Spring Integration provides support for outbound email with the
MailSendingMessageHandler
. It delegates to a configured instance of Spring's
JavaMailSender
:
JavaMailSender mailSender = context.getBean("mailSender", JavaMailSender.class); MailSendingMessageHandler mailSendingHandler = new MailSendingMessageHandler(mailSender);
MailSendingMessageHandler
has various mapping strategies that use Spring's
MailMessage
abstraction. If the received Message's payload is already
a MailMessage
instance, it will be sent directly.
Therefore, it is generally recommended to precede this
consumer with a Transformer for non-trivial MailMessage construction requirements. However, a few simple
Message mapping strategies are supported out-of-the-box. For example, if the message payload is a byte array,
then that will be mapped to an attachment. For simple text-based emails, you can provide a String-based
Message payload. In that case, a MailMessage will be created with that String as the text content. If you
are working with a Message payload type whose toString() method returns appropriate mail text content, then
consider adding Spring Integration's ObjectToStringTransformer prior to the outbound
Mail adapter (see the example within the section called “Configuring Transformer with XML” for more detail).
The outbound MailMessage may also be configured with certain values from the
MessageHeaders
. If available, values will be mapped to the outbound mail's
properties, such as the recipients (TO, CC, and BCC), the from/reply-to, and the subject. The header names are
defined by the following constants:
MailHeaders.SUBJECT MailHeaders.TO MailHeaders.CC MailHeaders.BCC MailHeaders.FROM MailHeaders.REPLY_TO
Note | |
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MailHeaders also allows you to override corresponding MailMessage values.
For example: If MailMessage.to is set to '[email protected]' and MailHeaders.TO
Message header is provided it will take precedence and override the corresponding value in MailMessage
|
Spring Integration also provides support for inbound email with the
MailReceivingMessageSource
. It delegates to a configured instance of Spring
Integration's own MailReceiver
interface, and there are two implementations:
Pop3MailReceiver
and ImapMailReceiver
. The easiest way to
instantiate either of these is by passing the 'uri' for a Mail store to the receiver's constructor. For example:
MailReceiver receiver = new Pop3MailReceiver("pop3://usr:pwd@localhost/INBOX");
Another option for receiving mail is the IMAP "idle" command (if supported by the mail server you are using).
Spring Integration provides the ImapIdleChannelAdapter
which is itself a Message-producing
endpoint. It delegates to an instance of the ImapMailReceiver
but enables asynchronous
reception of Mail Messages. There are examples in the next section of configuring both types of inbound Channel
Adapter with Spring Integration's namespace support in the 'mail' schema.
Spring Integration provides a namespace for mail-related configuration. To use it, configure the following schema locations.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/schema/beans" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:int-mail="http://www.springframework.org/schema/integration/mail" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd http://www.springframework.org/schema/integration/mail http://www.springframework.org/schema/integration/mail/spring-integration-mail.xsd">
To configure an outbound Channel Adapter, provide the channel to receive from, and the MailSender:
<int-mail:outbound-channel-adapter channel="outboundMail" mail-sender="mailSender"/>
Alternatively, provide the host, username, and password:
<int-mail:outbound-channel-adapter channel="outboundMail" host="somehost" username="someuser" password="somepassword"/>
Note | |
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Keep in mind, as with any outbound Channel Adapter, if the referenced channel is a PollableChannel, a <poller> sub-element should be provided with either an interval-trigger or cron-trigger. |
When using the namespace support, a header-enricher Message Transformer is also available. This simplifies the application of the headers mentioned above to any Message prior to sending to the Mail Outbound Channel Adapter.
<int-mail:header-enricher input-channel="expressionsInput" default-overwrite="false"> <int-mail:to expression="payload.to"/> <int-mail:cc expression="payload.cc"/> <int-mail:bcc expression="payload.bcc"/> <int-mail:from expression="payload.from"/> <int-mail:reply-to expression="payload.replyTo"/> <int-mail:subject expression="payload.subject" overwrite="true"/> </int-mail:header-enricher>
This example assumes the payload is a JavaBean with appropriate getters for the specified properties, but
any SpEL expression can be used. Alternatively, use the value
attribute to specify a
literal. Notice also that you can specify default-overwrite
and individual
overwrite
attributes to control the behavior with existing headers.
