Reputation: 2274
It's a basic example for Nodemailer.
var http = require('http');
var port = process.env.PORT || 8080;
var async = require('async');
var nodemailer = require('nodemailer');
// create reusable transporter object using SMTP transport
var mailOptions = {
from: '*********', // sender address
to: '[email protected]', // list of receivers
subject: 'Hello ✔', // Subject line
text: 'Hello world ✔', // plaintext body
html: '<b>Hello world ✔</b>', // html body
attachments: [
{ // utf-8 string as an attachment
filename: 'text1.txt',
content: 'hello world!'
}]
};
var transporter = nodemailer.createTransport({
service: 'Gmail',
auth: {
user: '*******',
pass: '****'
}
});
// send mail with defined transport object
var server = http.createServer(function(request, response) {
if (request.url === '/favicon.ico') {
response.writeHead(200, {'Content-Type': 'image/x-icon'} );
response.end();
return;
}
response.writeHead(200, {
"Content-Type": "text/plain"
});
transporter.sendMail(mailOptions, function(error, info){
if(error){
console.log("error is " ,error);
}else{
console.log('Message sent: ' + info.response);
}
});
response.end("Hello World\n");
}).listen(port);
console.log("Node server listening on port " + port);
I am getting following error on going to localhost:
[Error: No transport method defined]
I am using Nodemailer version 1.4.23 on Windows 7. What could be the problem?
Upvotes: 2
Views: 1530
Reputation: 6252
Their initial example appears to mention Gmail
for the service when it should instead be gmail
per other examples provided. Seems to be a documentation issue.
Upvotes: 3