UTF-8"
, but something like "text/plain; charset=UTF-8"
). But more importantly, be aware that every mime-type has its own way of handling charsets.
text/plain
is US-ASCII
, but can be overruled with an additional charset parameter.text/xml
type determines the charset using the content of the message. The charset parameter will just be ignored here.text/html
should really always specify a charset. But if you don't, then it will use ISO-8859-1
(=Latin-1
).Upvotes: 110
Reputation: 1751
After spending a lot of time on debugging, and searching the internet for a clue, I have found a solution to my problem.
It seems that whenever I sended data through a web request, my application didn't encode the characters with UTF-8 encoding. This meant that the data which was send from my contact form, which contained æ, ø and å characters, couldn't be handled correct by the character encoding.
The solution seemed to setup a Character Encoding Filter, in my Deployment Descriptor, which would encode all incoming request from the web to be with the character encoding UTF-8.
private void registerCharacterEncodingFilter(ServletContext servletContext) {
CharacterEncodingFilter encodingFilter = new CharacterEncodingFilter();
encodingFilter.setEncoding("UTF-8");
encodingFilter.setForceEncoding(true);
FilterRegistration.Dynamic characterEncodingFilter = servletContext.addFilter("characterEncodingFilter", encodingFilter);
characterEncodingFilter.addMappingForUrlPatterns(null, false, "/*");
}
This filter sets the encoding to be UTF-8 and force the encoding to all requests comming at the url ' /* '.
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 3141
Maybe You should provide also UTF-8 here
mimeMessage.setContent(message, "text/plain; charset=UTF-8");
You have to look at http://www.coderanch.com/t/274480/java/java/JavaMail-set-content-utf
Upvotes: 55