记一次Hibernate报错java.util.ServiceConfigurationError

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在配置Hibernate时,报这样一个错误

java.util.ServiceConfigurationError: org.hibernate.boot.model.TypeContributor: Provider org.hibernate.type.Java8DateTimeTypeContributor not found

一开始以为少包,添加了这种包,经过一天折腾,被一层回贴打醒,将hibernate-java8-5.0.4.Final.jar移除后,就可以正常运行了

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现有的 Java EE 应用 假定我们已经拥有了一个管理雇员信息的 Java EE 应用,名为 EmployeeMgmt-Server,结构如 图 1 所示: 图 1. Java EE 工程结构 这是一个典型的 Java EE 应用,使用了流行的 Spring 框架。为了简化数据库操作,我们使用了内存数据库 HSQLDB。对这个简单的应用,省略了 DAO,直接在 Façade 中通过 Spring 的 JdbcTemplate 操作数据库。最后,EmployeeMgmt 应用通过 Servlet 和 JSP 页面为用户提供前端界面: 图 2. EmployeeMgmt Web 界面 该界面为传统的 HTML 页面,用户每次点击某个链接都需要刷新页面。由于 Employee Management 系统更接近于传统的桌面应用程序,因此,用 Flex 重新编写界面会带来更好的用户体验。 回页首 集成 BlazeDS 如何将 Flex 集成至该 Java EE 应用呢?现在,我们希望用 Flex 替换掉原有的 Servlet 和 JSP 页面,就需要让 Flex 和 Java EE 后端通信。Flex 支持多种远程调用方式,包括 HTTP,Web Services 和 AMF。不过,针对 Java EE 开发的服务器端应用,可以通过集成 BlazeDS,充分利用 AMF 协议并能轻易与 Flex 前端交换数据,这种方式是 Java EE 应用程序集成 Flex 的首选。 BlazeDS 是 Adobe LifeCycle Data Services 的开源版本,遵循 LGPL v3 授权,可以免费使用。BlazeDS 为 Flex 提供了基于 AMF 二进制协议的远程调用支持,其作用相当于 Java 的 RMI。有了 BlazeDS,通过简单的配置,一个 Java 接口就可以作为服务暴露给 Flex,供其远程调用。 尽管现有的 EmployeeMgmt 应用程序已经有了 Façade 接口,但这个接口是暴露给 Servlet 使用的,最好能再为 Flex 定义另一个接口 FlexService,并隐藏 Java 语言的特定对象(如 清单 1 所示): 清单 1. FlexService interface public interface FlexService { Employee createEmployee(String name, String title, boolean gender, Date birth); void deleteEmployee(String id); Employee[] queryByName(String name); Employee[] queryAll(); } 现在,Java EE 后端与 Flex 前端的接口已经定义好了,要完成 Java EE 后端的接口实现类非常容易,利用 Spring 强大的依赖注入功能,可以通过几行简单的代码完成: 清单 2. FlexServiceImpl class public class FlexServiceImpl implements FlexService { private static final Employee[] EMPTY_EMPLOYEE_ARRAY = new Employee[0]; private Facade facade; public void setFacade(Facade facade) { this.facade = facade; } public Employee createEmployee(String name, String title, boolean gender, Date birth) { return facade.createEmployee(name, title, gender, birth); } public void deleteEmployee(String id) { facade.deleteEmployee(id); } public Employee[] queryAll() { return facade.queryAll().toArray(EMPTY_EMPLOYEE_ARRAY); } public Employee[] queryByName(String name) { return facade.queryByName(name).toArray(EMPTY_EMPLOYEE_ARRAY); } } 然后,我们将 BlazeDS 所需的 jar 包放至 /WEB-INF/lib/。BlazeDS 需要如下的 jar: 清单 3. BlazeDS 依赖的 Jar backport-util-concurrent.jar commons-httpclient.jar commons-logging.jar flex-messaging-common.jar flex-messaging-core.jar flex-messaging-proxy.jar flex-messaging-remoting.jar 在 web.xml 中添加 HttpFlexSession 和 Servlet 映射。HttpFlexSession 是 BlazeDS 提供的一个 Listener,负责监听 Flex 远程调用请求,并进行一些初始化设置: 清单 4. 定义 Flex Listener <listener> <listener-class>flex.messaging.HttpFlexSession</listener-class> </listener> MessageBrokerServlet 是真正处理 Flex 远程调用请求的 Servlet,我们需要将其映射到指定的 URL: 清单 5. 定义 Flex servlet <servlet> <servlet-name>messageBroker</servlet-name> <servlet-class>flex.messaging.MessageBrokerServlet</servlet-class> <init-param> <param-name>services.configuration.file</param-name> <param-value>/WEB-INF/flex/services-config.xml</param-value> </init-param> <load-on-startup>0</load-on-startup> </servlet> <servlet-mapping> <servlet-name>messageBroker</servlet-name> <url-pattern>/messagebroker/*</url-pattern> </servlet-mapping> BlazeDS 所需的所有配置文件均放在 /WEB-INF/flex/ 目录下。BlazeDS 将读取 services-config.xml 配置文件,该配置文件又引用了 remoting-config.xml、proxy-config.xml 和 messaging-config.xml 这 3 个配置文件,所以,一共需要 4 个配置文件。 由于 BlazeDS 需要将 Java 接口 FlexService 暴露给 Flex 前端,因此,我们在配置文件 remoting-config.xml 中将 FlexService 接口声明为一个服务: 清单 6. 定义 flexService 服务 <destination id="flexService"> <properties> <source>org.expressme.employee.mgmt.flex.FlexServiceImpl</source> <scope>application</scope> </properties> </destination> 服务名称通过 destination 的 id 属性指定,Flex 前端通过该服务名称来进行远程调用。scope 指定为 application,表示该对象是一个全局对象。 然而,按照默认的声明,BlazeDS 会去实例化 FlexService 对象。对于一个 Java EE 应用来说,通常这些服务对象都是被容器管理的(例如,Spring 容器或 EJB 容器),更合适的方法是查找该服务对象而非直接实例化。因此,需要告诉 BlazeDS 通过 Factory 来查找指定的 FlexService 对象,修改配置如下: 清单 7. 通过 factory 定义 flexService <destination id="flexService"> <properties> <factory>flexFactory</factory> <source>flexService</source> <scope>application</scope> </properties> </destination> 现在,Flex 如何才能通过 BlazeDS 调用 FlexService 接口呢?由于 FlexService 对象已经被 Spring 管理,因此,我们需要编写一个 FlexFactory 告诉 BlazeDS 如何找到 Spring 管理的 FlexService 的实例。flexFactory 在 services-config.xml 中指定: 清单 8. 定义 flexFactory <factories> <factory id="flexFactory" class="org.expressme.employee.mgmt.flex.FlexFactoryImpl"/> </factories> FlexFactoryImpl 实现了 FlexFactory 接口,该接口完成两件事情: 创建 FactoryInstance 对象; 通过 FactoryInstance 对象查找我们需要的 FlexService。 因此,需要一个 FactoryInstance 的实现类,我们编写一个 SpringFactoryInstance,以便从 Spring 的容器中查找 FlexService: 清单 9. SpringFactoryInstance class class SpringFactoryInstance extends FactoryInstance { private Log log = LogFactory.getLog(getClass()); SpringFactoryInstance(FlexFactory factory, String id, ConfigMap properties) { super(factory, id, properties); } public Object lookup() { ApplicationContext appContext = WebApplicationContextUtils. getRequiredWebApplicationContext( FlexContext.getServletConfig().getServletContext() ); String beanName = getSource(); try { log.info("Lookup bean from Spring ApplicationContext: " + beanName); return appContext.getBean(beanName); } catch (NoSuchBeanDefinitionException nex) { ... } catch (BeansException bex) { ... } catch (Exception ex) { ... } } } FlexFactoryImpl 负责实例化 SpringFactoryInstance 并通过 SpringFactoryInstance 的 lookup() 方法查找 FlexService 接口对象: 清单 10. FlexFactoryImpl class public class FlexFactoryImpl implements FlexFactory { private Log log = LogFactory.getLog(getClass()); public FactoryInstance createFactoryInstance(String id, ConfigMap properties) { log.info("Create FactoryInstance."); SpringFactoryInstance instance = new SpringFactoryInstance(this, id, properties); instance.setSource(properties.getPropertyAsString(SOURCE, instance.getId())); return instance; } public Object lookup(FactoryInstance instanceInfo) { log.info("Lookup service object."); return instanceInfo.lookup(); } public void initialize(String id, ConfigMap configMap) { } } 以下是 BlazeDS 查找 FlexService 接口的过程: BlazeDS 将首先创建 FlexFactory 的实例—— FlexFactoryImpl; 当接收到 Flex 前端的远程调用请求时,BlazeDS 通过 FlexFactory 创建 FactoryInstance 对象,并传入请求的 Service ID。在这个应用程序中,被创建的 FactoryInstance 实际对象是 SpringFactoryInstance; FactoryInstance 的 lookup() 方法被调用,在 SpringFactoryInstance 中,首先查找 Spring 容器,然后,通过 Bean 的 ID 查找 Bean,最终,FlexService 接口的实例被返回。 注意到 destination 的 id 并没有写死在代码中,而是通过以下语句获得的: 清单 11. 获取 destination 的 ID properties.getPropertyAsString(SOURCE, instance.getId()) Property 的 SOURCE 属性由 BlazeDS 读取 XML 配置文件获得: 清单 12. 配置 destination 的 id <destination id="flexService"> <properties> <factory>flexFactory</factory> <source>flexService</source> <scope>application</scope> </properties> </destination> 如果您没有使用 Spring 框架,也不要紧,只需修改 FactoryInstance 的 lookup() 方法。例如,对于一个 EJB 来说,lookup() 方法应该通过 JNDI 查找返回远程接口。无论应用程序结构如何,我们的最终目标是向 BlazeDS 返回一个 FlexService 的实例对象。 回页首 开发 Flex 客户端 首先安装 Flex Builder 3,可以在 Adobe 的官方网站获得 30 天免费试用版。然后,打开 Flex Builder 3,创建一个新的 Flex Project,命名为 EmployeeMgmt-Flex: 图 3. 新建 Flex 工程 - 第一步 Flex Project 需要指定 Server 端的配置文件地址: 图 4. 新建 Flex 工程 - 第二步 因此,需要填入 EmployeeMgmt-Server 项目的 web 根目录,该目录下必须要存在 /WEB-INF/flex/。点击“Validate Configuration”验证配置文件是否正确,只有通过验证后,才能继续。默认地,Flex Builder 将会把生成的 Flash 文件放到 EmployeeMgmt-Server 项目的 web/EmployeeMgmt-Flex-debug 目录下。 一个 Flex Project 的目录结构如下: 图 5. Flex 工程的目录结构 用 Flex Builder 做出漂亮的用户界面非常容易。Flex Builder 提供了一个可视化的编辑器,通过简单的拖拽,一个毫无经验的开发人员也能够设计出漂亮的布局。如果熟悉一点 XML 的知识,编辑 MXML 也并非难事。我们设计的 Employee Management 系统界面的最终效果如下: 图 6. 用 Flex Builder 的可视化编辑器设计界面 本文不打算讨论如何编写 Flex 界面,而是把重点放在如何实现远程调用。 为了能在 Flex 中实现远程调用,我们需要定义一个 RemoteObject 对象。可以通过 ActionScript 编码创建该对象,也可以直接在 MXML 中定义一个 RemoteObject 对象,并列出其所有的方法: 清单 13. 定义 flexServiceRO <mx:RemoteObject id="flexServiceRO" destination="flexService"> <mx:method name="queryAll" result="handleQueryAll(result : ResultEvent)"/> </mx:RemoteObject> 现在,就可以调用这个名为 flexServiceRO 的 RemoteObject 对象的方法了: 清单 14. 调用 FlexServiceRO.queryAll() flexServiceRO.queryAll(function(result : ResultEvent) { var employees = result.result as Array; }); 运行该 Flex Application,雇员信息已经被正确获取了: 图 7. 在浏览器中运行 Flex application 回页首 增强 RemoteObject 对象 通过 RemoteObject 进行调用虽然简单,但存在不少问题:首先,RemoteObject 是一个 Dynamic Class,Flex Builder 的编译器无法替我们检查参数类型和参数个数,这样,在编写 ActionScript 代码时极易出。此外,接口变动时(这种情况常常发生),需要重新修改 RemoteObject 的定义。此外,Flex 团队需要一份随时修订的完整的 FlexService 接口文档才能工作。 因此,最好能使用强类型的 RemoteObject 接口,让 Flex Builder 的编译器及早发现误。这个强类型的 RemoteObject 最好能通过 Java EE 应用的 FlexService 接口自动生成,这样,就无需再维护 RemoteObject 的定义。 为了能完成自动生成 RemoteObject 对象,我编写了一个 Java2ActionScript 的 Ant 任务来自动转换 FlexService 接口以及相关的所有 JavaBean。JavaInterface2RemoteObjectTask 完成一个 Java 接口对象到 RemoteObject 对象的转换。使用如下的 Ant 脚本: 清单 15. 