Before you configure ColdFusion to send e-mail messages, you must have access to an SMTP e-mail server. Also, before you run application pages that refer to the e-mail server, you can configure the ColdFusion Administrator to use the SMTP server. If you need to override the ColdFusion Administrator SMTP server setting for any messages, you can specify a new mail server in the server attribute of the cfmail tag.
Configure ColdFusion for e-mail
ColdFusion Enterprise edition includes additional mail spooling and delivery features. For more information on these features, and for information on the Administrator's mail settings, see Configuring and Administering ColdFusion.
The cfmail tag provides support for sending SMTP e-mail from within ColdFusion applications. The cfmail tag is similar to the cfoutput tag, except that cfmail outputs the generated text as an SMTP mail message rather than to a page. The cfmail tag supports all the attributes and commands that you use with cfoutput, including query. The following table describes basic cfmail tag attributes that you might use to send a simple email message. For a complete list of attributes, see the cfmail description in the CFML Reference.
Attribute |
Description |
---|---|
subject |
The subject of the message. |
from |
The e-mail address of the sender. |
to |
The e-mail address of the recipient. Use a comma-delimited list to specify multiple recipients. |
cc |
(Optional) The e-mail address of a carbon copy recipient. The recipient's address is visible to other recipients. Use a comma-delimited list to specify multiple cc recipients. |
bcc |
(Optional) The e-mail address of a blind carbon copy recipient. The recipient's address is not visible to other recipients. Use a comma-delimited list to specify multiple bcc recipients. |
The cfmail tag has many options that let you customize your mail or control how it is sent. For a description of all attributes, including options to wrap mail text at a specified column, specify the mail character encoding, and specify the mail server, user name, and password, see the cfmail description in the CFML Reference.
If you know all the mail recipients use mail applications that are capable of reading and interpreting HTML code in a mail message, you can use the cfmail tag to send an HTML message. The cfmail tag type="HTML" attribute informs the receiving e-mail client that the message contains embedded HTML tags that must be processed. For an example that sends HTML mail, see Including images in a message.
The cfmailpart tag lets you create multipart mail messages, with each part having a different MIME type or character set. For example, if you do not know that all recipients can interpret HTML mail messages, you can send your message as a multipart mail with a text part and an HTML part. To do so use two cfmailpart tags, one with the HTML version of the message and one with the plain text message, as shown in the following example. To test this example, replace the To attribute value with a valid email address, save and run the page, and check the incoming email at the address you entered.
<cfmail from = "peter@domain.com" To = "paul@domain.com" Subject = "Which version do you see?"> <cfmailpart type="text" wraptext="74"> You are reading this message as plain text, because your mail reader does not handle HTML text. </cfmailpart>> <cfmailpart type="html"> <h3>HTML Mail Message</h3> <p>You are reading this message as <strong>HTML</strong>.</p> <p>Your mail reader handles HTML text.</p> </cfmailpart> </cfmail>