E Mail Tutorial
E Mail Tutorial
E Mail Tutorial
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When I double-clicked on a message header, it would find that message in the text file and show me its body. As you can see, this is a very simple system. Surprisingly, the real e-mail system that you use every day isn't much more complicated than this.
The Real E-mail System
For the vast majority of people right now, the real e-mail system consists of two different servers running on a server machine. One is called the SMTP server, where SMTP stands for Simple Mail Transfer Protocol. The SMTP server handles outgoing mail. The other is either a POP3
server or an IMAP server, both of which handle incoming mail. POP stands for Post Office Protocol, and IMAP stands for Internet Mail Access Protocol. A typical e-mail server looks like this: The SMTP server listens on well-known port number 25, POP3 listens on port 110 and IMAP uses port 143 (see How Web Servers Work for details on ports). 7.
5. The SMTP server at howstuffworks.com connects with the SMTP server at Mindspring using port 25. It has the same simple text conversation that my e-mail client had with the SMTP server for HowStuffWorks, and gives the message to the Mindspring server. The Mindspring server recognizes that the domain name for jsmith is at Mindspring, so it hands the message to Mindspring's POP3 server, which puts the message in jsmith's mailbox. If, for some reason, the SMTP server at HowStuffWorks cannot connect with the SMTP server at Mindspring, then the message goes into a queue. The SMTP server on most machines uses a program called sendmail to do the actual sending, so this queue is called the sendmail queue. Sendmail will periodically try to resend the messages in its queue. For example, it might retry every 15 minutes. After four hours, it will usually send you a piece of mail that tells you there is some sort of problem. After five days, most sendmail configurations give up and return the mail to you undelivered. The SMTP server understands very simple text commands like HELO, MAIL, RCPT and DATA. The most common commands are:
HELO - introduce yourself EHLO - introduce yourself and request extended mode MAIL FROM: - specify the sender RCPT TO: - specify the recipient DATA - specify the body of the message (To, From and Subject should be the first three lines.) RSET - reset QUIT - quit the session HELP - get help on commands VRFY - verify an address EXPN - expand an address VERB - verbose
USER - enter your user ID PASS - enter your password QUIT - quit the POP3 server
LIST - list the messages and their size RETR - retrieve a message, pass it a message number DELE - delete a message, pass it a message number TOP - show the top x lines of a message, pass it a message number and the number of lines
Your e-mail client connects to the POP3 server and issues a series of commands to bring copies of your e-mail messages to your local machine. Generally, it will then delete the messages from the server (unless you've told the e-mail client not to). You can see that the POP3 server simply acts as an interface between the e-mail client and the text file containing your messages. And again, you can see that the POP3 server is extremely simple. You can connect to it through telnet at port 110 and issue the commands yourself if you would like to (see How Web Servers Work for details on telnetting to servers).
The IMAP Server
As you can see, the POP3 protocol is very simple. It allows you to have a collection of messages stored in a text file on the server. Your e-mail client (e.g. Outlook Express) can connect to your POP3 e-mail server and download the messages from the POP3 text file onto your PC. That is about all that you can do with POP3. Many users want to do far more than that with their e-mail, and they want their e-mail to remain on the server. The main reason for keeping your e-mail on the server is to allow users to connect from a variety of machines. With POP3, once you download your e-mail it's stuck on the machine to which you downloaded it. If you want to read your e-mail both on your desktop machine and your laptop (depending on whether you're working in the office or on the road), POP3 makes life difficult. IMAP (Internet Mail Access Protocol) is a more advanced protocol that solves these problems. With IMAP, your mail stays on the e-mail server. You can organize your mail into folders, and all the folders live on the server as well. When you search your e-mail, the search occurs on the server machine, rather than on your machine. This approach makes it extremely easy for you to access your e-mail from any machine, and regardless of which machine you use, you have access to all of your mail in all of your folders. We'll look at IMAP problems and attachments in the next section.
