I want to send an email from my application and i have written following code for sending mail
MailMessage msg = new MailMessage();
msg.From = new MailAddress("mymailid");
msg.To.Add("receipientid");
msg.Subject = "test";
msg.Body = "Test Content";
msg.Priority = MailPriority.High;
SmtpClient client = new SmtpClient();
client.Credentials = new NetworkCredential("mymailid", "mypassword", "smtp.gmail.com");
client.Host = "smtp.gmail.com";
client.Port = 587;
client.DeliveryMethod = SmtpDeliveryMethod.Network;
client.EnableSsl = true;
client.UseDefaultCredentials = true;
client.Send(msg);
I am running it on localhost so what mistake i am doing to send it.
When i send button it gives an error like
The SMTP server requires a secure connection or the client was not
authenticated. The server response was: 5.5.1 Authentication
Required.
Code in Web.config file
<appSettings>
<add key="webpages:Version" value="2.0.0.0" />
<add key="webpages:Enabled" value="false" />
<add key="PreserveLoginUrl" value="true" />
<add key="ClientValidationEnabled" value="true" />
<add key="UnobtrusiveJavaScriptEnabled" value="true" />
<add key="smtpServer" value="smtp.gmail.com" />
<add key="EnableSsl" value = "true"/>
<add key="smtpPort" value="587" />
<add key="smtpUser" value="sender#gmail.com" />
<add key="smtpPass" value="mypassword" />
<add key="adminEmail" value="sender#gmail.com" />
</appSettings>
<system.net>
<mailSettings>
<smtp from="sender#gmail.com">
<network host="smtp.gmail.com" password="mypassword" port="587" userName="sender#gmail.com" enableSsl="true"/>
</smtp>
</mailSettings>
</system.net>
what should i do to solve this error and send mail??
I have the same problem.
I have found this solution:
Google may block sign in attempts from some apps or devices that do not use modern security standards. Since these apps and devices are easier to break into, blocking them helps keep your account safer.
Some examples of apps that do not support the latest security standards include:
The Mail app on your iPhone or iPad with iOS 6 or below
The Mail app on your Windows phone preceding the 8.1 release
Some Desktop mail clients like Microsoft Outlook and Mozilla Thunderbird
Therefore, you have to enable Less Secure Sign-In (or Less secure app access) in your google account.
After sign into google account, go to:
https://www.google.com/settings/security/lesssecureapps
or
https://myaccount.google.com/lesssecureapps
In C#, you can use the following code:
using (MailMessage mail = new MailMessage())
{
mail.From = new MailAddress("email#gmail.com");
mail.To.Add("somebody#domain.com");
mail.Subject = "Hello World";
mail.Body = "<h1>Hello</h1>";
mail.IsBodyHtml = true;
mail.Attachments.Add(new Attachment("C:\\file.zip"));
using (SmtpClient smtp = new SmtpClient("smtp.gmail.com", 587))
{
smtp.Credentials = new NetworkCredential("email#gmail.com", "password");
smtp.EnableSsl = true;
smtp.Send(mail);
}
}
First check for gmail's security related issues. You may have enabled double authentication in gmail. Also check your gmail inbox if you are getting any security alerts. In such cases check other answer of #mjb as below
Below is the very general thing that i always check first for such issues
client.UseDefaultCredentials = true;
set it to false.
Note #Joe King's answer - you must set client.UseDefaultCredentials before you set client.Credentials
Ensure you set SmtpClient.Credentials after calling SmtpClient.UseDefaultCredentials = false.
The order is important as setting SmtpClient.UseDefaultCredentials = false will reset SmtpClient.Credentials to null.
I've searched and tried different things for hours.. To summarize, I had to take into consideration the following points:
Use smtp.gmail.com instead of smtp.google.com
Use port 587
Set client.UseDefaultCredentials = false; before setting credentials
Turn on the Access for less secure apps
Set client.EnableSsl = true;
If these steps didn't help, check this answer.
Perhaps, you can find something useful on this System.Net.Mail FAQ too.
App Passwords helped me.
Go to https://myaccount.google.com/security.
Scroll down to "Signing in to Google".
Enable 2-Step Verification.
