I'm feeling nostalgic.
Should I install a new mail server using sendmail?
#email #sendmail #postfix #proton #proton_mail #MS365 #Google #Microsoft #GoogleWorkspace
I never ceases to amaze me that mail systems do this shit. I know it was a thing with Sendmail but most of us have moved on or at least fixed the stupid mailer flags.
Fun story! :-) The case of the 500-mile email ― Andreas Zwinkau https://beza1e1.tuxen.de/lore/500mile_email.html via @wallabagapp
Sending emails in Node.js, Deno, and Bun in 2026: a practical guide
https://hackers.pub/@hongminhee/2026/sending-emails-nodejs-deno-bun

So you need to send emails from your JavaScript application. Email remains one of the most essential features in web apps—welcome emails, password resets, notifications—but the ecosystem is fragmented. Nodemailer doesn't work on edge functions. Each provider has its own SDK. And if you're using Deno or Bun, good luck finding libraries that actually work. This guide covers how to send emails across modern JavaScript runtimes using Upyo, a cross-runtime email library. TL;DR for the impatient If you just want working code, here's the quickest path to sending an email: import { createMessage } from "@upyo/core";import { SmtpTransport } from "@upyo/smtp";const transport = new SmtpTransport({ host: "smtp.gmail.com", port: 465, secure: true, auth: { user: "[email protected]", pass: "your-app-password", // Not your regular password! },});const message = createMessage({ from: "[email protected]", to: "[email protected]", subject: "Hello from my app!", content: { text: "This is my first email." },});const receipt = await transport.send(message);if (receipt.successful) { console.log("Sent:", receipt.messageId);} else { console.log("Failed:", receipt.errorMessages);} Install with: npm add @upyo/core @upyo/smtp That's it. This exact code works on Node.js, Deno, and Bun. But if you want to understand what's happening and explore more powerful options, read on. Why Upyo? Cross-runtime: Works on Node.js, Deno, Bun, and edge functions with the same API Zero dependencies: Keeps your bundle small Provider independence: Switch between SMTP, Mailgun, Resend, SendGrid, or Amazon SES without changing your application code Type-safe: Full TypeScript support with discriminated unions for error handling Built for testing: Includes a mock transport for unit tests Part 1: Getting started with Gmail SMTP Let's start with the most accessible option: Gmail's SMTP server. It's free, requires no additional accounts, and works great for development and low-volume production use. Step 1: Generate a Gmail app password Gmail doesn't allow you to use your regular password for SMTP. You need to create an app-specific password: Go to your Google Account Navigate to Security → 2-Step Verification (enable it if you haven't) At the bottom, click App passwords Select Mail and your device, then click Generate Copy the 16-character password Step 2: Install dependencies Choose your runtime and package manager: Node.js npm add @upyo/core @upyo/smtp# or: pnpm add @upyo/core @upyo/smtp# or: yarn add @upyo/core @upyo/smtp Deno deno add jsr:@upyo/core jsr:@upyo/smtp Bun bun add @upyo/core @upyo/smtp The same code works across all three runtimes—that's the beauty of Upyo. Step 3: Send your first email import { createMessage } from "@upyo/core";import { SmtpTransport } from "@upyo/smtp";// Create the transport (reuse this for multiple emails)const transport = new SmtpTransport({ host: "smtp.gmail.com", port: 465, secure: true, auth: { user: "[email protected]", pass: "abcd efgh ijkl mnop", // Your app password },});// Create and send a messageconst message = createMessage({ from: "[email protected]", to: "[email protected]", subject: "Welcome to my app!", content: { text: "Thanks for signing up. We're excited to have you!", html: "<h1>Welcome!</h1><p>Thanks for signing up. We're excited to have you!</p>", },});const receipt = await transport.send(message);if (receipt.successful) { console.log("Email sent successfully! Message ID:", receipt.messageId);} else { console.error("Failed to send email:", receipt.errorMessages.join(", "));}// Don't forget to close connections when doneawait transport.closeAllConnections(); Let me highlight a few important details: secure: true with port 465: This establishes a TLS-encrypted connection from the start. Gmail requires encryption, so this combination is essential. Separate text and html content: Always provide both. Some email clients don't render HTML, and spam filters look more favorably on emails with plain text alternatives. The receipt pattern: Upyo uses discriminated unions for type-safe error handling. When receipt.successful is