[ Blat v2.5.0 ] - Utilisation

Fermé
Hypothez - 12 déc. 2008 à 08:40
 Hiais Thy - 20 mai 2009 à 17:01
Bonjour,

A ceux qui connaissent le "blat", cet exécutable qui permet d'envoyer des mails, j'ai une question.

Comment faire pour mettre PLUSIEURS corps de message dans le mail envoyé ???!!!

J'ai trouvé une une parade, mais elle me convient peu, voilà ce que ça donne en ligne de commande :

E:\Utils\Blat250\blat.exe "E:\Utils\Blat250\messages1.txt" -ps "E:\Utils\Blat250\messages2.txt" -sig "E:\Utils\Blat250\messages3.txt" -s "<TEST_BLAT_250>" -to "toto@xxx.fr"

Où mon premier corps est "messages1.txt"
vient ensuite le "-ps" le Post Sriptum "messages2.txt"
et j'y mets une signature "-sig" qui est "messages3.txt"

Tout ça ce met à la suite dans mon mail, mais je tronque en quelque sorte l'utulisation de chaque paramètre.


Voici l'aide en ligne du blat :

Win32 console utility to send mail via SMTP or post to usenet via NNTP
by P.Mendes,M.Neal,G.Vollant,T.Charron,T.Musson,H.Pesonen,A.Donchey,C.Hyde
http://www.blat.net
syntax:
Blat <filename> -to <recipient> [optional switches (see below)]
Blat -install <server addr> <sender's addr> [<try>[<port>[<profile>]]] [-q]
Blat -profile [-delete | "<default>"] [profile1] [profileN] [-q]
Blat -h

-------------------------------- Installation ---------------------------------
-install[SMTP|NNTP|POP3] <server addr> <sender's email addr> [<try n times>
[<port> [<profile> [<username> [<password>]]]]]
: set server, sender, number of tries and port for profile
(<try n times> and <port> may be replaced by '-')
port defaults are SMTP=25, NNTP=119, POP3=110
default profile can be specified with a '-'
username and/or password may be stored to the registry
order of options is specific
use -installNNTP for storing NNTP information
use -installPOP3 for storing POP3 information
(sender and try are ignored, use '-' in place of these)

--------------------------------- The Basics ----------------------------------
<filename> : file with the message body to be sent
if your message body is on the command line, use a hyphen (-)
as your first argument, and -body followed by your message
if your message will come from the console/keyboard, use the
hyphen as your first argument, but do not use -body option.
-of <file> : text file containing more options (also -optionfile)
-to <recipient> : recipient list (also -t) (comma separated)
-tf <file> : recipient list filename
-cc <recipient> : carbon copy recipient list (also -c) (comma separated)
-cf <file> : cc recipient list filename
-bcc <recipient>: blind carbon copy recipient list (also -b)
(comma separated)
-bf <file> : bcc recipient list filename
-maxNames <x> : send to groups of <x> number of recipients
-ur : set To: header to Undisclosed Recipients if not using the
-to and -cc options
-subject <subj> : subject line, surround with quotes to include spaces(also -s)
-ss : suppress subject line if not defined
-sf <file> : file containing subject line
-body <text> : message body, surround with quotes to include spaces
-sig <file> : text file containing your email signature
-tag <file> : text file containing taglines, to be randomly chosen
-ps <file> : final message text, possibly for unsubscribe instructions

----------------------------- Registry overrides ------------------------------
-p <profile> : send with server, user, and port defined in <profile>
: use username and password if defined in <profile>
-profile : list all profiles in the Registry
-server <addr> : specify SMTP server to be used (optionally, addr:port)
-serverSMTP <addr>
: same as -server
-serverNNTP <addr>
: specify NNTP server to be used (optionally, addr:port)
-serverPOP3 <addr>
: specify POP3 server to be used (optionally, addr:port)
when POP3 access is required before sending email
-f <sender> : override the default sender address (must be known to server)
-i <addr> : a 'From:' address, not necessarily known to the server
-port <port> : port to be used on the SMTP server, defaults to SMTP (25)
-portSMTP <port>: same as -port
-portNNTP <port>: port to be used on the NNTP server, defaults to NNTP (119)
-portPOP3 <port>: port to be used on the POP3 server, defaults to POP3 (110)
-u <username> : username for AUTH LOGIN (use with -pw)
-pw <password> : password for AUTH LOGIN (use with -u)
-pu <username> : username for POP3 LOGIN (use with -ppw)
-ppw <password> : password for POP3 LOGIN (use with -pu)