Add App Password.
Use the generated password in your code.
Try to login in your gmail account. it gets locked if you send emails by using gmail SMTP. I don't know the limit of emails you can send before it gets locked but if you login one time then it works again from code.
make sure your webconfig setting are good.
Try it this way, I just made some light changes:
MailMessage msg = new MailMessage();
msg.From = new MailAddress("mymailid#gmail.com");
msg.To.Add("receipientid#gmail.com");
msg.Subject = "test";
msg.Body = "Test Content";
//msg.Priority = MailPriority.High;
using (SmtpClient client = new SmtpClient())
{
client.EnableSsl = true;
client.UseDefaultCredentials = false;
client.Credentials = new NetworkCredential("mymailid#gmail.com", "mypassword");
client.Host = "smtp.gmail.com";
client.Port = 587;
client.DeliveryMethod = SmtpDeliveryMethod.Network;
client.Send(msg);
}
Also please show your app.config file, if you have mail settings there.
As of May 30, 2022 less secure apps are no longer supported from Google so you have to use App Passwords.
https://support.google.com/accounts/answer/6010255?authuser=1&hl=en-GB&authuser=1&visit_id=637957424028050444-425688120&p=less-secure-apps&rd=1
Here are the steps to set up an app password via google:
https://support.google.com/accounts/answer/185833?authuser=1
Then you need to use the 16 character app password for the smtpClient's credentials:
smtpClient = new SmtpClient(emailHost)
{
Port = port,
DeliveryMethod = SmtpDeliveryMethod.Network,
Credentials = new NetworkCredential(fromEmail, emailPassword),
EnableSsl = true,
};
The emailpassword should be the 16 character generated App Password.
Port: 587
Emailhost: smtp.gmail.com
Then the rest of the code:
var mailMessage = new MailMessage{
From = new MailAddress(fromEmail),
Subject = "Yoursubject",
Body = $"Your body",
IsBodyHtml = true,
};
mailMessage.To.Add(newEmail);
if (smtpClient != null)
smtpClient.Send(mailMessage);
Turn on less secure app from this link and boom...
try to enable allow less secure app access.
Here, you can enable less secure app after login with your Gmail.
https://myaccount.google.com/lesssecureapps
Thanks.
For security reasons, Google has discontinued turning on Access for Less Secure Apps, effective from May 30, 2021. Hence, some of the answers here that emphasized enabling access for less secure apps have become obsolete.
Here is an answer I found on VB Forum and it worked for me. I was able to send a mail successfully.
"Please do following steps.
In Google Account Activate 2-step verification.
Select App Password in Google Account => Security => Signing to Google.
In Select App Combo Select Other and Name as Windows App & Click Generate it.
Copy Password and use it in place of email password.
It will work."
Check out the link to see more answers.
https://www.vbforums.com/showthread.php?895413-Sending-Email-via-Gmail-changing-for-May-30
Scroll down and see the answer posted by microbrain
See the code with which I sent my mail below:
Dim emailTo As String = TxtEmail.Text.Trim()
If emailTo.Length > 10 Then
Try
Dim Smtp_Server As New SmtpClient
Dim e_mail As New MailMessage()
Smtp_Server.UseDefaultCredentials = False
Smtp_Server.Credentials = New Net.NetworkCredential("myemail#gmail.com", "***16-digit-code***")
Smtp_Server.Port = 587
Smtp_Server.EnableSsl = True
Smtp_Server.Host = "smtp.gmail.com"
e_mail = New MailMessage()
e_mail.From = New MailAddress("myemailaddress#gmail.com")
e_mail.To.Add(emailTo)
e_mail.Subject = "Login OTP"
e_mail.IsBodyHtml = False
e_mail.Body = "some text here"
Smtp_Server.Send(e_mail)
MessageBox.Show("Your login OTP has been sent to " & emailTo)
LblOTPSuccess.Visible = True
TxtOTP.Visible = True
BtnVerifyOTP.Visible = True
TxtOTP.Focus()
Catch error_t As Exception
MessageBox.Show(error_t.ToString, "Error", MessageBoxButtons.OK, MessageBoxIcon.Error)
End Try
Else
MessageBox.Show("Email address is invalid or too short", "Invalid Email", MessageBoxButtons.OK, MessageBoxIcon.Error)
End If
Remember to change the parameters in the code to suit you.
