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Mail::Bulkmail 3.12
Mail::Bulkmail is a platform independent mailing list module. more>>
Mail::Bulkmail is a platform independent mailing list module.
SYNOPSIS
use Mail::Bulkmail /path/to/conf.file
my $bulk = Mail::Bulkmail->new(
"LIST" => "~/my.list.txt",
"From" => "Jim Thomason" ,
"Subject" => "This is a test message",
"Message" => "Here is my test message"
) || die Mail::Bulkmail->error();
$bulk->bulkmail() || die $bulk->error;
Dont forget to set up your conf file!
Mail::Bulkmail gives a fairly complete set of tools for managing mass-mailing lists. I initially wrote it because the tools I was using at the time were just too damn slow for mailing out to thousands of recipients. I keep working on it because its reasonably popular and I enjoy it.
In a nutshell, it allows you to rapidly transmit a message to a mailing list by zipping out the information to them via an SMTP relay (your own, of course). Subclasses provide the ability to use mail merges, dynamic messages, and anything else you can think of.
Mail::Bulkmail 3.00 is a major major major upgrade to the previous version (2.05), which was a major upgrade to the previous version (1.11). My software philosophy is that most code should be scrapped and re-written every 6-8 months or so. 2.05 was released in October of 2000, and Im writing these docs for 3.00 in January of 2003. So Im at least 3 major re-writes behind. (philosophy is referenced in the FAQ, below)
But thats okay, because were getting it done now.
3.00 is about as backwards compatible to 2.00 as 2.00 is to 1.00. That is to say, sorta. Ive tried to make a note of things where they changed, but Im sure I missed things. Some things can no longer be done, lots are done differently, some are the same. You will need to change your code to update from 1.x or 2.x to 3.00, though. Thats a given.
So whats new for 3.00? Lots of stuff.
Immediate changes are:
* code compartmentalization
* multi-server support
* conf file
The immediate change is that the code is now compartmentalized. Mail::Bulkmail now just handles ordinary, non-dynamic mailings. See Mail::Bulkmail::Dynamic for the merging and dynamic text abilities from the prior versions.
Server connections are no longer handled directly in Mail::Bulkmail (Smtp attribute, Port attribute, etc.), there is now a separate Mail::Bulkmail::Server object to handle all of that.
And everything subclasses off of Mail::Bulkmail::Object, where I have my super-methods to define my objects, some helper stuff, and so on.
Its just a lot easier for me to maintain, think about it, etc. if its all separated. Its also easier for you, the user, if you want to make changes to things. Just subclass it, tweak it, and use it. Very straightforward to modify and extend now. 2.x and below *could* do it, but it wasnt really that easy (unless you were making very trivial changes). This should rectify that.
Another major change is the addition of multi-server support. See the docs in Mail::Bulkmail::Server for more information. You can still specify one SMTP relay if thats all youve got, but if you have multiple servers, Mail::Bulkmail can now load balance between them to help take the stress off. No matter what, the biggest bottleneck to all of this is network performance (both to the SMTP relay and then from the relay to the rest of the world), so i wanted to try and help alleviate that by using multiple servers. I know that some people were doing that on there own with small changes, but this allows you to do it all invisibly.
And finally, finally, finally there is a conf file. Documentation on the format is in Mail::Bulkmail::Object. Its pretty easy to use. This is the conf file format that I designed for my own use (along with most of the rest of Mail::Bulkmail::Object). The software also has the ability to read multiple conf files, if so desired. So no more worrying about asking your sysadmin to tweak the values in your module somewhere up in /usr/lib/whatever
Just have him create the conf file you want, or pass in your own as desired.
conf_files are specified and further documented in Mail::Bulkmail::Object, in an internal array called @conf_files, right at the top of the module. To specify a universal conf file, put it in that array (or have your sysadmin do so). Alternatively, you can also add a conf_file via the conf_files accessor.
Mail::Bulkmail->conf_files(/path/to/conf_file, /path/to/other/conf_file); #, etc.
But the recommended way is to specify your conf file upon module import.
use Mail::Bulkmail 3.00 "/path/to/conf/file";
In addition, there is the usual plethora of bug fixes, tweaks, clean-ups, and so on.