true, you get messageId. When it's false, you get errorMessages. This makes it impossible to forget error handling. Closing connections: SMTP maintains persistent TCP connections. Always close them when you're done, or use await using (shown next) to handle this automatically. Pro tip: automatic resource cleanup with await using Managing resources manually is error-prone—what if an exception occurs before closeAllConnections() is called? Modern JavaScript (ES2024) solves this with explicit resource management. import { createMessage } from "@upyo/core";import { SmtpTransport } from "@upyo/smtp";// Transport is automatically disposed when it goes out of scopeawait using transport = new SmtpTransport({ host: "smtp.gmail.com", port: 465, secure: true, auth: { user: "[email protected]", pass: "your-app-password", },});const message = createMessage({ from: "[email protected]", to: "[email protected]", subject: "Hello!", content: { text: "This email was sent with automatic cleanup!" },});await transport.send(message);// No need to call `closeAllConnections()` - it happens automatically! The await using keyword tells JavaScript to call the transport's cleanup method when execution leaves this scope—even if an error is thrown. This pattern is similar to Python's with statement or C#'s using block. It's supported in Node.js 22+, Deno, and Bun. What if your environment doesn't support await using? For older Node.js versions or environments without ES2024 support, use try/finally to ensure cleanup: const transport = new SmtpTransport({ host: "smtp.gmail.com", port: 465, secure: true, auth: { user: "[email protected]", pass: "your-app-password" },});try { await transport.send(message);} finally { await transport.closeAllConnections();} This achieves the same result—cleanup happens whether the send succeeds or throws an error. Part 2: Adding attachments and rich content Real-world emails often need more than plain text. HTML emails with inline images Inline images appear directly in the email body rather than as downloadable attachments. The trick is to reference them using a Content-ID (CID) URL scheme. import { createMessage } from "@upyo/core";import { SmtpTransport } from "@upyo/smtp";import { readFile } from "node:fs/promises";await using transport = new SmtpTransport({ host: "smtp.gmail.com", port: 465, secure: true, auth: { user: "[email protected]", pass: "your-app-password" },});// Read your logo fileconst logoContent = await readFile("./assets/logo.png");const message = createMessage({ from: "[email protected]", to: "[email protected]", subject: "Your order confirmation", content: { html: ` <div style="font-family: sans-serif; max-width: 600px; margin: 0 auto;"> <img src="cid:company-logo" alt="Company Logo" style="width: 150px;"> <h1>Order Confirmed!</h1> <p>Thank you for your purchase. Your order #12345 has been confirmed.</p> </div> `, text: "Order Confirmed! Thank you for your purchase. Your order #12345 has been confirmed.", }, attachments: [ { filename: "logo.png", content: logoContent, contentType: "image/png", contentId: "company-logo", // Referenced as cid:company-logo in HTML inline: true, }, ],});await transport.send(message); Key points about inline images: contentId: This is the identifier you use in the HTML's src="cid:..." attribute. It can be any unique string. inline: true: This tells the email client to display the image within the message body, not as a separate attachment. Always include alt text: Some email clients block images by default, so the alt text ensures your message is still understandable. File attachments For regular attachments that recipients can download, use the standard File API. This approach works across all JavaScript runtimes. import { createMessage } from "@upyo/core";import { SmtpTransport } from "@upyo/smtp";import { readFile } from "node:fs/promises";await using transport = new SmtpTransport({ host: "smtp.gmail.com", port: 465, secure: true, auth: { user: "[email protected]", pass: "your-app-password" },});// Read files to attachconst invoicePdf = await readFile("./invoices/invoice-2024-001.pdf");const reportXlsx = await readFile("./reports/monthly-report.xlsx");const message = createMessage({ from: "[email protected]", to: "[email protected]", cc: "[email protected]", subject: "Invoice #2024-001", content: { text: "Please find your invoice and monthly report attached.", }, attachments: [ new File([invoicePdf], "invoice-2024-001.pdf", { type: "application/pdf" }), new File([reportXlsx], "monthly-report.xlsx", { type: "application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet", }), ], priority: "high", // Sets email priority headers});await transport.send(message); A