I encountered the same problem even I set "UseDefaultCredentials" to false. Later I found that the root cause is that I turned on "2-step Verification" in my account. After I turned it off, the problem is gone.
Make sure that Access less secure app is allowed.
MailMessage mail = new MailMessage();
mail.From = new MailAddress("xx#gmail.com");
mail.Sender = new MailAddress("xx#gmail.com");
mail.To.Add("external#emailaddress");
mail.IsBodyHtml = true;
mail.Subject = "Email Sent";
mail.Body = "Body content from";
SmtpClient smtp = new SmtpClient("smtp.gmail.com", 587);
smtp.UseDefaultCredentials = false;
smtp.Credentials = new System.Net.NetworkCredential("xx#gmail.com", "xx");
smtp.DeliveryMethod = SmtpDeliveryMethod.Network;
smtp.EnableSsl = true;
smtp.Timeout = 30000;
try
{
smtp.Send(mail);
}
catch (SmtpException e)
{
textBox1.Text= e.Message;
}
In my case, I was facing the same issue. After a long research, don't set UseDefaultCredentials value to false. Because default value of UseDefaultCredentials is false.
Another key point is to set network credential just before the client.send(message) statement.
Wrong Code:
SmtpClient client = new SmtpClient();
client.Host = ServerName;
var credentials = new System.Net.NetworkCredential(UserName, Password);
client.Credentials = credentials;
client.Port = Port;
client.EnableSsl = EnableSSL;
client.UseDefaultCredentials = false;
client.Send(message);
Wrong Code:
SmtpClient client = new SmtpClient();
client.Host = ServerName;
var credentials = new System.Net.NetworkCredential(UserName, Password);
client.Credentials = credentials;
client.Port = Port;
client.EnableSsl = EnableSSL;
client.UseDefaultCredentials = true;
client.Send(message);
Correct code
SmtpClient client = new SmtpClient();
client.Host = ServerName;
var credentials = new System.Net.NetworkCredential(UserName, Password);
client.Credentials = credentials;
client.Port = Port;
client.EnableSsl = EnableSSL;
// client.UseDefaultCredentials = true;
client.Send(message);
Correct code
SmtpClient client = new SmtpClient();
client.Host = ServerName;
client.Port = Port;
client.EnableSsl = EnableSSL;
client.UseDefaultCredentials = false;
var credentials = new System.Net.NetworkCredential(UserName, Password);
client.Credentials = credentials;
client.Send(message);
Now its working ok with both corrected codes. So in this case sequence matters.
Cheers!
Below is my code.I also had the same error but the problem was that i gave my password wrong.The below code will work perfectly..try it
MailMessage mail = new MailMessage();
SmtpClient SmtpServer = new SmtpClient("smtp.gmail.com");
mail.From = new MailAddress("fromaddress#gmail.com");
mail.To.Add("toaddress1#gmail.com");
mail.To.Add("toaddress2#gmail.com");
mail.Subject = "Password Recovery ";
mail.Body += " <html>";
mail.Body += "<body>";
mail.Body += "<table>";
mail.Body += "<tr>";
mail.Body += "<td>User Name : </td><td> HAi </td>";
mail.Body += "</tr>";
mail.Body += "<tr>";
mail.Body += "<td>Password : </td><td>aaaaaaaaaa</td>";
mail.Body += "</tr>";
mail.Body += "</table>";
mail.Body += "</body>";
mail.Body += "</html>";
mail.IsBodyHtml = true;
SmtpServer.Port = 587;
SmtpServer.Credentials = new System.Net.NetworkCredential("sendfrommailaddress.com", "password");
SmtpServer.EnableSsl = true;
SmtpServer.Send(mail);
You can reffer it in Sending mail
If it's a new google account, you have to send an email (the first one) through the regular user interface. After that you can use your application/robot to send messages.