生成 ActionScript class 的 Ant 脚本 <taskdef name="genactionscript" classname="org.expressme.ant.JavaBean2ActionScriptTask"> <classpath refid="build-classpath" /> </taskdef> <taskdef name="genremoteobject" classname="org.expressme.ant.JavaInterface2RemoteObjectTask"> <classpath refid="build-classpath" /> </taskdef> <genactionscript packageName="org.expressme.employee.mgmt" includes="Employee" orderByName="true" encoding="UTF-8" outputDir="${gen.dir}" /> <genremoteobject interfaceClass="org.expressme.employee.mgmt.flex.FlexService" encoding="UTF-8" outputDir="${gen.dir}" destination="flexService" /> 转换后的 FlexServiceRO 类拥有 Java 接口对应的所有方法,每个方法均为强类型签名,并添加额外的两个可选的函数处理 result 和 fault 事件。例如,queryByName 方法: 清单 16. 自动生成的 queryByName() 方法 public function queryByName(arg1 : String, result : Function = null, fault : Function = null) : void { var op : AbstractOperation = ro.getOperation("queryByName"); if (result!=null) { op.addEventListener(ResultEvent.RESULT, result); } if (fault!=null) { op.addEventListener(FaultEvent.FAULT, fault); } var f : Function = function() : void { op.removeEventListener(ResultEvent.RESULT, f); op.removeEventListener(FaultEvent.FAULT, f); if (result!=null) { op.removeEventListener(ResultEvent.RESULT, result); } if (fault!=null) { op.addEventListener(FaultEvent.FAULT, fault); } } op.addEventListener(ResultEvent.RESULT, f); op.addEventListener(FaultEvent.FAULT, f); op.send(arg1); } 转换 Java 接口是通过 Interface.as 和 InterfaceMethod.as 两个模板文件完成的,此外,所有在 Java EE 后端和 Flex 之间传递的 JavaBean 对象也通过 JavaBean2ActionScriptTask 自动转换成对应的 ActionScript 类,这是通过 Bean.as 模板完成的。 有了 Java 类到 ActionScript 的自动转换,我们在编写 ActionScript 时,就能享受到编译器检查和 ActionScript 类方法的自动提示了: 图 8. Flex Builder 的代码自动补全 唯一的缺憾是通过反射读取 FlexService 接口时,我们失去了方法的参数名称,因此,FlexServiceRO 的方法参数名只能变成 arg1,arg2 …… 等,要读取 FlexService 接口的方法参数名,只能通过解析 Java 源代码实现。 现在,Java EE 后端开发团队和 Flex 前端开发团队只需协商定义好 FlexService 接口,然后,利用 Java2ActionScript,Flex 团队就得到了强类型的 FlexServiceRO 类,而 Java EE 团队则只需集中精力实现 FlexService 接口。 在开发的前期,甚至可以用硬编码的 FlexService 的实现类。每当 FlexService 变动时,只需再次运行 Ant 脚本,就可以获得最新的 FlexServiceRO 类。这样,两个团队都可以立刻开始工作,仅需要通过 FlexService 接口就可以完美地协同开发。
package generconfig; import java.io.File; import java.io.IOException; import java.sql.SQLException; import java.util.ArrayList; import java.util.List; import org.mybatis.generator.api.MyBatisGenerator; import org.mybatis.generator.config.Configuration; import org.mybatis.generator.config.xml.ConfigurationParser; import org.mybatis.generator.exception.InvalidConfigurationException; import org.mybatis.generator.exception.XMLParserException; import org.mybatis.generator.internal.DefaultShellCallback; import org.springframework.context.support.GenericXmlApplicationContext; import com.pactera.service.schedule.ThreadReadPath; import com.pactera.util.CommTool; /*打包用File->Export->runnable JAR File Export Launch选择对应的类 Export destination 选择地址 Library handling:Copy required */ public class SMSThreadSender { public static void main(String[] args) { if(args.length==0) { System.out.println("短信服务开启,开始加载Spring配置。"); GenericXmlApplicationContext context = new GenericXmlApplicationContext(); context.setValidating(false); context.load("classpath:sysconfig/applicationContext.xml"); context.refresh(); System.out.println("开整·~~~~"); CommTool.smsthreadisruning=true; ThreadReadPath thread = new ThreadReadPath(); thread.smsname="sms"+CommTool.threadid; Thread t1 = new Thread(thread); t1.setName("sms"); t1.start(); System.out.println("已经启动"); } if(args.length==1) { String pfile=args[0]; System.out.println("短信服务开启,开始加载Spring配置。"+pfile); GenericXmlApplicationContext context = new GenericXmlApplicationContext(); context.setValidating(false); context.load(pfile); // context.load("classpath:sysconfig/applicationContext.xml"); context.refresh(); CommTool.smsth
Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Table of Contents If you're viewing this document online, you can click any of the topics below to link directly to that section. 1. Tutorial tips 2 2. Introducing the JavaMail API 3 3. Reviewing related protocols 4 4. Installing JavaMail 6 5. Reviewing the core classes 8 6. Using the JavaMail API 13 7. Searching with SearchTerm 21 8. Exercises 22 9. Wrapup 32 Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 1 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Section 1. Tutorial tips Should I take this tutorial? Looking to incorporate mail facilities into your platform-independent Java solutions? Look no further than the JavaMail API, which offers a protocol-independent model for working with IMAP, POP, SMTP, MIME, and all those other Internet-related messaging protocols. With the help of the JavaBeans Activation Framework (JAF), your applications can now be mail-enabled through the JavaMail API. Concepts After completing this module you will understand the: * Basics of the Internet mail protocols SMTP, POP3, IMAP, and MIME * Architecture of the JavaMail framework * Connections between the JavaMail API and the JavaBeans Activation Framework Objectives By the end of this module you will be able to: * Send and read mail using the JavaMail API * Deal with sending and receiving attachments * Work with HTML messages * Use search terms to search for messages Prerequisites Instructions on how to download and install the JavaMail API are contained in the course. In addition, you will need a development environment such as the JDK 1.1.6+ or the Java 2 Platform, Standard Edition (J2SE) 1.2.x or 1.3.x. A general familiarity with object-oriented programming concepts and the Java programming language is necessary. The Java language essentials tutorial can help. copyright 1996-2000 Magelang Institute dba jGuru Contact jGuru has been dedicated to promoting the growth of the Java technology community through evangelism, education, and software since 1995. You can find out more about their activities, including their huge collection of FAQs at jGuru.com . To send feedback to jGuru about this course, send mail to [email protected] . Course author: Formerly with jGuru.com , John Zukowski does strategic Java consulting for JZ Ventures, Inc. His latest book is titled Java Collections from Apress . Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 2 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Section 2. Introducing the JavaMail API What is the JavaMail API? The JavaMail API is an optional package (standard extension) for reading, composing, and sending electronic messages. You use the package to create Mail User Agent (MUA) type programs, similar to Eudora, pine, and Microsoft Outlook. The API's main purpose is not for transporting, delivering, and forwarding messages; this is the purview of applications such as sendmail and other Mail Transfer Agent (MTA) type programs. MUA-type programs let users read and write e-mail, whereas MUAs rely on MTAs to handle the actual delivery. The JavaMail API is designed to provide protocol-independent access for sending and receiving messages by dividing the API into two parts: * The first part of the API is the focus of this course --basically, how to send and receive messages independent of the provider/protocol. * The second part speaks the protocol-specific languages, like SMTP, POP, IMAP, and NNTP. With the JavaMail API, in order to communicate with a server, you need a provider for a protocol. The creation of protocol-specific providers is not covered in this course because Sun provides a sufficient set for free. Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 3 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Section 3. Reviewing related protocols Introduction Before looking into the JavaMail API specifics, let's step back and take a look at the protocols used with the API. There are basically four that you'll come to know and love: * SMTP * POP * IMAP * MIME You will also run across NNTP and some others. Understanding the basics of all the protocols will help you understand how to use the JavaMail API. While the API is designed to be protocol agnostic, you can't overcome the limitations of the underlying protocols. If a capability isn't supported by a chosen protocol, the JavaMail API doesn't magically add the capability on top of it. (As you'll soon see, this can be a problem when working with POP.) SMTP The Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) is defined by RFC 821 . It defines the mechanism for delivery of e-mail. In the context of the JavaMail API, your JavaMail-based program will communicate with your company or Internet Service Provider's (ISP's) SMTP server. That SMTP server will relay the message on to the SMTP server of the recipient(s) to eventually be acquired by the user(s) through POP or IMAP. This does not require your SMTP server to be an open relay, as authentication is supported, but it is your responsibility to ensure the SMTP server is configured properly. There is nothing in the JavaMail API for tasks like configuring a server to relay messages or to add and remove e-mail accounts. POP POP stands for Post Office Protocol. Currently in version 3, also known as POP3, RFC 1939 defines this protocol. POP is the mechanism most people on the Internet use to get their mail. It defines support for a single mailbox for each user. That is all it