few notes on attachments: MIME types matter: Setting the correct type helps email clients display the right icon and open the file with the appropriate application. priority: "high": This sets the X-Priority header, which some email clients use to highlight important messages. Use it sparingly—overuse can trigger spam filters. Multiple recipients with different roles Email supports several recipient types, each with different visibility rules: import { createMessage } from "@upyo/core";const message = createMessage({ from: { name: "Support Team", address: "[email protected]" }, to: [ "[email protected]", { name: "John Smith", address: "[email protected]" }, ], cc: "[email protected]", bcc: ["[email protected]", "[email protected]"], replyTo: "[email protected]", subject: "Your support ticket has been updated", content: { text: "We've responded to your ticket #5678." },}); Understanding recipient types: to: Primary recipients. Everyone can see who else is in this field. cc (Carbon Copy): Secondary recipients. Visible to all recipients—use for people who should be informed but aren't the primary audience. bcc (Blind Carbon Copy): Hidden recipients. No one can see BCC addresses—useful for archiving or compliance without revealing internal processes. replyTo: Where replies should go. Useful when sending from a no-reply address but wanting responses to reach a real inbox. You can specify addresses as simple strings ("[email protected]") or as objects with name and address properties for display names. Part 3: Moving to production with email service providers Gmail SMTP is great for getting started, but for production applications, you'll want a dedicated email service provider. Here's why: Higher sending limits: Gmail caps you at ~500 emails/day for personal accounts Better deliverability: Dedicated services maintain sender reputation and handle bounces properly Analytics and tracking: See who opened your emails, clicked links, etc. Webhook notifications: Get real-time callbacks for delivery events No dependency on personal accounts: Production systems shouldn't rely on someone's Gmail The best part? With Upyo, switching providers requires minimal code changes—just swap the transport. Option A: Resend (modern and developer-friendly) Resend is a newer email service with an excellent developer experience. npm add @upyo/resendimport { createMessage } from "@upyo/core";import { ResendTransport } from "@upyo/resend";const transport = new ResendTransport({ apiKey: process.env.RESEND_API_KEY!,});const message = createMessage({ from: "[email protected]", // Must be verified in Resend to: "[email protected]", subject: "Welcome aboard!", content: { text: "Thanks for joining us!", html: "<h1>Welcome!</h1><p>Thanks for joining us!</p>", }, tags: ["onboarding", "welcome"], // For analytics});const receipt = await transport.send(message);if (receipt.successful) { console.log("Sent via Resend:", receipt.messageId);} Notice how similar this looks to the SMTP example? The only differences are the import and the transport configuration. Your message creation and sending logic stays exactly the same—that's Upyo's transport abstraction at work. Option B: SendGrid (enterprise-grade) SendGrid is a popular choice for high-volume senders, offering advanced analytics, template management, and a generous free tier. SendGrid is a popular choice for high-volume senders. npm add @upyo/sendgridimport { createMessage } from "@upyo/core";import { SendGridTransport } from "@upyo/sendgrid";const transport = new SendGridTransport({ apiKey: process.env.SENDGRID_API_KEY!, clickTracking: true, openTracking: true,});const message = createMessage({ from: "[email protected]", to: "[email protected]", subject: "Your weekly digest", content: { html: "<h1>This Week's Highlights</h1><p>Here's what you missed...</p>", text: "This Week's Highlights\n\nHere's what you missed...", }, tags: ["digest", "weekly"],});await transport.send(message); Option C: Mailgun (reliable workhorse) Mailgun offers robust infrastructure with strong EU support—important if you need GDPR-compliant data residency. npm add @upyo/mailgunimport { createMessage } from "@upyo/core";import { MailgunTransport } from "@upyo/mailgun";const transport = new MailgunTransport({ apiKey: process.env.MAILGUN_API_KEY!, domain: "mg.yourdomain.com", region: "eu", // or "us"});const message = createMessage({ from: "[email protected]", to: "[email protected]", subject: "Important update", content: { text: "We have some news to share..." },});await transport.send(message); Option D: Amazon SES (cost-effective at scale) Amazon SES is incredibly affordable—about $0.10 per 1,000 emails. If you're already in