You should consider to specify SMTP configuration data in config file and do not overwrite them in a code - see SMTP configuration data at http://www.systemnetmail.com/faq/4.1.aspx
<system.net>
<mailSettings>
<smtp deliveryMethod="Network" from="admin#example.com">
<network defaultCredentials="false" host="smtp.example.com" port="25" userName="admin#example.com" password="password"/>
</smtp>
</mailSettings>
</system.net>
I have encountered the same problem several times. After enabling less secure app option the problem resolved.
Enable less secure app from here: https://myaccount.google.com/lesssecureapps
hope this will help.
I created a Microsoft 365 Developer subscription (E5) today morning and used it to send a test email using the following settings
using (SmtpClient client = new SmtpClient())
{
client.EnableSsl = true;
client.UseDefaultCredentials = false;
client.Credentials = new NetworkCredential(username, password);
client.Host = "smtp.office365.com";
client.Port = 587;
client.DeliveryMethod = SmtpDeliveryMethod.Network;
client.Send(msg);
}
It did not work in the beginning, as I kept getting this error message with the exception thrown by this code. Then, I spent about 4+ hours playing with the Microsoft 365 admin centre settings and reading articles to figure out the issue. Ultimately I changed my Microsoft 365 admin centre password and it worked like a charm. So, it is worth to try changing the password when you get this message, before thinking about any advance solution.
Note that the password wasn't invalid for sure as I logged on to my Microsoft 365 account without any issues. however, the password change solved the issue.
After going through each of every proposed solution, I realized the correct answer depends on your current server and email client situation. In my case, I have the MX record pointing to my on-premise outbound server. Also, since I'm using G Suite and not Gmail to send my notification emails, I had to follow this configuration: https://support.google.com/a/answer/2956491?hl=en.
Having said this, I found the right way to make this work, is indeed configuring the SMTP relay service first from my G Suite account:
IPv6 address is the address of the webserver the MX record is pointing at (example: 1234:454:c88a:d8e7:25c0:2a9a:5aa2:104).
Once this is done, use this code to complement the solution:
//Set email provider credentials
SmtpClient smtpClient = new SmtpClient("smtp-relay.gmail.com", "587");
smtpClient.EnableSsl = true;
smtpClient.UseDefaultCredentials = true;
MailAddress from = new MailAddress("username#yourdomain.com", "EmailFromAlias");
MailAddress to = new MailAddress("destination#anydomain.com");
MailMessage = new MailMessage(from, to);
MailMessage.Subject = subject;
MyMailMessage.Body = message;
MyMailMessage.IsBodyHtml = false;
smtpClient.Send(MyMailMessage);
Please, notice that with this method, smtpClient.UseDefaultCredentials = true; and not false as suggested in other solutions. Also, since we use the IPv6 address to connect to the SMTP client, it's not required to specify the user name or password. Therefore, in my opinion, this is a more secure and safe approach.
some smtp servers (secure ones) requires you to supply both username and email, if its gmail then most chances its the 'Less Secure Sign-In' issue you need to address, otherwise you can try:
public static void SendEmail(string address, string subject,
string message, string email, string username, string password,
string smtp, int port)
{
var loginInfo = new NetworkCredential(username, password);
var msg = new MailMessage();
var smtpClient = new SmtpClient(smtp, port);
msg.From = new MailAddress(email);
msg.To.Add(new MailAddress(address));
msg.Subject = subject;
msg.Body = message;
msg.IsBodyHtml = true;
smtpClient.EnableSsl = true;
smtpClient.UseDefaultCredentials = false;
smtpClient.Credentials = loginInfo;
smtpClient.Send(msg);
}
notice that the email from and the username are different unlike some implementation that refers to them as the same.
calling this method can be done like so:
SendEmail("to-mail#gmail.com", "test", "Hi it worked!!",
"from-mail", "from-username", "from-password", "smtp", 587);
If you are in a test environment and do not want to set security settings you have to allow less secure apps via. this link in Gmail.
https://myaccount.google.com/lesssecureapps
I had the same issue, it was resolved by change password to strong password.
If you face this issue with Office 365 account. In Exchange Online, by default, the SMTP Client Authentication will be disabled for all Office 365 mailbox accounts. You have to manually enable SMTP Auth for the problematic account and check the case again. Check the below threads.
https://morgantechspace.com/2021/01/the-smtp-server-requires-a-secure-connection-or-the-client.html
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/exchange/clients-and-mobile-in-exchange-online/authenticated-client-smtp-submission
I have used the steps in this question and it worked for me.