does, and that is also the source of a lot of confusion. Much of what people are familiar with when using POP, like the ability to see how many new mail messages they have, are not supported by POP at all. These capabilities are built into programs like Eudora or Microsoft Outlook, which remember things like the last mail received and calculate how many are new for you. So, when using the JavaMail API, if you want this type of information, you have to calculate it yourself. IMAP IMAP is a more advanced protocol for receiving messages. Defined in RFC 2060 , IMAP stands for Internet Message Access Protocol, and is currently in version 4, also known as IMAP4. When using IMAP, your mail server must support the protocol. You can't just change your program to use IMAP instead of POP and expect everything in IMAP to be supported. Assuming your mail server supports IMAP, your JavaMail-based program can take Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 4 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks advantage of users having multiple folders on the server and these folders can be shared by multiple users. Due to the more advanced capabilities, you might think IMAP would be used by everyone. It isn't. It places a much heavier burden on the mail server, requiring the server to receive the new messages, deliver them to users when requested, and maintain them in multiple folders for each user. While this does centralize backups, as users' long-term mail folders get larger and larger, everyone suffers when disk space is exhausted. With POP, saved messages get offloaded from the mail server. MIME MIME stands for Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions. It is not a mail transfer protocol. Instead, it defines the content of what is transferred: the format of the messages, attachments, and so on. There are many different documents that take effect here: RFC 822 , RFC 2045 , RFC 2046 , and RFC 2047 . As a user of the JavaMail API, you usually don't need to worry about these formats. However, these formats do exist and are used by your programs. NNTP and others Because of the split of the JavaMail API between provider and everything else, you can easily add support for additional protocols. Sun maintains a list of third-party providers that take advantage of protocols for which Sun does not provide out-of-the-box support. You'll find support for NNTP (Network News Transport Protocol) [newsgroups], S/MIME (Secure Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions), and more. Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 5 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Section 4. Installing JavaMail Introduction There are two versions of the JavaMail API commonly used today: 1.2 and 1.1.3. All the examples in this course will work with both. While 1.2 is the latest, 1.1.3 is the version included with the 1.2.1 version of the Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE), so it is still commonly used. The version of the JavaMail API you want to use affects what you download and install. All will work with JDK 1.1.6+, Java 2 Platform, Standard Edition (J2SE) version 1.2.x, and J2SE version 1.3.x. Note: After installing Sun's JavaMail implementation, you can find many example programs in the demo directory. Installing JavaMail 1.2 To use the JavaMail 1.2 API, download the JavaMail 1.2 implementation, unbundle the javamail-1_2.zip file, and add the mail.jar file to your CLASSPATH. The 1.2 implementation comes with an SMTP, IMAP4, and POP3 provider besides the core classes. After installing JavaMail 1.2, install the JavaBeans Activation Framework. Installing JavaMail 1.1.3 To use the JavaMail 1.1.3 API, download the JavaMail 1.1.3 implementation, unbundle the javamail1_1_3.zip file, and add the mail.jar file to your CLASSPATH. The 1.1.3 implementation comes with an SMTP and IMAP4 provider, besides the core classes. If you want to access a POP server with JavaMail 1.1.3, download and install a POP3 provider. Sun has one available separate from the JavaMail implementation. After downloading and unbundling pop31_1_1.zip, add pop3.jar to your CLASSPATH, too. After installing JavaMail 1.1.3, install the JavaBeans Activation Framework. Installing the JavaBeans Activation Framework All versions of the JavaMail API require the JavaBeans Activation Framework. The framework adds support for typing arbitrary blocks of data and handling it accordingly. This doesn't sound like much, but it is your basic MIME-type support found in many browsers and mail tools today. After downloading the framework, unbundle the jaf1_0_1.zip file, and add the activation.jar file to your CLASSPATH. For JavaMail 1.2 users, you should now have added mail.jar and activation.jar to your CLASSPATH. For JavaMail 1.1.3 users, you should now have added mail.jar, pop3.jar, and activation.jar to your CLASSPATH. If you have no plans of using POP3, you don't Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 6 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks need to add pop3.jar to your CLASSPATH. If you don't want to change the CLASSPATH environment variable, copy the jar files to your lib/ext directory under the Java Runtime Environment (JRE) directory. For instance, for the J2SE 1.3 release, the default directory would be C:\jdk1.3\jre\lib\ext on a Windows platform. Using JavaMail with the Java 2 Enterprise Edition If you use J2EE, there is nothing special you have to do to use the basic JavaMail API; it comes with the J2EE classes. Just make sure the j2ee.jar file is in your CLASSPATH and you're all set. For J2EE 1.2.1, the POP3 provider comes separately, so download and follow the steps to include the POP3 provider as shown in the previous section "Installing JavaMail 1.1.3." J2EE 1.3 users get the POP3 provider with J2EE so do not require the separate installation. Neither installation requires you to install the JavaBeans Activation Framework. Exercise Exercise 1. How to set up a JavaMail environment on page 22 Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 7 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Section 5. Reviewing the core classes Introduction Before taking a how-to approach at looking at the JavaMail classes in depth, this section walks you through the core classes that make up the API: Session, Message, Address, Authenticator, Transport, Store, and Folder. All these classes are found in the top-level package for the JavaMail API, javax.mail, though you'll frequently find yourself using subclasses found in the javax.mail.internet package. Session The Session class defines a basic mail session. It is through this session that everything else works. The Session object takes advantage of a java.util.Properties object to get information like mail server, username, password, and other information that can be shared across your entire application. The constructors for the class are private. You can get a single default session that can be shared with the getDefaultInstance() method: Properties props = new Properties(); // fill props with any information Session session = Session.getDefaultInstance(props, null); Or, you can create a unique session with getInstance(): Properties props = new Properties(); // fill props with any information Session session = Session.getDefaultInstance(props, null); In both cases, the null argument is an Authenticator object that is not being used at this time. In most cases, it is sufficient to use the shared session, even if working with mail sessions for multiple user mailboxes. You can add the username and password combination in at a later step in the communication process, keeping everything separate. Message Once you have your Session object, it is time to move on to creating the message to send. This is done with a type of Message . Because Message is an abstract class, you must work with a subclass, in most cases javax.mail.internet.MimeMessage .A MimeMessage is an e-mail message that understands MIME types and headers, as defined in the different RFCs. Message headers are restricted to US-ASCII characters only, though non-ASCII characters can be encoded in certain header fields. To create a Message, pass along the Session object to the MimeMessage constructor: MimeMessage message = new MimeMessage(session); Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 8 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Note: There are other constructors, like for creating messages from RFC822-formatted input streams. Once you have your message, you can set its parts, as Message implements the Part interface (with MimeMessage implementing MimePart ). The basic mechanism to set the content is the setContent() method, with arguments for the content and the mime type: message.setContent("Hello", "text/plain"); If, however, you know you are working with a MimeMessage and your message is plain text, you can use its setText() method, which only requires the actual content, defaulting to the MIME type of text/plain: