Massimo,

Where is this meant to print to? I'm running the whole thing as
a windows service so there's no command line open. Also there's tool.py and
tools.pyc, I can only edit tools.py, but I'm thinking it's the pyc file
which is being read? Do I need to recompile or do something similar? If so,
I'll need instructions.

I can write enough python to develop the functionality I require, but I'm
lost when it comes to doing all the extra stuff on the side like compiling &
building from source etc...


On Tue, Jul 27, 2010 at 5:09 PM, mdipierro <mdipie...@cs.depaul.edu> wrote:

> Please help us debug this... look into line 555 of gluon/tools.py
>
>                server =
> smtplib.SMTP(*self.settings.server.split(':'))
>                if self.settings.login != None:
>                    if self.settings.tls:
>                        server.ehlo()
>                        server.starttls()
>                        server.ehlo()
>                    server.login(*self.settings.login.split(':'))
>                result = server.sendmail(self.settings.sender, to,
> payload.as_string())
>                server.quit()
>
> add some print statements. Where does it fail? how?
>
>
> On Jul 27, 11:07 am, Andrew Buchan <andyha...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Well it works from smtplib called from within web2py, so the server does
> > actually work. Can't actually seem to type in what you suggested into
> > telnet, that is an abomination of a command-line interface!!! :-)
> > So I'm thinking it must be something in the difference between web2py's
> mail
> > and smtplib's implementations...
> >
> > On Tue, Jul 27, 2010 at 4:13 PM, Adi <aditya.sa...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > Have you tried using telnet to verify your server and mail are
> > > correctly configured?
> >
> > > Try this:
> >
> > > c:\> telnet 192.168.200.43 25
> > > ehlo
> > > mail from:the...@h**********a.com
> > > recpt to: t...@h***********a.com
> > > data
> > > This is a test message
> >
> > > The recipient should be something valid. If this sends out email from
> > > your Windows server then the smtp relay is working. In that case
> > > please attach ehlo output. If this doesn't send out email, then the
> > > problem is not with your web2py code, but with your mail setup
> > > somewhere.
> >
> > > -- Adi
> >
> > > On Jul 27, 7:29 pm, Andrew Buchan <andyha...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > > Massimo,
> >
> > > > 192.168.200.43 is a different windows box setup as a domino server,
> and
> > > the
> > > > smtplib example in original post works fine connecting to that
> server.
> > > The
> > > > windows box hosting the web2py application will not normally be
> connected
> > > to
> > > > the internet, so I can't go using google's smtp.
> > > > If I recall from the event log on domino (which I do not have access
> to
> > > > myself), the connection seems to be established but then dropped.
> Perhaps
> > > > the header is not in a correct format?
> >
> > > > Andrew.
> >
> > > > On Tue, Jul 27, 2010 at 3:06 PM, mdipierro <mdipie...@cs.depaul.edu>
> > > wrote:
> > > > > Is 192.168.200.43:25 the windows box itself or an external unix
> box?
> > > > > In the first case, do you have an email server running on windows?
> > > > > On unix this works because you have postfix but windows does not
> come
> > > > > with one.
> > > > > You may want to use an external smpt server like google.
> >
> > > > > On Jul 27, 9:00 am, Andrew Buchan <andyha...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > > > > Thanks, but I tried that, along with a number of other port
> settings,
> > > > > > using smtp as prefix etc... Has anyone els managed to get this
> > > working
> > > > > > from a windows server?
> >
> > > > > > On Jul 22, 12:11 pm, Vasile Ermicioi <elff...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > > > > > > > mail.settings.server= '192.168.200.43:25'
> >
> > > > > > >  add port
>

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