My issue was that G suite didn't consider my password as strong and after changing it it worked perfectly.
If all mentioned solutions didn't help, try to use this URL - it helped me to unblock email sending at my website
https://g.co/allowaccess
that can be if:
1)the user or pass are wrong
2)not enable SSL
3)less secure app is not enable
4)you have not log in into the server with this mail
5)you have not set client.UseDefaultCredentials = false
Removing the port field worked in my case
After turning less secure option on and trying other solutions, if you are still facing the same problem try to use this overload:
client.Credentials = new NetworkCredential("mymailid", "mypassword");
instead of:
client.Credentials = new NetworkCredential("mymailid", "mypassword", "smtp.gmail.com");
I was also facing the issue like
'The SMTP server requires a secure connection or the client was not authenticated. The server response was: 5.5.0 Authentication Required'
then went through so much internet materials but it didn't helped me fully. How I solved it like
step1:smtp.gmail.com is gmail server so go to your account gmail settings->click on see all settings->Forwarding and IMAP/POP->check pop and imap is enabled ,if not enable it->Save changes.
step2-click on your gmail profile picture->click on Manage your google account->go to security tab->check for Access to less secure apps(this option will be available if you havent opt for two step verification)->by default google will set it as disable, make it enable to use your real gmail password working for sending email.
note:-Enabling gmail access for less secure apps,may be dangerous for you so i dont recommend this
step3:-if your account has two step verification enabled or want to use password other than your gmail Real password using app specific password then try this:-
click on your gmail profile picture->click on Manage your google account->go to security tab->search for APP PASSWORD->select any app name given->select any device name->click on generate->copy the 16-digit password and paste it into your app where you have to enter a gmail password in place of your real gmail password.
I would like to add email functionality to a WinForm program I'm writing in C#. I have an Android app that has email functionality. What it does is set up the email but then lets the user choose the email program, etc. Once that is chosen the email body is completed. But it's up to the use to select what email app they want to use.
I would like to do the same in Windows but I don't see how. I have tried the following (based on other questions and responses here) :
_from = new MailAddress("my email address", "xxxx");
_to = new MailAddress("xxxx3333#gmail.com", "yyyy");
SmtpClient smtp = new SmtpClient("smtp.gmail.com");
smtp.UseDefaultCredentials = true;
smtp.Port = 587;
smtp.EnableSsl = true;
smtp.DeliveryMethod = SmtpDeliveryMethod.Network;
smtp msgMail = new MailMessage();
smtp.Body = text;
msgMail.Subject = "Subject";
msgMail.From = _from;
msgMail.To.Add(_to);
smtp.EnableSsl = true;
msgMail.Subject = _subject;
msgMail.Body = Text;
msgMail.IsBodyHtml = false;
try
{
mailClient.Send(msgMail);
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
string msg = "Exception caught in sending the email: " + ex.ToString();
showMessage(msg);
}
msgMail.Dispose();
But I get:
The SMTP server requires a secure connection or the client was not authenticated. The server response was: 5.5.1 Authentication Required.
With similar code in Android, my program just gets to an email form but lets the user decide what email add they will use.
Is there a way to do this in Windows?
There is an almost identical question and response here:
C# Windows Form Application - Send email using gmail smtp
And I think I've followed this but...doesn't work.
To directly answer your question - you probably haven't enabled less secure apps on the gmail account you are using.
Otherwise though, you could investigate the syntax of mailto if you want to let the user elect a mail client to use to send the email: https://www.labnol.org/internet/email/learn-mailto-syntax/6748/
From the link:
Send an email to Barack Obama with the subject “Congrats Obama” and some text in the body of the email message
<a href=”mailto:obama#whitehouse.gov?
subject=Congrats%20Obama&body=Enjoy%20your%20stay%0ARegards%20″>
This isn't directly related to C#/Windows - but I do know entering mailto:someone#somewhere.com at the Run prompt works:
Presumably then you could do something like: (untested)
Process.Run("mailto:someone#somewhere.com");
From the server response messages it looks like you have to provide login credentials before you are allowed to send.