message.setText("Hello"); For plain text messages, the latter form is the preferred mechanism to set the content. For sending other kinds of messages, like HTML messages, use the former. For setting the subject, use the setSubject() method: message.setSubject("First"); Address Once you've created the Session and the Message, as well as filled the message with content, it is time to address your letter with an Address . Like Message, Address is an abstract class. You use the javax.mail.internet.InternetAddress class. To create an address with just the e-mail address, pass the e-mail address to the constructor: Address address = new InternetAddress("[email protected]"); If you want a name to appear next to the e-mail address, you can pass that along to the constructor, too: Address address = new InternetAddress("[email protected]", "George Bush"); You will need to create address objects for the message's from field as well as the to field. Unless your mail server prevents you, there is nothing stopping you from sending a message that appears to be from anyone. Once you've created the addresses, you connect them to a message in one of two ways. For identifying the sender, you use the setFrom() and setReplyTo() methods. message.setFrom(address) If your message needs to show multiple from addresses, use the addFrom() method: Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 9 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Address address[] = ...; message.addFrom(address); For identifying the message recipients, you use the addRecipient() method. This method requires a Message.RecipientType besides the address. message.addRecipient(type, address) The three predefined types of address are: * Message.RecipientType.TO * Message.RecipientType.CC * Message.RecipientType.BCC So, if the message was to go to the vice president, sending a carbon copy to the first lady, the following would be appropriate: Address toAddress = new InternetAddress("[email protected]"); Address ccAddress = new InternetAddress("[email protected]"); message.addRecipient(Message.RecipientType.TO, toAddress); message.addRecipient(Message.RecipientType.CC, ccAddress); The JavaMail API provides no mechanism to check for the validity of an e-mail address. While you can program in support to scan for valid characters (as defined by RFC 822) or verify the MX (mail exchange) record yourself, these are all beyond the scope of the JavaMail API. Authenticator Like the java.net classes, the JavaMail API can take advantage of an Authenticator to access protected resources via a username and password. For the JavaMail API, that resource is the mail server. The JavaMail Authenticator is found in the javax.mail package and is different from the java.net class of the same name. The two don't share the same Authenticator as the JavaMail API works with Java 1.1, which didn't have the java.net variety. To use the Authenticator, you subclass the abstract class and return a PasswordAuthentication instance from the getPasswordAuthentication() method. You must register the Authenticator with the session when created. Then, your Authenticator will be notified when authentication is necessary. You could pop up a window or read the username and password from a configuration file (though if not encrypted is not secure), returning them to the caller as a PasswordAuthentication object. Properties props = new Properties(); // fill props with any information Authenticator auth = new MyAuthenticator(); Session session = Session.getDefaultInstance(props, auth); Transport The final part of sending a message is to use the Transport class. This class speaks the Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 10 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks protocol-specific language for sending the message (usually SMTP). It's an abstract class and works something like Session. You can use the default version of the class by just calling the static send() method: Transport.send(message); Or, you can get a specific instance from the session for your protocol, pass along the username and password (blank if unnecessary), send the message, and close the connection: message.saveChanges(); // implicit with send() Transport transport = session.getTransport("smtp"); transport.connect(host, username, password); transport.sendMessage(message, message.getAllRecipients()); transport.close(); This latter way is best when you need to send multiple messages, as it will keep the connection with the mail server active between messages. The basic send() mechanism makes a separate connection to the server for each method call. Note: To watch the mail commands go by to the mail server, set the debug flag with session.setDebug(true). Store and folder Getting messages starts similarly to sending messages with a Session. However, after getting the session, you connect to a Store , quite possibly with a username and password or Authenticator. Like Transport, you tell the Store what protocol to use: // Store store = session.getStore("imap"); Store store = session.getStore("pop3"); store.connect(host, username, password); After connecting to the Store, you can then get a Folder , which must be opened before you can read messages from it: Folder folder = store.getFolder("INBOX"); folder.open(Folder.READ_ONLY); Message message[] = folder.getMessages(); For POP3, the only folder available is the INBOX. If you are using IMAP, you can have other folders available. Note: Sun's providers are meant to be smart. While Message message[] = folder.getMessages(); might look like a slow operation reading every message from the server, only when you actually need to get a part of the message is the message content retrieved. Once you have a Message to read, you can get its content with getContent() or write its content to a stream with writeTo(). The getContent() method only gets the message content, while writeTo() output includes headers. Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 11 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks System.out.println(((MimeMessage)message).getContent()); Once you're done reading mail, close the connection to the folder and store. folder.close(aBoolean); store.close(); The boolean passed to the close() method of folder states whether or not to update the folder by removing deleted messages. Moving on Essentially, understanding how to use these seven classes is all you need for nearly everything with the JavaMail API. Most of the other capabilities of the JavaMail API build off these seven classes to do something a little different or in a particular way, like if the content is an attachment. Certain tasks, like searching, are isolated and are discussed later. Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 12 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Section 6. Using the JavaMail API Introduction You've seen how to work with the core parts of the JavaMail API. In the following sections you'll find a how-to approach for connecting the pieces to do specific tasks. Sending messages Sending an e-mail message involves getting a session, creating and filling a message, and sending it. You can specify your SMTP server by setting the mail.smtp.host property for the Properties object passed when getting the Session: String host = ...; String from = ...; String to = ...; // Get system properties Properties props = System.getProperties(); // Setup mail server props.put("mail.smtp.host", host); // Get session Session session = Session.getDefaultInstance(props, null); // Define message MimeMessage message = new MimeMessage(session); message.setFrom(new InternetAddress(from)); message.addRecipient(Message.RecipientType.TO, new InternetAddress(to)); message.setSubject("Hello JavaMail"); message.setText("Welcome to JavaMail"); // Send message Transport.send(message); You should place the code in a try-catch block, as setting up the message and sending it can throw exceptions. Exercise: Exercise 2. How to send your first message on page 23 Fetching messages For reading mail, you get a session, get and connect to an appropriate store for your mailbox, open the appropriate folder, and get your messages. Also, don't forget to close the connection when done. String host = ...; String username = ...; String password = ...; // Create empty properties Properties props = new Properties(); // Get session Session session = Session.getDefaultInstance(props, null); Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 13 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks // Get the store Store store = session.getStore("pop3"); store.connect(host, username, password); // Get folder Folder folder = store.getFolder("INBOX"); folder.open(Folder.READ_ONLY); // Get directory Message message[] = folder.getMessages(); for (int i=0, n=message.length; i<n; i++) { System.out.println(i + ": " + message[i].getFrom()[0] + "\t" + message[i].getSubject()); } // Close connection folder.close(false); store.close(); What