One problem that can arise with IMAP involves this simple question: "If all of my e-mail is stored on the server, then how can I read my mail if I'm not connected to the Internet?" To solve this problem, most e-mail clients have some way to cache e-mail on their local machine. For example, the client will download all the messages and store their complete contents on the local machine (just like it would if it were talking to a POP3 server). The messages still exist on the IMAP server, but you now have copies on your machine. This allows you to read and reply to email even if you have no connection to the Internet. The next time you establish a connection, you download all the new messages you received while disconnected and send all the mail that you wrote while disconnected.
Attachments
Your e-mail client allows you to add attachments to e-mail messages you send, and also lets you save attachments from messages that you receive. Attachments might include word processing documents, spreadsheets, sound files, snapshots and pieces of software. Usually, an attachment is not text (if it were, you would simply include it in the body of the message). Since e-mail messages can contain only text information, and attachments aren't text, there's a problem that needs to be solved. In the early days of e-mail, you solved this problem by hand, using a program called uuencode. The uuencode program assumes that the file contains binary information. It extracts 3 bytes from the binary file and converts them to four text characters (that is, it takes 6 bits at a time, adds 32 to the value of the 6 bits and creates a text character -- see How Bits and Bytes Work to learn more about ASCII characters). What uuencode produces, therefore, is an encoded version of the original binary file that contains only text characters. In the early days of e-mail, you would run uuencode yourself and paste the uuencoded file into your e-mail message. Considering its tremendous impact on society, having forever changed the way we communicate, today's e-mail system is one of the simplest things ever devised! There are parts of the system, like the routing rules in sendmail, that get complicated, but the basic system is incredibly straightforward. The next time you send an e-mail, you'll know exactly how it's getting to its destination. Check out the next page for simple etiquette rules about writing and sending e-mail messages.
variety of e-mail service providers to choose from. Choices include providers like Gmail or Yahoo! who provide free e-mail service or providers who charge a fee like America Online, Apple or NetZero. Gmail and Yahoo! make money from advertisers who pay them to expose e-mail account holders to their messages. It's also easy to find reviews of various free e-mail services. Here are few descriptions of free e-mail services:
Gmail -- Gmail is Google's free e-mail service. It offers online storage that's practically unlimited. It also provides sorting methods that allows users to quickly organize and sift their inbox efficiently for important messages. As a free service, Gmail exposes users to contextual advertisements, which are based on keywords found in the user's e-mail messages. It's versatile in handling many different attachment types and scans for spam, worms and virus. Yahoo! mail -- Perhaps one of the most popular free services, Yahoo! offers unlimited online storage as well as text messaging and RSS news feeds. Using more than a dozen filters, Yahoo! files incoming e-mails and automatically sends junk e-mails to a spam folder and allows you to add e-mails to that folder. It features easy-to-use drag and drop organization tools. MSN Windows Hotmail -- Another well-used free service, Hotmail is supported by Microsoft technology and features 5 GB of online storage space. A versatile desktop design allows users to customize the color and layout of their mail manager. It also offers users the choice of working a classic, familiar format and switching to an updated look with added features when they choose. Microsoft security features coupled with familiar drag-and-drop organization tools add further comfort-of-use for many e-mail users.
E-mail providers who charge a fee may offer additional services such as increased storage space. Sample providers include Juno, EarthLink and Webmail.us. For example, it's easier to get personalized e-mail addresses -- perhaps incorporating your actual name, for instance - using a paid service. Paid e-mail services often allow users to keep their same e-mail address even if they change their ISP and screen users from advertisers. They often are easier to reach on support issues and special features such as custom spam filters, additional e-mail accounts and mobile access. Most ISP Internet providers can also serve as an e-mail provider for no additional charge. Other paid e-mail services specialize in small business accounts and can assist businesses in purchasing and maintaining a domain name. On the next page, we'll offer some etiquette tips for when you write and send e-mail messages.