To configure an Inbound Channel Adapter, you have the choice between polling or event-driven (assuming your mail server supports IMAP IDLE - if not, then polling is the only option). A polling Channel Adapter simply requires the store URI and the channel to send inbound Messages to. The URI may begin with "pop3" or "imap":
<int-mail:inbound-channel-adapter id="imapAdapter" store-uri="imaps://[username]:[password]@imap.gmail.com/INBOX" java-mail-properties="javaMailProperties" channel="receiveChannel" should-delete-messages="true" should-mark-messages-as-read="true" auto-startup="true"> <int:poller max-messages-per-poll="1" fixed-rate="5000"/> </int-mail:inbound-channel-adapter>
If you do have IMAP idle support, then you may want to configure the "imap-idle-channel-adapter" element instead. Since the "idle" command enables event-driven notifications, no poller is necessary for this adapter. It will send a Message to the specified channel as soon as it receives the notification that new mail is available:
<int-mail:imap-idle-channel-adapter id="customAdapter" store-uri="imaps://[username]:[password]@imap.gmail.com/INBOX" channel="receiveChannel" auto-startup="true" should-delete-messages="false" should-mark-messages-as-read="true" java-mail-properties="javaMailProperties"/>
... where javaMailProperties could be provided by creating and populating
a regular java.utils.Properties
object. For example via util namespace
provided by Spring.
Important | |
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If your username contains the '@' character use '%40' instead of '@' to avoid parsing errors from the underlying JavaMail API. |
<util:properties id="javaMailProperties"> <prop key="mail.imap.socketFactory.class">javax.net.ssl.SSLSocketFactory</prop> <prop key="mail.imap.socketFactory.fallback">false</prop> <prop key="mail.store.protocol">imaps</prop> <prop key="mail.debug">false</prop> </util:properties>
By default, the ImapMailReceiver
will search for Messages based on the default SearchTerm
which is All mails that are RECENT (if supported), that are NOT ANSWERED, that are NOT DELETED, that are NOT SEEN and have not
been processed by this mail receiver (enabled by the use of the custom USER flag or simply NOT FLAGGED if not supported).
Since version 2.2, the SearchTerm
used by the ImapMailReceiver
is fully configurable
via the SearchTermStrategy
which you can inject via the search-term-strategy
attribute.
SearchTermStrategy
is a simple strategy interface with a single method that allows you to create an
instance of the SearchTerm
that will be used by the ImapMailReceiver
.
public interface SearchTermStrategy { SearchTerm generateSearchTerm(Flags supportedFlags, Folder folder); }
For example:
<mail:imap-idle-channel-adapter id="customAdapter" store-uri="imap:foo" … search-term-strategy="searchTermStrategy"/> <bean id="searchTermStrategy" class="o.s.i.mail.config.ImapIdleChannelAdapterParserTests.TestSearchTermStrategy"/>
In the above example instead of relying on the default SearchTermStrategy
the
TestSearchTermStrategy
will be used instead
IMAP IDLE and lost connection
When using IMAP IDLE channel adapter there might be situations where connection to the server may be lost (e.g., network failure) and since Java Mail documentation explicitly states that the actual IMAP API is EXPERIMENTAL it is important to understand the differences in the API and how to deal with them when configuring IMAP IDLE adapters. Currently Spring Integration Mail adapters was tested with Java Mail 1.4.1 and Java Mail 1.4.3 and depending on which one is used special attention must be payed to some of the java mail properties that needs to be set with regard to auto-reconnect.
The following behavior was observed with GMAIL but should provide you with some tips on how to solve re-connect issue with other providers, however feedback is always welcome. Again, below notes are based on GMAIL.
With Java Mail 1.4.1 if mail.imaps.timeout
property is set for a relatively short period of time (e.g., ~ 5 min)
then IMAPFolder.idle()
will throw FolderClosedException
after this timeout.