you do with each message is up to you. The above code block just displays whom the message is from and the subject. Technically speaking, the list of from addresses could be empty and the getFrom()[0] call could throw an exception. To display the whole message, you can prompt the user after seeing the from and subject fields, and then call the message's writeTo() method if the user wants to see it. BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader ( new InputStreamReader(System.in)); // Get directory Message message[] = folder.getMessages(); for (int i=0, n=message.length; i<n; i++) { System.out.println(i + ": " + message[i].getFrom()[0] + "\t" + message[i].getSubject()); System.out.println("Do you want to read message? " + "[YES to read/QUIT to end]"); String line = reader.readLine(); if ("YES".equals(line)) { message[i].writeTo(System.out); } else if ("QUIT".equals(line)) { break; } } Exercise: Exercise 3. How to check for mail on page 25 Deleting messages and flags Deleting messages involves working with the Flags associated with the messages. There are different flags for different states, some system-defined and some user-defined. The predefined flags are defined in the inner class Flags.Flag and are listed below: * Flags.Flag.ANSWERED * Flags.Flag.DELETED * Flags.Flag.DRAFT * Flags.Flag.FLAGGED * Flags.Flag.RECENT * Flags.Flag.SEEN * Flags.Flag.USER Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 14 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Just because a flag exists doesn't mean the flag is supported by all mail servers or providers. For instance, except for deleting messages, the POP protocol supports none of them. Checking for new mail is not a POP task but a task built into mail clients. To find out what flags are supported, ask the folder with getPermanentFlags(). To delete messages, you set the message's DELETED flag: message.setFlag(Flags.Flag.DELETED, true); Open up the folder in READ_WRITE mode first though: folder.open(Folder.READ_WRITE); Then, when you are done processing all messages, close the folder, passing in a true value to expunge the deleted messages. folder.close(true); There is an expunge() method of Folder that can be used to delete the messages. However, it doesn't work for Sun's POP3 provider. Other providers may or may not implement the capabilities. It will more than likely be implemented for IMAP providers. Because POP only supports single access to the mailbox, you have to close the folder to delete the messages with Sun's provider. To unset a flag, just pass false to the setFlag() method. To see if a flag is set, check it with isSet(). Authenticating yourself You learned that you can use an Authenticator to prompt for username and password when needed, instead of passing them in as strings. Here you'll actually see how to more fully use authentication. Instead of connecting to the Store with the host, username, and password, you configure the Properties to have the host, and tell the Session about your custom Authenticator instance, as shown here: // Setup properties Properties props = System.getProperties(); props.put("mail.pop3.host", host); // Setup authentication, get session Authenticator auth = new PopupAuthenticator(); Session session = Session.getDefaultInstance(props, auth); // Get the store Store store = session.getStore("pop3"); store.connect(); You then subclass Authenticator and return a PasswordAuthentication object from the getPasswordAuthentication() method. The following is one such implementation, with a single field for both. (This isn't a Project Swing tutorial; just enter the two parts in the one field, separated by a comma.) Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 15 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks import javax.mail.*; import javax.swing.*; import java.util.*; public class PopupAuthenticator extends Authenticator { public PasswordAuthentication getPasswordAuthentication() { String username, password; String result = JOptionPane.showInputDialog( "Enter 'username,password'"); StringTokenizer st = new StringTokenizer(result, ","); username = st.nextToken(); password = st.nextToken(); return new PasswordAuthentication(username, password); } } Because the PopupAuthenticator relies on Swing, it will start up the event-handling thread for AWT. This basically requires you to add a call to System.exit() in your code to stop the program. Replying to messages The Message class includes a reply() method to configure a new Message with the proper recipient and subject, adding "Re: " if not already there. This does not add any content to the message, only copying the from or reply-to header to the new recipient. The method takes a boolean parameter indicating whether to reply to only the sender (false) or reply to all (true). MimeMessage reply = (MimeMessage)message.reply(false); reply.setFrom(new InternetAddress("[email protected]")); reply.setText("Thanks"); Transport.send(reply); To configure the reply-to address when sending a message, use the setReplyTo() method. Exercise: Exercise 4. How to reply to mail on page 27 Forwarding messages Forwarding messages is a little more involved. There is no single method to call, and you build up the message to forward by working with the parts that make up a message. A mail message can be made up of multiple parts. Each part is a BodyPart , or more specifically, a MimeBodyPart when working with MIME messages. The different body parts get combined into a container called Multipart or, again, more specifically a MimeMultipart . To forward a message, you create one part for the text of your message and a second part with the message to forward, and combine the two into a multipart. Then you add the multipart to a properly addressed message and send it. That's essentially it. To copy the content from one message to another, just copy over its Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 16 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks DataHandler , a class from the JavaBeans Activation Framework. // Create the message to forward Message forward = new MimeMessage(session); // Fill in header forward.setSubject("Fwd: " + message.getSubject()); forward.setFrom(new InternetAddress(from)); forward.addRecipient(Message.RecipientType.TO, new InternetAddress(to)); // Create your new message part BodyPart messageBodyPart = new MimeBodyPart(); messageBodyPart.setText( "Here you go with the original message:\n\n"); // Create a multi-part to combine the parts Multipart multipart = new MimeMultipart(); multipart.addBodyPart(messageBodyPart); // Create and fill part for the forwarded content messageBodyPart = new MimeBodyPart(); messageBodyPart.setDataHandler(message.getDataHandler()); // Add part to multi part multipart.addBodyPart(messageBodyPart); // Associate multi-part with message forward.setContent(multipart); // Send message Transport.send(forward); Working with attachments Attachments are resources associated with a mail message, usually kept outside of the message like a text file, spreadsheet, or image. As with common mail programs like Eudora and pine, you can attach resources to your mail message with the JavaMail API and get those attachments when you receive the message. Sending attachments: Sending attachments is quite like forwarding messages. You build up the parts to make the complete message. After the first part, your message text, you add other parts where the DataHandler for each is your attachment, instead of the shared handler in the case of a forwarded message. If you are reading the attachment from a file, your attachment data source is a FileDataSource . Reading from a URL, it is a URLDataSource . Once you have your DataSource, just pass it on to the DataHandler constructor, before finally attaching it to the BodyPart with setDataHandler(). Assuming you want to retain the original filename for the attachment, the last thing to do is to set the filename associated with the attachment with the setFileName() method of BodyPart. All this is shown here: // Define message Message message = new MimeMessage(session); message.setFrom(new InternetAddress(from)); message.addRecipient(Message.RecipientType.TO, new InternetAddress(to)); message.setSubject("Hello JavaMail Attachment"); // Create the message part BodyPart messageBodyPart = new MimeBodyPart(); // Fill the message messageBodyPart.setText("Pardon Ideas"); Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 17 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Multipart multipart = new MimeMultipart(); multipart.addBodyPart(messageBodyPart); // Part two is attachment messageBodyPart = new MimeBodyPart(); DataSource source = new FileDataSource(filename); messageBodyPart.setDataHandler(new DataHandler(source)); messageBodyPart.setFileName(filename); multipart.addBodyPart(messageBodyPart); // Put parts in message message.setContent(multipart); // Send the message Transport.send(message); When including attachments with your messages, if