﻿<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><Type Name="SmtpMail" FullName="System.Web.Mail.SmtpMail"><TypeSignature Language="C#" Value="public class SmtpMail" Maintainer="auto" /><AssemblyInfo><AssemblyName>System.Web</AssemblyName><AssemblyPublicKey></AssemblyPublicKey><AssemblyVersion>1.0.5000.0</AssemblyVersion><AssemblyVersion>2.0.0.0</AssemblyVersion></AssemblyInfo><ThreadSafetyStatement>Gtk# is thread aware, but not thread safe; See the &lt;link location="node:gtk-sharp/programming/threads"&gt;Gtk# Thread Programming&lt;/link&gt; for details.</ThreadSafetyStatement><Base><BaseTypeName>System.Object</BaseTypeName></Base><Interfaces /><Docs><remarks><attribution license="cc4" from="Microsoft" modified="false" /><para>The mail message can be delivered either through the SMTP mail service built into Microsoft Windows 2000 or through an arbitrary SMTP server. Types in the <see cref="N:System.Web.Mail" /> namespace can be used from ASP.NET or from any managed application.</para><para>If the <see cref="P:System.Web.Mail.SmtpMail.SmtpServer" /> property is not set, mail is by default queued on a Windows 2000 system, ensuring that the calling program does not block network traffic. If the <see cref="T:System.Web.Mail.SmtpMail" /> property is set, the mail is delivered directly to the specified server.</para></remarks><summary><attribution license="cc4" from="Microsoft" modified="false" /><para>Provides properties and methods for sending messages using the Collaboration Data Objects for Windows 2000 (CDOSYS) message component. Recommended alternative: <see cref="N:System.Net.Mail" />.</para></summary></Docs><Members><Member MemberName="Send"><MemberSignature Language="C#" Value="public static void Send (System.Web.Mail.MailMessage message);" /><MemberType>Method</MemberType><ReturnValue><ReturnType>System.Void</ReturnType></ReturnValue><Parameters><Parameter Name="message" Type="System.Web.Mail.MailMessage" /></Parameters><Docs><remarks><para>
	    This method sends an e-mail to the recipients specified in the <see cref="T:System.Web.Mail.MailMessage" />  parameter
	    <paramref name="message" />. The e-mail is sent over the SMTP protocol through the server
	    specified in <see cref="P:System.Web.Mail.SmtpMail.SmtpServer" />.
	  </para><para>
	    This example shows the typical usage of the <c>SmtpMail.Send</c> method. To run this sample you have to change the
	    e-mail addresses and the SMTP server to real ones.
	    <example><code lang="C#">
using System;
using System.Web.Mail;

public class SmtpTest {
    
    public static void Main (String[] args) 
    {
	MailMessage message = new MailMessage();
	message.From = "per@foo.bar";
	message.To = "ola@foo.bar";
	message.Subject = "Hello, E-Mail world!";
	message.Body = "This is a test mail.";

	SmtpMail.SmtpServer = "mail.foo.bar";
	SmtpMail.Send (message);
    }
}
              </code></example></para></remarks><summary><attribution license="cc4" from="Microsoft" modified="false" /><para>Sends an e-mail message using arguments supplied in the properties of the <see cref="T:System.Web.Mail.MailMessage" /> class. Recommended alternative: <see cref="N:System.Net.Mail" />.</para></summary><param name="message"><attribution license="cc4" from="Microsoft" modified="false" />The <see cref="T:System.Web.Mail.MailMessage" /> to send. </param></Docs><AssemblyInfo><AssemblyVersion>1.0.5000.0</AssemblyVersion><AssemblyVersion>2.0.0.0</AssemblyVersion></AssemblyInfo></Member><Member MemberName="Send"><MemberSignature Language="C#" Value="public static void Send (string from, string to, string subject, string messageText);" /><MemberType>Method</MemberType><ReturnValue><ReturnType>System.Void</ReturnType></ReturnValue><Parameters><Parameter Name="from" Type="System.String" /><Parameter Name="to" Type="System.String" /><Parameter Name="subject" Type="System.String" /><Parameter Name="messageText" Type="System.String" /></Parameters><Docs><remarks><para>
	    This is a method that sends an e-mail message over the SMTP protocol. It connects
	    to the SMTP server as specified in <see cref="P:System.Web.Mail.SmtpMail.SmtpServer" /> and
	    sends the e-mail to <paramref name="to" />. This method is a simplified version of 
	    <see cref="M:System.Web.Mail.SmtpMail.Send(MailMessage)" /> which is actually used by this
	    method for sending e-mails.
	  </para><para>
	    Here is a simple example to show how to send an e-mail.
	    <example><code lang="C#">
using System;
using System.Web.Mail;

public class SmtpTest {
    
    public static void Main (String[] args) 
    {
	SmtpMail.SmtpServer = "mail.foo.bar";
	SmtpMail.Send ("per@foo.bar","ola@foo.bar","Hello, E-Mail world!","This is a test mail.");
    }
}
              </code></example></para></remarks><summary><attribution license="cc4" from="Microsoft" modified="false" /><para>Sends an e-mail message using the specified destination parameters. Recommended alternative: <see cref="N:System.Net.Mail" />.</para></summary><param name="from"><attribution license="cc4" from="Microsoft" modified="false" />The address of the e-mail sender. </param><param name="to"><attribution license="cc4" from="Microsoft" modified="false" />The address of the e-mail recipient. </param><param name="subject"><attribution license="cc4" from="Microsoft" modified="false" />The subject line of the e-mail message. </param><param name="messageText"><attribution license="cc4" from="Microsoft" modified="false" />The body of the e-mail message. </param></Docs><AssemblyInfo><AssemblyVersion>1.0.5000.0</AssemblyVersion><AssemblyVersion>2.0.0.0</AssemblyVersion></AssemblyInfo></Member><Member MemberName="SmtpServer"><MemberSignature Language="C#" Value="public static string SmtpServer { set; get; }" /><MemberType>Property</MemberType><ReturnValue><ReturnType>System.String</ReturnType></ReturnValue><Parameters /><Docs><value>A string representing the SMTP server address that the e-mails should be sent through.</value><remarks><attribution license="cc4" from="Microsoft" modified="false" /><para>If your local SMTP server (included with Windows 2000 and Windows Server 2003) is behind a firewall that blocks any direct SMTP traffic (through port 25), you will need to find out if there is a smart host available on your network that is allowed to relay SMTP messages to the Internet.</para><para>A smart host is an SMTP server with the permissions to relay outgoing e-mail messages directly to the Internet from internal SMTP servers. A smart host should be able to simultaneously connect to both the internal network and the Internet in order to work as the e-mail gateway.</para></remarks><summary><attribution license="cc4" from="Microsoft" modified="false" /><para>Gets or sets the name of the SMTP relay mail server to use to send e-mail messages. Recommended alternative: <see cref="N:System.Net.Mail" />.</para></summary></Docs><AssemblyInfo><AssemblyVersion>1.0.5000.0</AssemblyVersion><AssemblyVersion>2.0.0.0</AssemblyVersion></AssemblyInfo></Member></Members><Attributes><Attribute><AttributeName>System.Obsolete("The recommended alternative is System.Net.Mail.SmtpClient.")</AttributeName></Attribute></Attributes></Type>