However if this property is not set (should be indefinite) the behavior that was observed is that IMAPFolder.idle()
method never returns nor it throws an exception. It will however reconnect automatically if connection was lost for a short
period of time (e.g., under 10 min), but if connection was lost for a long period of time (e.g., over 10 min), then
IMAPFolder.idle()
will not throw FolderClosedException
nor it will re-establish connection
and will remain in the blocked state indefinitely, thus leaving you no possibility to reconnect without restarting the adapter.
So the only way to make re-connect to work with Java Mail 1.4.1 is to set mail.imaps.timeout
property explicitly
to some value, but it also means that such value shoudl be relatively short (under 10 min) and the connection should be
re-estabished relatively quickly. Again, it may be different with other providers.
With Java Mail 1.4.3 there was significant improvements to the API ensuring that there will always be a condition which
will force IMAPFolder.idle()
method to return via StoreClosedException
or
FolderClosedException
or simply return, thus allowing us to proceed with auto-reconnect.
Currently auto-reconnect will run infinitely making attempts to reconnect every 10 sec.
Important | |
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In both configurations channel and should-delete-messages are the REQUIRED
attributes. The important thing to understand is why should-delete-messages is required.
The issue is with the POP3 protocol, which does NOT have any knowledge of messages that were READ. It can only know what's been read
within a single session. This means that when your POP3 mail adapter is running, emails are successfully consumed as as they become available during each poll
and no single email message will be delivered more then once. However, as soon as you restart your adapter and begin a new session
all the email messages that might have been retrieved in the previous session will be retrieved again. That is the nature of POP3. Some might argue
that should-delete-messages should be TRUE by default. In other words, there are two valid and mutually exclusive use cases
which make it very hard to pick a single "best" default. You may want to configure your adapter as the only email receiver in which
case you want to be able to restart such adapter without fear that messages that were delivered before will not be redelivered again.
In this case setting should-delete-messages to TRUE would make most sense. However, you may have another use case where
you may want to have multiple adapters that simply monitor email servers and their content. In other words you just want to 'peek but not touch'.
Then setting should-delete-messages to FALSE would be much more appropriate. So since it is hard to choose what should be
the right default value for the should-delete-messages attribute, we simply made it a required attribute, to be set by the user.
Leaving it up to the user also means, you will be less likely to end up with unintended behavior.
|
Note | |
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When configuring a polling email adapter's should-mark-messages-as-read attribute, be aware of the protocol you are configuring to retrieve messages. For example POP3 does not support this flag which means setting it to either value will have no effect as messages will NOT be marked as read. |
Important | |
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It is important to understand that that these actions (marking messages read, and deleting messages) are performed after the messages are received, but before they are processed. This can cause messages to be lost. You may wish to consider using transaction synchronization instead - see Section 20.5, “Transaction Synchronization” |
The <imap-idle-channel-adapter/> also accepts the 'error-channel' attribute. If a downstream exception is thrown and an 'error-channel' is specified, a MessagingException message containing the failed message and original exception, will be sent to this channel. Otherwise, if the downstream channels are synchronous, any such exception will simply be logged as a warning by the channel adapter.
Note | |
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Beginning with the 3.0 release, the IMAP idle adapter emits application events (specifically
ImapIdleExceptionEvent s) when exceptions occur. This allows applications to detect and act on those
exceptions. The events can be obtained using an <int-event:inbound-channel-adapter>
or any ApplicationListener configured to receive an
ImapIdleExceptionEvent or one of its super classes.
|
Very often you may encounter a requirement to filter incoming messages
(e.g., You want to only read emails that have 'Spring Integration' in the Subject line). This
could be easily accomplished by connecting Inbound Mail adapter with an expression-based Filter. Although it would work, there is a
downside to this approach. Since messages would be filtered after going through inbound mail adapter all such messages would be marked as read (SEEN) or
Un-read (depending on the value of should-mark-messages-as-read
attribute). However in reality what would be more useful is to mark messages
as SEEN only if they passed the filtering criteria. This is very similar to looking at your email client while scrolling through all the
messages in the preview pane, but only flagging messages as SEEN that were actually opened and read.
In Spring Integration 2.0.4 we've introduced mail-filter-expression
attribute on inbound-channel-adapter
and
imap-idle-channel-adapter
. This attribute allows you to provide an expression which is a combination of SpEL and Regular Expression.