your program is a servlet, your users must upload the attachment besides telling you where to send the message. Uploading each file can be handled with a form encoding type of multipart/form-data. <FORM ENCTYPE="multipart/form-data" method=post action="/myservlet"> <INPUT TYPE="file" NAME="thefile"> <INPUT TYPE="submit" VALUE="Upload"> </FORM> Note: Message size is limited by your SMTP server, not the JavaMail API. If you run into problems, consider increasing the Java heap size by setting the ms and mx parameters. Exercise: Exercise 5. How to send attachments on page 28 Getting attachments: Getting attachments out of your messages is a little more involved then sending them because MIME has no simple notion of attachments. The content of your message is a Multipart object when it has attachments. You then need to process each Part, to get the main content and the attachment(s). Parts marked with a disposition of Part.ATTACHMENT from part.getDisposition() are clearly attachments. However, attachments can also come across with no disposition (and a non-text MIME type) or a disposition of Part.INLINE. When the disposition is either Part.ATTACHMENT or Part.INLINE, you can save off the content for that message part. Just get the original filename with getFileName() and the input stream with getInputStream(). Multipart mp = (Multipart)message.getContent(); for (int i=0, n=multipart.getCount(); i<n; i++) { Part part = multipart.getBodyPart(i)); String disposition = part.getDisposition(); if ((disposition != null) && ((disposition.equals(Part.ATTACHMENT) || (disposition.equals(Part.INLINE))) { saveFile(part.getFileName(), part.getInputStream()); } } The saveFile() method just creates a File from the filename, reads the bytes from the input stream, and writes them off to the file. In case the file already exists, a number is added to the end of the filename until one is found that doesn't exist. // from saveFile() File file = new File(filename); Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 18 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks for (int i=0; file.exists(); i++) { file = new File(filename+i); } The code above covers the simplest case where message parts are flagged appropriately. To cover all cases, handle when the disposition is null and get the MIME type of the part to handle accordingly. if (disposition == null) { // Check if plain MimeBodyPart mbp = (MimeBodyPart)part; if (mbp.isMimeType("text/plain")) { // Handle plain } else { // Special non-attachment cases here of image/gif, text/html, ... } ... } Processing HTML messages Sending HTML-based messages can be a little more work than sending plain text message, though it doesn't have to be that much more work. It all depends on your specific requirements. Sending HTML messages: If all you need to do is send the equivalent of an HTML file as the message and let the mail reader worry about fetching any embedded images or related pieces, use the setContent() method of Message, passing along the content as a String and setting the content type to text/html. String htmlText = "<H1>Hello</H1>" + "<img src=\"http://www.jguru.com/images/logo.gif\">"; message.setContent(htmlText, "text/html")); On the receiving end, if you fetch the message with the JavaMail API, there is nothing built into the API to display the message as HTML. The JavaMail API only sees it as a stream of bytes. To display the message as HTML, you must either use the Swing JEditorPane or some third-party HTML viewer component. if (message.getContentType().equals("text/html")) { String content = (String)message.getContent(); JFrame frame = new JFrame(); JEditorPane text = new JEditorPane("text/html", content); text.setEditable(false); JScrollPane pane = new JScrollPane(text); frame.getContentPane().add(pane); frame.setSize(300, 300); frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.DISPOSE_ON_CLOSE); frame.show(); } Including images with your messages: On the other hand, if you want your HTML content message to be complete, with embedded images included as part of the message, you must treat the image as an attachment and reference the image with a special cid URL, where the cid is a reference to the Content-ID header of the image attachment. The process of embedding an image is quite similar to attaching a file to a message, the only Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 19 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks difference is you have to tell the MimeMultipart that the parts are related by setting its subtype in the constructor (or with setSubType()) and set the Content-ID header for the image to a random string which is used as the src for the image in the img tag. The following demonstrates this completely. String file = ...; // Create the message Message message = new MimeMessage(session); // Fill its headers message.setSubject("Embedded Image"); message.setFrom(new InternetAddress(from)); message.addRecipient(Message.RecipientType.TO, new InternetAddress(to)); // Create your new message part BodyPart messageBodyPart = new MimeBodyPart(); String htmlText = "<H1>Hello</H1>" + "<img src=\"cid:memememe\">"; messageBodyPart.setContent(htmlText, "text/html"); // Create a related multi-part to combine the parts MimeMultipart multipart = new MimeMultipart("related"); multipart.addBodyPart(messageBodyPart); // Create part for the image messageBodyPart = new MimeBodyPart(); // Fetch the image and associate to part DataSource fds = new FileDataSource(file); messageBodyPart.setDataHandler(new DataHandler(fds)); messageBodyPart.setHeader("Content-ID","memememe"); // Add part to multi-part multipart.addBodyPart(messageBodyPart); // Associate multi-part with message message.setContent(multipart); Exercise: Exercise 6. How to send HTML messages with images on page 29 Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 20 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Section 7. Searching with SearchTerm Introduction The JavaMail API includes a filtering mechanism found in the javax.mail.search package to build up a SearchTerm . Once built, you then ask a Folder what messages match, retrieving an array of Message objects: SearchTerm st = ...; Message[] msgs = folder.search(st); There are 22 different classes available to help you build a search term. * AND terms (class AndTerm) * OR terms (class OrTerm) * NOT terms (class NotTerm) * SENT DATE terms (class SentDateTerm) * CONTENT terms (class BodyTerm) * HEADER terms (FromTerm / FromStringTerm, RecipientTerm / RecipientStringTerm, SubjectTerm, etc..) Essentially, you build up a logical expression for matching messages, then search. For instance the following term searches for messages with a (partial) subject string of ADV or a from field of [email protected]. You might consider periodically running this query and automatically deleting any messages returned. SearchTerm st = new OrTerm( new SubjectTerm("ADV:"), new FromStringTerm("[email protected]")); Message[] msgs = folder.search(st); Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 21 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Section 8. Exercises About the exercises These exercises are designed to provide help according to your needs. For example, you might simply complete the exercise given the information and the task list in the exercise body; you might want a few hints; or you may want a step-by-step guide to successfully complete a particular exercise. You can use as much or as little help as you need per exercise. Moreover, because complete solutions are also provided, you can skip a few exercises and still be able to complete future exercises requiring the skipped ones. Each exercise has a list of any prerequisite exercises, a list of skeleton code for you to start with, links to necessary API pages, and a text description of the exercise goal. In addition, there is help for each task and a solutions page with links to files that comprise a solution to the exercise. Exercise 1. How to set up a JavaMail environment In this exercise you will install Sun's JavaMail reference implementation. After installing, you will be introduced to the demonstration programs that come with the reference implementation. Task 1: Download the latest version of the JavaMail API implementation from Sun. Task 2: Download the latest version of the JavaBeans Activation Framework from Sun. Task 3: Unzip the downloaded packages. You get a ZIP file for all platforms for both packages. Help for task 3: You can use the jar tool to unzip the packages. Task 4: Add the mail.jar file from the JavaMail 1.2 download and the activation.jar file from the JavaBeans Activation Framework download to your CLASSPATH. Help for task 4: Copy the files to your extension library directory. For Microsoft Windows, using the default installation copy, the command might look like the following: cd \javamail-1.2 copy mail.jar \jdk1.3\jre\lib\ext cd \jaf-1.0.1 copy activation.jar \jdk1.3\jre\lib\ext If you don't like copying