Replace:
smtp.UseDefaultCredentials = true;
With:
smtp.Credentials = new System.Net.NetworkCredential("yourusername", "yourpassword");
This should do the trick.
You may have forgotten in your code to add the Host
Try to use this :
SmtpClient smtp = new SmtpClient();
smtp.UseDefaultCredentials = true;
smtp.Host = "SRVMAIL";
I have a web application using ASP.net and C#,in one step it will need
from the user to
send an email to someone with an attachments.
my problem is when the user will send the email i don't want to put their
password every time the user send.
i want to send an email without the password of the sender.
any way to do that using SMTP ?
and this is a sample of my code "not all".
the code is worked correctly when i put my password , but without it ,it
is not work, i need a way to send emails without put the password but
in the same time using smtp protocol.
private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
string smtpAddress = "smtp.office365.com";
int portNumber = 587;
bool enableSSL = true;
string emailFrom = "my email";
string password = "******";
string emailTo = "receiver mail";
string subject = "Hello";
string body = "Hello, I'm just writing this to say Hi!";
using (MailMessage mail = new MailMessage())
{
mail.From = new MailAddress(emailFrom);
mail.To.Add(emailTo);
mail.Subject = subject;
mail.Body = body;
mail.IsBodyHtml = true;
// Can set to false, if you are sending pure text.
// mail.Attachments.Add(new Attachment("C:\\SomeFile.txt"));
// mail.Attachments.Add(new Attachment("C:\\SomeZip.zip"));
using (SmtpClient smtp = new SmtpClient(smtpAddress,portNumber))
{
smtp.UseDefaultCredentials = true;
smtp.Credentials = new NetworkCredential(emailFrom, password);
smtp.EnableSsl = enableSSL;
smtp.Send(mail);
}
MessageBox.Show("message sent");
}
}
I believe this can be accomplished easily, but with some restrictions.
Have a look at the MSDN article on configuring SMTP in your config file.
If your SMTP server allows it, your email object's from address may not need to be the same as the credentials used to connect to the SMTP server.
So, set the from address of your email object as you already are:
mail.From = new MailAddress(emailFrom);
But, configure your smtp connection one of two ways:
Set your app to run under an account that has permission to access the SMTP server
Include credentials for the SMTP server in your config, like this.
Then, just do something like this:
using (SmtpClient smtp = new SmtpClient())
{
smtp.Send(mail);
}
Let the configuration file handle setting up SMTP for you. This is also great because you don't need to change any of your code if you switch servers.
Just remember to be careful with any sensitive settings in your config file! (AKA, don't check them into a public github repo)
I'm just trying to get my hmailserver to send mail from my C# program. The part that's killing me is the SSL part.
I originally got this error: The SMTP server requires a secure connection or the client was not authenticated. The server response was: SMTP authentication is required.
So I added: smtp.EnableSsl = true; and now I get Server does not support secure connections.
Here is my code, this is driving me nuts. Do I have to create my own SSL or is there a way to disable SSL on hmailserver side?
MailMessage mail = new MailMessage("jlnt#ademo.net", "com", "NEW Item", emailBody);
SmtpClient smtp = new SmtpClient("1.1.1.250");
smtp.Port = 25;
NetworkCredential login = new NetworkCredential("ja#test.net", "dg");
smtp.Credentials = login;
smtp.EnableSsl = true;
smtp.UseDefaultCredentials = false;
smtp.Send(mail);
Ahh okay what you have to do is in HMailServer go to advanced- ip ranges. Create a new IP range for example if you 192.168.1.2, you have to make the range 192.168.1.1-192.168.1.3, then at bottom uncheck all the required smtp authentication boxes.
Annoying...
To enable secure connection to send email throught your email provider, you have to change the port number.