And yes, the horrid long-standing bug in the Tz method is fixed! No, honest.
Im also trying a new documentation technique. The pod for a given method is now in the module by that method, as opposed to everything being bunched up at the bottom. Personally, I prefer everything being bunched up there for clarities sake. But from a maintenance point of view, spreading it all out makes my life much easier.
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use Mail::Bulkmail /path/to/conf.file
my $bulk = Mail::Bulkmail->new(
"LIST" => "~/my.list.txt",
"From" => "Jim Thomason" ,
"Subject" => "This is a test message",
"Message" => "Here is my test message"
) || die Mail::Bulkmail->error();
$bulk->bulkmail() || die $bulk->error;
Dont forget to set up your conf file!
Mail::Bulkmail gives a fairly complete set of tools for managing mass-mailing lists. I initially wrote it because the tools I was using at the time were just too damn slow for mailing out to thousands of recipients. I keep working on it because its reasonably popular and I enjoy it.
In a nutshell, it allows you to rapidly transmit a message to a mailing list by zipping out the information to them via an SMTP relay (your own, of course). Subclasses provide the ability to use mail merges, dynamic messages, and anything else you can think of.
Mail::Bulkmail 3.00 is a major major major upgrade to the previous version (2.05), which was a major upgrade to the previous version (1.11). My software philosophy is that most code should be scrapped and re-written every 6-8 months or so. 2.05 was released in October of 2000, and Im writing these docs for 3.00 in January of 2003. So Im at least 3 major re-writes behind. (philosophy is referenced in the FAQ, below)
But thats okay, because were getting it done now.
3.00 is about as backwards compatible to 2.00 as 2.00 is to 1.00. That is to say, sorta. Ive tried to make a note of things where they changed, but Im sure I missed things. Some things can no longer be done, lots are done differently, some are the same. You will need to change your code to update from 1.x or 2.x to 3.00, though. Thats a given.
So whats new for 3.00? Lots of stuff.
Immediate changes are:
* code compartmentalization
* multi-server support
* conf file
The immediate change is that the code is now compartmentalized. Mail::Bulkmail now just handles ordinary, non-dynamic mailings. See Mail::Bulkmail::Dynamic for the merging and dynamic text abilities from the prior versions.
Server connections are no longer handled directly in Mail::Bulkmail (Smtp attribute, Port attribute, etc.), there is now a separate Mail::Bulkmail::Server object to handle all of that.
And everything subclasses off of Mail::Bulkmail::Object, where I have my super-methods to define my objects, some helper stuff, and so on.
Its just a lot easier for me to maintain, think about it, etc. if its all separated. Its also easier for you, the user, if you want to make changes to things. Just subclass it, tweak it, and use it. Very straightforward to modify and extend now. 2.x and below *could* do it, but it wasnt really that easy (unless you were making very trivial changes). This should rectify that.
Another major change is the addition of multi-server support. See the docs in Mail::Bulkmail::Server for more information. You can still specify one SMTP relay if thats all youve got, but if you have multiple servers, Mail::Bulkmail can now load balance between them to help take the stress off. No matter what, the biggest bottleneck to all of this is network performance (both to the SMTP relay and then from the relay to the rest of the world), so i wanted to try and help alleviate that by using multiple servers. I know that some people were doing that on there own with small changes, but this allows you to do it all invisibly.
And finally, finally, finally there is a conf file. Documentation on the format is in Mail::Bulkmail::Object. Its pretty easy to use. This is the conf file format that I designed for my own use (along with most of the rest of Mail::Bulkmail::Object). The software also has the ability to read multiple conf files, if so desired. So no more worrying about asking your sysadmin to tweak the values in your module somewhere up in /usr/lib/whatever
Just have him create the conf file you want, or pass in your own as desired.
conf_files are specified and further documented in Mail::Bulkmail::Object, in an internal array called @conf_files, right at the top of the module. To specify a universal conf file, put it in that array (or have your sysadmin do so). Alternatively, you can also add a conf_file via the conf_files accessor.
Mail::Bulkmail->conf_files(/path/to/conf_file, /path/to/other/conf_file); #, etc.