the files to the extension library directory, detailed instructions are available from Sun for setting your CLASSPATH on Windows NT. Task 5: Go into the demo directory that comes with the JavaMail API implementation and compile the msgsend program to send a test message. Help for task 5: javac msgsend.java Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 22 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Task 6: Execute the program passing in a from address with the -o option, your SMTP server with the -M option, and the to address (with no option). You'll then enter the subject, the text of your message, and the end-of-file character (CTRL-Z) to signal the end of the message input. Help for task 6: Be sure to replace the from address, SMTP server, and to address. java msgsend -o from@address -M SMTP.Server to@address If you are not sure of your SMTP server, contact your system administrator or check with your Internet Service Provider. Task 7: Check to make sure you received the message with your normal mail reader (Eudora, Outlook Express, pine, ...). Exercise 1. How to set up a JavaMail environment: Solution Upon successful completion, the JavaMail reference implementation will be in your CLASSPATH. Exercise 2. How to send your first message In the last exercise you sent a mail message using the demonstration program provided with the JavaMail implementation. In this exercise, you'll create the program yourself. For more help with exercises, see About the exercises on page 22 . Prerequisites: * Exercise 1. How to set up a JavaMail environment on page 22 Skeleton code: * MailExample.java Task 1: Starting with the skeleton code , get the system Properties. Help for task 1: Properties props = System.getProperties(); Task 2: Add the name of your SMTP server to the properties for the mail.smtp.host key. Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 23 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Help for task 2: props.put("mail.smtp.host", host); Task 3: Get a Session object based on the Properties. Help for task 3: Session session = Session.getDefaultInstance(props, null); Task 4: Create a MimeMessage from the session. Help for task 4: MimeMessage message = new MimeMessage(session); Task 5: Set the from field of the message. Help for task 5: message.setFrom(new InternetAddress(from)); Task 6: Set the to field of the message. Help for task 6: message.addRecipient(Message.RecipientType.TO, new InternetAddress(to)); Task 7: Set the subject of the message. Help for task 7: message.setSubject("Hello JavaMail"); Task 8: Set the content of the message. Help for task 8: message.setText("Welcome to JavaMail"); Task 9: Use a Transport to send the message. Help for task 9: Transport.send(message); Task 10: Compile and run the program, passing your SMTP server, from address, and to address on the command line. Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 24 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Help for task 10: java MailExample SMTP.Server from@address to@address Task 11: Check to make sure you received the message with your normal mail reader (Eudora, Outlook Express, pine, ...). Exercise 2. How to send your first message: Solution The following Java source file represents a solution to this exercise: * Solution/MailExample.java Exercise 3. How to check for mail In this exercise, create a program that displays the from address and subject for each message and prompts to display the message content. For more help with exercises, see About the exercises on page 22 . Prerequisites: * Exercise 1. How to set up a JavaMail environment on page 22 Skeleton Code * GetMessageExample.java Task 1: Starting with the skeleton code , get or create a Properties object. Help for task 1: Properties props = new Properties(); Task 2: Get a Session object based on the Properties. Help for task 2: Session session = Session.getDefaultInstance(props, null); Task 3: Get a Store for your e-mail protocol, either pop3 or imap. Help for task 3: Store store = session.getStore("pop3"); Task 4: Connect to your mail host's store with the appropriate username and password. Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 25 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Help for task 4: store.connect(host, username, password); Task 5: Get the folder you want to read. More than likely, this will be the INBOX. Help for task 5: Folder folder = store.getFolder("INBOX"); Task 6: Open the folder read-only. Help for task 6: folder.open(Folder.READ_ONLY); Task 7: Get a directory of the messages in the folder. Save the message list in an array variable named message. Help for task 7: Message message[] = folder.getMessages(); Task 8: For each message, display the from field and the subject. Help for task 8: System.out.println(i + ": " + message[i].getFrom()[0] + "\t" + message[i].getSubject()); Task 9: Display the message content when prompted. Help for task 9: System.out.println(message[i].getContent()); Task 10: Close the connection to the folder and store. Help for task 10: folder.close(false); store.close(); Task 11: Compile and run the program, passing your mail server, username, and password on the command line. Answer YES to the messages you want to read. Just hit ENTER if you don't. If you want to stop reading your mail before making your way through all the messages, enter QUIT. Help for task 11: java GetMessageExample POP.Server username password Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 26 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Exercise 3. How to check for mail: Solution The following Java source file represents a solution to this exercise. * Solution/GetMessageExample.java Exercise 4. How to reply to mail In this exercise, create a program that creates a canned reply message and attaches the original message if it's plain text. For more help with exercises, see About the exercises on page 22 . Prerequisites: * Exercise 3. How to check for mail on page 25 Skeleton Code: * ReplyExample.java Task 1: The skeleton code already includes the code to get the list of messages from the folder and prompt you to create a reply. Task 2: When answered affirmatively, create a new MimeMessage from the original message. Help for task 2: MimeMessage reply = (MimeMessage)message[i].reply(false); Task 3: Set the from field to your e-mail address. Task 4: Create the text for the reply. Include a canned message to start. When the original message is plain text, add each line of the original message, prefix each line with the "> " characters. Help for task 4: To check for plain text messages, check the messages MIME type with mimeMessage.isMimeType("text/plain"). Task 5: Set the message's content, once the message content is fully determined. Task 6: Send the message. Task 7: Compile and run the program, passing your mail server, SMTP server, username, password, and from address on the command line. Answer YES to the messages you want to send replies. Just hit ENTER if you don't. If you want to stop going through your mail before Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 27 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks making your way through all the messages, enter QUIT. Help for task 7: java ReplyExample POP.Server SMTP.Server username password from@address Task 8: Check to make sure you received the message with your normal mail reader (Eudora, Outlook Express, pine, ...). Exercise 4. How to reply to mail: Solution The following Java source file represents a solution to this exercise. * Solution/ReplyExample.java Exercise 5. How to send attachments In this exercise, create a program that sends a message with an attachment. For more help with exercises, see About the exercises on page 22 . Prerequisites: * Exercise 2. How to send your first message on page 23 Skeleton Code: * AttachExample.java Task 1: The skeleton code already includes the code to get the initial mail session. Task 2: From the session, get a Message and set its header fields: to, from, and subject. Task 3: Create a BodyPart for the main message content and fill its content with the text of the message. Help for task 3: BodyPart messageBodyPart = new MimeBodyPart(); messageBodyPart.setText("Here's the file"); Task 4: Create a Multipart to combine the main content with the attachment. Add the main content to the multipart. Help for task 4: Multipart multipart = new MimeMultipart(); multipart.addBodyPart(messageBodyPart); Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 28 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Task 5: Create a second BodyPart for the attachment. Task 6: Get the attachment as a DataSource. Help for task 6: DataSource source = new FileDataSource(filename); Task 7: Set the DataHandler for the message part to the data source. Carry the original filename along. Help for task 7: messageBodyPart.setDataHandler(new DataHandler(source)); messageBodyPart.setFileName(filename); Task 8: Add the second part of the message to the multipart. Task 9: Set the content of the message to the multipart. Help for task 9: message.setContent(multipart); Task 10: Send the message. Task 11: Compile and run the program, passing your SMTP server, from address, to address, and filename on the command line. This will send the file as an attachment. Help for task 11: java AttachExample SMTP.Server from@address to@address filename Task 12: Check to make sure you received the message with your normal mail reader (Eudora, Outlook Express, pine, ...). Exercise 5. How to send attachments: Solution The following Java source file represents a solution to this exercise. * Solution/AttachExample.java Exercise 6. How to send HTML messages with images In this exercise, create a program that sends an HTML message with an image attachment where the image is displayed within the HTML message. Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 29 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks For more help with exercises, see About the exercises on page 22 . Prerequisites: * Exercise 5. How to send attachments on page 28 Skeleton code: * logo.gif * HtmlImageExample.java Task 1: The skeleton code already includes the code to get the initial mail session, create the main message, and fill its headers (to, from, subject). Task 2: Create a BodyPart for the HTML message content. Task 3: Create a text string of the HTML content. Include a reference in the HTML to an image (<img src="...">) that is local to the mail message. Help for task 3: Use a cid URL. The content-id will need to be specified for the image later. String htmlText = "<H1>Hello</H1>" + "<img src=\"cid:memememe\">"; Task 4: Set the content of the message part. Be sure to specify the MIME type is text/html. Help for task 4: messageBodyPart.setContent(htmlText, "text/html"); Task 5: Create a Multipart to combine the main content with the attachment. Be sure to specify that the parts are related. Add the main content to the multipart. Help for task 5: MimeMultipart multipart = new MimeMultipart("related"); multipart.addBodyPart(messageBodyPart); Task 6: Create a second BodyPart for the attachment. Task 7: Get the attachment as a DataSource, and set the DataHandler for the message part to the data source. Task 8: Set the Content-ID header for the part to match the image reference specified in the HTML. Help for task 8: messageBodyPart.setHeader("Content-ID","memememe"); Task 9: Add the second part of the message to the multipart, and set the content of the Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 30 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks message to the multipart. Task 10: Send the message. Task 11: Compile and run the program, passing your SMTP server, from address, to address, and filename on the command line. This will send the images as an inline image within the HTML text. Help for task 11: java HtmlImageExample SMTP.Server from@address to@address filename Task 12: Check if your mail reader recognizes the message as HTML and displays the image within the message, instead of as a link to an external attachment file. Help for task 12: If your mail reader can't display HTML messages, consider sending the message to a friend. Exercise 6. How to send HTML messages with images: Solution The following Java source files represent a solution to this exercise. * Solution/logo.gif * Solution/HtmlImageExample.java Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 31 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Section 9. Wrapup In summary The JavaMail API is a Java package used for reading, composing, and sending e-mail messages and their attachments. It lets you build standards-based e-mail clients that employ various Internet mail protocols, including SMTP, POP, IMAP, and MIME, as well as related protocols such as NNTP, S/MIME, and others. The API divides naturally into two parts. The first focuses on sending, receiving, and managing messages independent of the protocol used, whereas the second focuses on specific use of the protocols. The purpose of this tutorial was to show how to use the first part of the API, without attempting to deal with protocol providers. The core JavaMail API consists of seven classes --Session, Message, Address, Authenticator, Transport, Store, and Folder --all of which are found in javax.mail, the top-level package for the JavaMail API. We used these classes to work through a number of common e-mail-related tasks, including sending messages, retrieving messages, deleting messages, authenticating, replying to messages, forwarding messages, managing attachments, processing HTML-based messages, and searching or filtering mail lists. Finally, we provided a number of step-by-step exercises to help illustrate the concepts presented. Hopefully, this will help you add e-mail functionality to your platform-independent Java applications. Resources You can do much more with the JavaMail API than what's found here. The lessons and exercises found here can be supplemented by the following resources: * Download the JavaMail 1.2 API from the JavaMail API home page . * The JavaBeans Activation Framework is required for versions 1.2 and 1.1.3 of the JavaMail API. * The JavaMail-interest mailing list is a Sun-hosted discussion forum for developers. * Sun's JavaMail FAQ addresses the use of JavaMail in applets and servlets, as well as prototol-specific questions. * Tutorial author John Zukowski maintains jGuru's JavaMail FAQ . * Want to see how others are using JavaMail? Check out Sun's list of third-party products. * If you want more detail about JavaMail, read Rick Grehan's "How JavaMail keeps it simple" (Lotus Developer Network, June 2000). * Benoit Marchal shows how to use Java and XML to produce plain text and HTML newsletters in this two-part series, "Managing e-zines with JavaMail and XSLT" Part 1 (developerWorks, March 2001) and Part 2 (developerWorks, April 2001). * "Linking Applications with E-mail" (Lotus Developer Network, May 2000) discusses how groupware can facilitate communication, collaboration, and coordination among applications. Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 32 Presented by developerWorks, your source for great tutorials ibm.com/developerWorks Feedback Please let us know whether this tutorial was helpful to you and how we could make it better. We'd also like to hear about other tutorial topics you'd like to see covered. Thanks! For questions about the content of this tutorial, contact the author John Zukowski ( [email protected] ) Colophon This tutorial was written entirely in XML, using the developerWorks Toot-O-Matic tutorial generator. The Toot-O-Matic tool is a short Java program that uses XSLT stylesheets to convert the XML source into a number of HTML pages, a zip file, JPEG heading graphics, and PDF files. Our ability to generate multiple text and binary formats from a single source file illustrates the power and flexibility of XML. Fundamentals of the JavaMail API Page 33
要特性 - 使用最新技术栈,社区资源丰富,基于Java 21(Core Module Support 17-21)、Spring Boot 3.2。 (Support Virtual Threads/fibre/loom) - 基于注解的动态查询(Specification),可根据需要扩充查询注解。 - 支持接口级别的功能权限,动态权限控制 - 支持数据字典,可方便地对一些状态进行管理 - 高效率开发,代码生成器可一键生成前后端代码 - 对一些常用前端组件封装:表格数据请求、数据字典等 - 前后端统一异常拦截处理,统一输出异常,避免繁琐的判断 - 使用ShardingSphere实现多数据源和读写分离。该方式针对MySQL数据库。对系统侵入性小。(只需引入依赖,并在yaml中配置数据源信息即可) [unicorn-starter](https://github.com/lWoHvYe/unicorn-starter)。 - 整合Redisson拓展Redis的功能,读写分离 - 整合消息队列RabbitMQ,实现消息通知、延迟消息,服务解耦。 - 各模块独立,基本可插拔:若只需查询注解等基础功能,只需引入Core模块即可,Beans, Security, Logging, 3rd Tools, Code Gen 模块可插拔, 除了传统To B业务,还可用于To C业务(see [OAuth2.0 part](unicorn-oauth2) ) #### 系统功能 - 用户管理:提供用户的相关配置,新增用户后,默认密码为123456 - 角色管理:对权限与菜单进行分配,菜单权限、数据权限(Draft)、接口权限(_In Progress_) - 菜单管理:已实现菜单动态路由,后端可配置化,支持多级菜单 - 部门管理:可配置系统组织架构,树形表格展示(Draft) - 岗位管理:配置各个部门的职位(Draft) - 字典管理:可维护常用一些固定的数据,如:状态,性别等 - 系统日志:录用户操作日志与异常日志,方便开发人员定位排 - 定时任务:整合Quartz做定时任务,加入任务日志,任务运行情况一目了然 - 代码生成:高灵活度生成前后端代码,减少大量重复的工作任务(逆向有很多方案,这种基于template的有一定的灵活性) - 邮件工具:配合富文本,发送html格式的邮件 #### 项目结构 项目采用按功能分模块的开发方式,结构如下 - `unicorn-core` 系统的Core模块,BaseClass及各种Util,(基于Multi-Release JAR Files,Support Java 17 - 21) - `unicorn-beans` 基础Beans的Definition及Configuration,To C业务可只引入该dependency - `unicorn-sys-api` Sys Module基础实体及API,方便服务拆分 - `unicorn-security` 系统权限模块,包含权限配置管理等。 - `unicorn-logging` 系统的日志模块,其他模块如果需要录日志需要引入该模块,亦可自行实现 - `unicorn-tp-tools-kotlin` 第三方工具模块,包含:邮件、S3,可视情况引入 - `unicorn-code-gen-kotlin` 系统的代码生成模块。这部分待优化,亦非必须模块 - `unicorn-starter` [启动类(Maven),项目入口,包含模块及组件配置(DB读写分离 + Cache读写分离)](https://github.com/lWoHvYe/unicorn-starter) - `valentine-starter` 启动配置示例(Gradle),尝试Kotlin/Kotlinx - `unicorn-oauth2` OAuth2 Sample,AuthorizationServer, OAuth2Client + Gateway, ResourceServer #### 详细结构 ``` - unicorn-core 公共模块 ## 项目备注 1、该资源内项目代码都经过测试运行成功,功能ok的情况下才上传的,请放心下载使用! 2、本项目适合计算机相关专业(如计科、人工智能、通信工程、自动化、电子信息等)的在校学生、老师或者企业员工下载学习,也适合小白学习进阶,当然也可作为毕设项目、课程设计、作业、项目初期立项演示等。 3、如果基础还行,也可在此代码基础上进行修改,以实现其他功能,也可用于毕设、课设、作业等。 下载后请首先打开README.md文件(如有),仅供学习参考, 切勿用于商业用途。

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