Can I send files via email using MailKit?

C#Email AttachmentsMailkitMimekit

C# Problem Overview


As the title, is MailKit supported to send file?
If yes, how can I do it?

C# Solutions


Solution 1 - C#

Yes. This is explained in the documentation as well as the FAQ.

From the FAQ:

How do I create a message with attachments?

To construct a message with attachments, the first thing you'll need to do is create a multipart/mixed container which you'll then want to add the message body to first. Once you've added the body, you can then add MIME parts to it that contain the content of the files you'd like to attach, being sure to set the Content-Disposition header value to the attachment. You'll probably also want to set the filename parameter on the Content-Disposition header as well as the name parameter on the Content-Type header. The most convenient way to do this is to simply use the MimePart.FileName property which will set both parameters for you as well as setting the Content-Disposition header value to attachment if it has not already been set to something else.

var message = new MimeMessage ();
message.From.Add (new MailboxAddress ("Joey", "[email protected]"));
message.To.Add (new MailboxAddress ("Alice", "[email protected]"));
message.Subject = "How you doin?";

// create our message text, just like before (except don't set it as the message.Body)
var body = new TextPart ("plain") {
    Text = @"Hey Alice,

What are you up to this weekend? Monica is throwing one of her parties on
Saturday. I was hoping you could make it.

Will you be my +1?

-- Joey
"
};

// create an image attachment for the file located at path
var attachment = new MimePart ("image", "gif") {
    Content = new MimeContent (File.OpenRead (path)),
    ContentDisposition = new ContentDisposition (ContentDisposition.Attachment),
    ContentTransferEncoding = ContentEncoding.Base64,
    FileName = Path.GetFileName (path)
};

// now create the multipart/mixed container to hold the message text and the
// image attachment
var multipart = new Multipart ("mixed");
multipart.Add (body);
multipart.Add (attachment);

// now set the multipart/mixed as the message body
message.Body = multipart;

A simpler way to construct messages with attachments is to take advantage of the BodyBuilder class.

var message = new MimeMessage ();
message.From.Add (new MailboxAddress ("Joey", "[email protected]"));
message.To.Add (new MailboxAddress ("Alice", "[email protected]"));
message.Subject = "How you doin?";

var builder = new BodyBuilder ();

// Set the plain-text version of the message text
builder.TextBody = @"Hey Alice,

What are you up to this weekend? Monica is throwing one of her parties on
Saturday. I was hoping you could make it.

Will you be my +1?

-- Joey
";

// We may also want to attach a calendar event for Monica's party...
builder.Attachments.Add (@"C:\Users\Joey\Documents\party.ics");

// Now we just need to set the message body and we're done
message.Body = builder.ToMessageBody ();

For more information, see Creating Messages.

Solution 2 - C#

@jstedfast brought pretty cool solution, here are a few more examples of simple ways to just send a file as an attachment (pdf document in this case, but can be applied to any file type).

var message = new MimeMessage();
// add from, to, subject and other needed properties to your message

var builder = new BodyBuilder();
builder.HtmlBody = htmlContent;
builder.TextBody = textContent;

// you can either create MimeEntity object(s)
// this might get handy in case you want to pass multiple attachments from somewhere else
byte[] myFileAsByteArray = LoadMyFileAsByteArray();
var attachments = new List<MimeEntity>
{
    // from file
    MimeEntity.Load("myFile.pdf"),
    // file from stream
    MimeEntity.Load(new MemoryStream(myFileAsByteArray)),
    // from stream with a content type defined
    MimeEntity.Load(new ContentType("application", "pdf"), new MemoryStream(myFileAsByteArray))
}

// or add file directly - there are a few more overloads to this
builder.Attachments.Add("myFile.pdf");
builder.Attachments.Add("myFile.pdf", myFileAsByteArray);
builder.Attachments.Add("myFile.pdf", myFileAsByteArray , new ContentType("application", "pdf"));

// append previously created attachments
foreach (var attachment in attachments)
{
    builder.Attachments.Add(attachment);
}

message.Body = builder.ToMessageBody();

Hope it helps.

Solution 3 - C#

You can also send multiple files using this approach directly. **Note: files used here is IEnumerable files **

        try
        {
            var message = new MimeMessage();
            message.From.Add(new MailboxAddress(emailService.FromFullName, emailService.FromEmail));
            message.To.AddRange(emailsToSend.Select(x => new MailboxAddress(x)));
            message.Subject = subject;

            var builder = new BodyBuilder();
            builder.HtmlBody = body;

            foreach (var attachment in files)
            {
                if (attachment.Length > 0)
                {
                    string fileName = Path.GetFileName(attachment.FileName);
                    builder.Attachments.Add(fileName, attachment.OpenReadStream());
                }
            }
            message.Body = builder.ToMessageBody();
           
            }
     

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionKlynkCView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - C#jstedfastView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - C#VočkoView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - C#Arsalan HaiderView Answer on Stackoverflow