But the recommended way is to specify your conf file upon module import.
use Mail::Bulkmail 3.00 "/path/to/conf/file";
In addition, there is the usual plethora of bug fixes, tweaks, clean-ups, and so on.
And yes, the horrid long-standing bug in the Tz method is fixed! No, honest.
Im also trying a new documentation technique. The pod for a given method is now in the module by that method, as opposed to everything being bunched up at the bottom. Personally, I prefer everything being bunched up there for clarities sake. But from a maintenance point of view, spreading it all out makes my life much easier.
Download (0.070MB)
Added: 2007-07-09 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
840 downloads
Mail::Bulkmail::Server 3.12
Mail::Bulkmail::Server is a Perl module that handles server connections and communication for Mail::Bulkmail. more>>
Mail::Bulkmail::Server is a Perl module that handles server connections and communication for Mail::Bulkmail.
SYNOPSIS
my $server = Mail::Bulkmail::Server->new(
Smtp => your.smtp.com,
Port => 25
) || die Mail::Bulkmail::Server->error();
#connect to the SMTP relay
$server->connect || die $server->error();
#talk to the server
my $response = $server->talk_and_respond("RSET");
Mail::Bulkmail::Server now handles server connections. Mail::Bulkmail 1.x and 2.x had all the server functionality built into the module itself. That was nice in terms of simplicity - one module, one connection, one server, and so on. But it had some downsides. For one thing, it only allowed for one connection. And since I wanted to allow multiple server connections in 3.00, that had to go. For another, it was a pain in the butt to change the server implementation. This way, you can easily write your own server class, drop it in here, and be off to the races.
For example, the Mail::Bulkmail::DummyServer module for debugging purposes.
This is not a module that youll really need to access directly, since it is accessed internally by Mail::Bulkmail when it is needed. Specify the data you need in the conf file and the server_file attribute, and you wont ever need to touch this directly.
<<lessSYNOPSIS
my $server = Mail::Bulkmail::Server->new(
Smtp => your.smtp.com,
Port => 25
) || die Mail::Bulkmail::Server->error();
#connect to the SMTP relay
$server->connect || die $server->error();
#talk to the server
my $response = $server->talk_and_respond("RSET");
Mail::Bulkmail::Server now handles server connections. Mail::Bulkmail 1.x and 2.x had all the server functionality built into the module itself. That was nice in terms of simplicity - one module, one connection, one server, and so on. But it had some downsides. For one thing, it only allowed for one connection. And since I wanted to allow multiple server connections in 3.00, that had to go. For another, it was a pain in the butt to change the server implementation. This way, you can easily write your own server class, drop it in here, and be off to the races.
For example, the Mail::Bulkmail::DummyServer module for debugging purposes.
This is not a module that youll really need to access directly, since it is accessed internally by Mail::Bulkmail when it is needed. Specify the data you need in the conf file and the server_file attribute, and you wont ever need to touch this directly.
Download (0.070MB)
Added: 2006-12-19 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1046 downloads
Basset::Object 1.04
Basset::Object is a Perl module used to create objects. more>>
Basset::Object is a Perl module used to create objects.
This is my ultimate object creation toolset to date. It has roots in Mail::Bulkmail, Text::Flowchart, and the unreleased abstract object constructors that Ive tooled around with in the past.
If you want an object to be compatible with anything else Ive written, then subclass it off of here.
Of course, you dont have to use this to create subclasses, but youll run the risk of making something with an inconsistent interface vs. the rest of the system. Thatll confuse people and make them unhappy. So I recommend subclassing off of here to be consistent. Of course, you may not like these objects, but they do work well and are consistent. Consistency is very important in interface design, IMHO.
<<lessThis is my ultimate object creation toolset to date. It has roots in Mail::Bulkmail, Text::Flowchart, and the unreleased abstract object constructors that Ive tooled around with in the past.
If you want an object to be compatible with anything else Ive written, then subclass it off of here.
Of course, you dont have to use this to create subclasses, but youll run the risk of making something with an inconsistent interface vs. the rest of the system. Thatll confuse people and make them unhappy. So I recommend subclassing off of here to be consistent. Of course, you may not like these objects, but they do work well and are consistent. Consistency is very important in interface design, IMHO.
Download (0.14MB)
Added: 2007-06-20 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
856 downloads
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