---------------------- Miscellaneous RFC header switches ----------------------
-organization <organization>
: Organization field (also -o and -org)
-ua : include User-Agent header line instead of X-Mailer
-x <X-Header: detail>
: custom 'X-' header. eg: -x "X-INFO: Blat is Great!"
-noh : prevent X-Mailer/User-Agent header from showing Blat homepage
-noh2 : prevent X-Mailer header entirely
-d : request disposition notification
-r : request return receipt
-charset <cs> : user defined charset. The default is ISO-8859-1
-a1 <header> : add custom header line at the end of the regular headers
-a2 <header> : same as -a1, for a second custom header line
-dsn <nsfd> : use Delivery Status Notifications (RFC 3461)
n = never, s = successful, f = failure, d = delayed
can be used together, however N takes precedence
-hdrencb : use base64 for encoding headers, if necessary
-hdrencq : use quoted-printable for encoding headers, if necessary
-priority <pr> : set message priority 0 for low, 1 for high

----------------------- Attachment and encoding options -----------------------
-attach <file> : attach binary file(s) to message (filenames comma separated)
-attacht <file> : attach text file(s) to message (filenames comma separated)
-attachi <file> : attach text file(s) as INLINE (filenames comma separated)
-embed <file> : embed file(s) in HTML. Object tag in HTML must specify
content-id using cid: tag. eg: <img src="cid:image.jpg">
-af <file> : file containing list of binary file(s) to attach (comma
separated)
-atf <file> : file containing list of text file(s) to attach (comma
separated)
-aef <file> : file containing list of embed file(s) to attach (comma
separated)
-base64 : send binary files using base64 (binary MIME)
-uuencode : send binary files UUEncoded
-enriched : send an enriched text message (Content-Type=text/enriched)
-unicode : message body is in 16- or 32-bit Unicode format
-html : send an HTML message (Content-Type=text/html)
-alttext <text> : plain text for use as alternate text
-alttextf <file>: plain text file for use as alternate text
-mime : MIME Quoted-Printable Content-Transfer-Encoding
-8bitmime : ask for 8bit data support when sending MIME
-multipart <size>
: send multipart messages, breaking attachments on <size>
KB boundaries, where <size> is per 1000 bytes
-nomps : do not allow multipart messages

---------------------------- NNTP specific options ----------------------------
-groups <usenet groups>
: list of newsgroups (comma separated)

-------------------------------- Other options --------------------------------
-h : displays this help (also -?, /?, -help or /help)
-q : suppresses all output to the screen
-debug : echoes server communications to a log file or screen
(overrides -q if echoes to the screen)
-log <file> : log everything but usage to <file>
-timestamp : when -log is used, a timestamp is added to each log line
-ti <n> : set timeout to 'n' seconds. Blat will wait 'n' seconds for
server responses
-try <n times> : how many times blat should try to send (1 to 'INFINITE')
-binary : do not convert ASCII | (pipe, 0x7c) to CrLf in the message
body
-hostname <hst> : select the hostname used to send the message via SMTP
this is typically your local machine name
-raw : do not add CR/LF after headers
-delay <x> : wait x seconds between messages being sent when used with
-maxnames or -multipart
-comment <char> : use this character to mark the start of commments in
options files and recipient list files. The default is ;
-superdebug : hex/ascii dump the data between Blat and the server
-superdebugT : ascii dump the data between Blat and the server
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Note that if the '-i' option is used, <sender> is included in 'Reply-to:'
and 'Sender:' fields in the header of the message.

Optionally, the following options can be used instead of the -f and -i
options:

-mailfrom <addr> The RFC 821 MAIL From: statement
-from <addr> The RFC 822 From: statement
-replyto <addr> The RFC 822 Reply-To: statement
-returnpath <addr> The RFC 822 Return-Path: statement
-sender <addr> The RFC 822 Sender: statement

For backward consistency, the -f and -i options have precedence over these
RFC 822 defined options. If both -f and -i options are omitted then the
RFC 821 MAIL FROM statement will be defaulted to use the installation-defined
default sender address.




Merci d'avance de vos réponses

4 réponses

j'ai fini par trouvé (avec de l'aide) il s'agit du caractère "|"
2
Excellente cette trouvaille ! Pour contourner le probléme j'utilisais même pour des petits textes le paramètre -bodyF <file>.

Il me reste un probléme, dans le cadre d'une ligne de commande VBS commençant par :
oShell.Run "blat.exe ......
je ne peux plus utiliser les guillemets pour encadrer un texte avec des espaces dans -body ; jai essayé l'apostrophe, le crochet mais brut de décoffrage rien n'y fait.

Si une bonne idée se profile, je suis preneur. Sincères salutations - Thierry.
0
Toujours besoin d'aide, MERCI
0
Bonjour,

Si tu cherches toujours une réponse, essaye de développer un peu ton problème. Peux-tu nous communiquer - en changeant le texte" ce que sont les fichiers messages1.txt 2 et 3, j'ai peut-être une idée.

Salutations.
0
Bonjour,

j'ai la même question, comment insérer un retour chariot dans le body ? ( le char(13)+char(10) et les autres n'ont pas fonctionné...)
as tu trouvé la réponse ?

merci !
0