For example if you would like to read only emails that contain 'Spring Integration' in the Subject line, you would configure mail-filter-expression
attribute
like this this: mail-filter-expression="subject matches '(?i).*Spring Integration.*"
Since javax.mail.internet.MimeMessage
is the root context of SpEL Evaluation Context, you can filter on any value available
through MimeMessage including the actual body of the message. This one is particularly important since reading the body of the message would
typically result in such message to be marked as SEEN by default, but since we now setting PEAK flag of every incomming message to 'true', only
messages that were explicitly marked as SEEN will be seen as read.
So in the below example only messages that match the filter expression will be output by this adapter and only those messages will be marked as SEEN.
In this case based on the mail-filter-expression
only messages that contain 'Spring Integration' in the subject line will be
produced by this adapter.
<int-mail:imap-idle-channel-adapter id="customAdapter" store-uri="imaps://some_google_address:${password}@imap.gmail.com/INBOX" channel="receiveChannel" should-mark-messages-as-read="true" java-mail-properties="javaMailProperties" mail-filter-expression="subject matches '(?i).*Spring Integration.*'"/>
Another reasonable question is what happens on the next poll, or idle event, or what happens when such adapter is restarted. Will there be a potential duplication of massages to be filtered? In other words if on the last retrieval where you had 5 new messages and only 1 passed the filter what would happen with the other 4. Would they go through the filtering logic again on the next poll or idle? After all they were not marked as SEEN. The actual answer is no. They would not be subject of duplicate processing due to another flag (RECENT) that is set by the Email server and is used by Spring Integration mail search filter. Folder implementations set this flag to indicate that this message is new to this folder, that is, it has arrived since the last time this folder was opened. In other while our adapter may peek at the email it also lets the email server know that such email was touched and therefore will be marked as RECENT by the email server.
Transaction synchronization for inbound adapters allows you to take different actions after a
transaction commits, or rolls back. Transaction synchronization is enabled by adding a <transactional/> element
to the poller for the polled <inbound-adapter/>, or to the <imap-idle-inbound-adapter/>. Even if there
is no 'real' transaction involved, you can still enable this feature by using a
PseudoTransactionManager
with the <transactional/> element.
For more information, see Section C.3, “Transaction Synchronization”.
Because of the many different mail servers, and specifically the limitations that some have, at this time we only provide a strategy for these transaction synchronizations. You can send the messages to some other Spring Integration components, or invoke a custom bean to perform some action. For example, to move an IMAP message to a different folder after the transaction commits, you might use something similar to the following:
<int-mail:imap-idle-channel-adapter id="customAdapter" store-uri="imaps://foo.com:[email protected]/INBOX" channel="receiveChannel" auto-startup="true" should-delete-messages="false" java-mail-properties="javaMailProperties"> <int:transactional synchronization-factory="syncFactory"/> </int-mail:imap-idle-channel-adapter> <int:transaction-synchronization-factory id="syncFactory"> <int:after-commit expression="@syncProcessor.process(payload)"/> </int:transaction-synchronization-factory> <bean id="syncProcessor" class="foo.bar.Mover"/>
public class Mover { public void process(MimeMessage message) throws Exception{ Folder folder = message.getFolder(); folder.open(Folder.READ_WRITE); String messageId = message.getMessageID(); Message[] messages = folder.getMessages(); FetchProfile contentsProfile = new FetchProfile(); contentsProfile.add(FetchProfile.Item.ENVELOPE); contentsProfile.add(FetchProfile.Item.CONTENT_INFO); contentsProfile.add(FetchProfile.Item.FLAGS); folder.fetch(messages, contentsProfile); // find this message and mark for deletion for (int i = 0; i < messages.length; i++) { if (((MimeMessage) messages[i]).getMessageID().equals(messageId)) { messages[i].setFlag(Flags.Flag.DELETED, true); break; } } Folder fooFolder = store.getFolder("FOO")); fooFolder.appendMessages(new MimeMessage[]{message}); folder.expunge(); folder.close(true); fooFolder.close(false); } }
Important | |
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For the message to be still available for manipulation after the transaction, should-delete-messages must be set to 'false'. |