MailMessage mail = new MailMessage("jlnt#ademo.net", "com", "NEW Item", emailBody);
SmtpClient smtp = new SmtpClient("1.1.1.250");
//smtp.Port =25;
smtp.Port =587;
NetworkCredential login = new NetworkCredential("ja#test.net", "dg");
smtp.Credentials = login;
smtp.EnableSsl = true;
smtp.UseDefaultCredentials = false;
smtp.Send(mail);
i was having this issue, what i did was used localhost ip and EnableSsl to false
SmtpClient smtpClient = new SmtpClient();
smtpClient.Host = "127.0.0.1";
smtpClient.Credentials = new NetworkCredential("test#123test.com", "pass123");
smtpClient.EnableSsl = false;
// then your other statements like: from, to, body, to send mail
this guide will help you setup custom NetworkCredentials in HMailServer as used above, hope helps someone.
I have stumbled on this question when trying to configure hMailServer to work to e-mail sending from C#. I have tried the following:
C# SmtpClient - does not work with implicit SSL - see this question and answers
AegisImplicitMail from here - could not make it work with UTF-8 strings (I have diacritics in my strings)
MailKit from here - very powerful and mature, no problems using it
I aimed for the following:
decent security
being able to send e-mails to mainstream e-mail providers (e.g. Google, Yahoo) and reach Inbox
being able to receive e-mails from mainstream e-mail providers
C# code
public void MailKitSend(string senderEmail, string senderName, string subject, string bodyText, string receivers, string receiversCc)
{
// no receivers, no e-mail is sent
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(receivers))
return;
var msg = new MimeMessage();
msg.From.Add(new MailboxAddress(Encoding.UTF8, senderName, senderEmail));
msg.Subject = subject;
var bb = new BodyBuilder {HtmlBody = bodyText};
msg.Body = bb.ToMessageBody();
IList<string> receiversEmails = receivers.Split(new[] { ";" }, StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries).ToList();
foreach (string receiver in receiversEmails)
msg.To.Add(new MailboxAddress(Encoding.UTF8, "", receiver));
if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(receiversCc))
{
IList<string> receiversEmailsCc = receiversCc.Split(new[] { ";" }, StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries).ToList();
foreach (string receiverCc in receiversEmailsCc)
msg.Cc.Add(new MailboxAddress(Encoding.UTF8, "", receiverCc));
}
try
{
var sc = new MailKit.Net.Smtp.SmtpClient();
if (!string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(SmtpUser) && !string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(SmtpPassword))
{
sc.Connect(SmtpServer, 465);
sc.Authenticate(SmtpUser, SmtpPassword);
}
sc.Send(msg);
sc.Disconnect(true);
}
catch (Exception exc)
{
string err = $"Error sending e-mail from {senderEmail} ({senderName}) to {receivers}: {exc}";
throw new ApplicationException(err);
}
}
hMailServer configuration
1) Opened ports - 25, 143, 465, 995 are opened to ensure that you can send and receive e-mail
2) TCP/IP ports configuration
SMTP / 0.0.0.0 / port 25 / no security (allow receiving start process)
SMTP / 0.0.0.0 / port 465 / SSL/TLS security (must define a SSL certificate)
POP3 / 0.0.0.0 / port 995 / SSL/TLS security (use the same SSL certificate)
3) pre C# testing
Run Diagnostics from hMailServer Administrator
Use an e-mail client that allows manual configuration of various settings such as ports for each protocol, security. I have used Thunderbird. Include sending of e-mails to external providers and receiving e-mails from them (I have tried with Gmail).
I made no changes in IP ranges and left the implicit ones (My computer and the Internet).
Although it's 7 years passed since the accepted answer was posted - I also upvoted it in the beginning - I want to emphasize that the suggested solution disables the whole authentication process which is unnecessary. The problem is the line with :
smtp.UseDefaultCredentials = false;
Just remove that line and it should work.
I post here the working solution for me (note that I'm not using SSL):
MailMessage mail = new MailMessage("a1#test.com", "foooo#gmail.com");
SmtpClient client = new SmtpClient();
client.Credentials = new NetworkCredential("a1#test.com", "test");
client.Port = 25;
client.EnableSsl = false;
client.DeliveryMethod = SmtpDeliveryMethod.Network;
client.UseDefaultCredentials = false;
client.Host = "...IPv4 Address from ipconfig...";
mail.Subject = "this is a test email.";
mail.Body = "this is my test email body";
client.Send(mail);