the AWS ecosystem, it integrates seamlessly with IAM, CloudWatch, and other services. npm add @upyo/sesimport { createMessage } from "@upyo/core";import { SesTransport } from "@upyo/ses";const transport = new SesTransport({ authentication: { type: "credentials", accessKeyId: process.env.AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID!, secretAccessKey: process.env.AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY!, }, region: "us-east-1", configurationSetName: "my-config-set", // Optional: for tracking});const message = createMessage({ from: "[email protected]", to: "[email protected]", subject: "System alert", content: { text: "CPU usage exceeded 90%" }, priority: "high",});await transport.send(message); Part 4: Sending emails from edge functions Here's where many email solutions fall short. Edge functions (Cloudflare Workers, Vercel Edge, Deno Deploy) run in a restricted environment—they can't open raw TCP connections, which means SMTP is not an option. You must use an HTTP-based transport like Resend, SendGrid, Mailgun, or Amazon SES. The good news? Your code barely changes. Cloudflare Workers example // src/index.tsimport { createMessage } from "@upyo/core";import { ResendTransport } from "@upyo/resend";export default { async fetch(request: Request, env: Env): Promise<Response> { const transport = new ResendTransport({ apiKey: env.RESEND_API_KEY, }); const message = createMessage({ from: "[email protected]", to: "[email protected]", subject: "Request received", content: { text: "We got your request and are processing it." }, }); const receipt = await transport.send(message); if (receipt.successful) { return new Response(`Email sent: ${receipt.messageId}`); } else { return new Response(`Failed: ${receipt.errorMessages.join(", ")}`, { status: 500, }); } },};interface Env { RESEND_API_KEY: string;} Vercel Edge Functions example // app/api/send-email/route.tsimport { createMessage } from "@upyo/core";import { SendGridTransport } from "@upyo/sendgrid";export const runtime = "edge";export async function POST(request: Request) { const { to, subject, body } = await request.json(); const transport = new SendGridTransport({ apiKey: process.env.SENDGRID_API_KEY!, }); const message = createMessage({ from: "[email protected]", to, subject, content: { text: body }, }); const receipt = await transport.send(message); if (receipt.successful) { return Response.json({ success: true, messageId: receipt.messageId }); } else { return Response.json( { success: false, errors: receipt.errorMessages }, { status: 500 } ); }} Deno Deploy example // main.tsimport { createMessage } from "jsr:@upyo/core";import { MailgunTransport } from "jsr:@upyo/mailgun";Deno.serve(async (request: Request) => { if (request.method !== "POST") { return new Response("Method not allowed", { status: 405 }); } const { to, subject, body } = await request.json(); const transport = new MailgunTransport({ apiKey: Deno.env.get("MAILGUN_API_KEY")!, domain: Deno.env.get("MAILGUN_DOMAIN")!, region: "us", }); const message = createMessage({ from: "[email protected]", to, subject, content: { text: body }, }); const receipt = await transport.send(message); if (receipt.successful) { return Response.json({ success: true, messageId: receipt.messageId }); } else { return Response.json( { success: false, errors: receipt.errorMessages }, { status: 500 } ); }}); Part 5: Improving deliverability with DKIM Ever wonder why some emails land in spam while others don't? Email authentication plays a huge role. DKIM (DomainKeys Identified Mail) is one of the key mechanisms—it lets you digitally sign your emails so recipients can verify they actually came from your domain and weren't tampered with in transit. Without DKIM: Your emails are more likely to be flagged as spam Recipients have no way to verify you're really who you claim to be Sophisticated phishing attacks can impersonate your domain Setting up DKIM with Upyo First, generate a DKIM key pair. You can use OpenSSL: # Generate a 2048-bit RSA private keyopenssl genrsa -out dkim-private.pem 2048# Extract the public keyopenssl rsa -in dkim-private.pem -pubout -out dkim-public.pem Then configure your SMTP transport: import { createMessage } from "@upyo/core";import { SmtpTransport } from "@upyo/smtp";import { readFileSync } from "node:fs";const transport = new SmtpTransport({ host: "smtp.example.com", port: 587, secure: false, auth: { user: "[email protected]", pass: "password", }, dkim: { signatures: [ { signingDomain: "yourdomain.com", selector: "mail", // Creates DNS record at mail._domainkey.yourdomain.com privateKey: readFileSync("./dkim-private.pem", "utf8"), algorithm: "rsa-sha256", // or "ed25519-sha256" for shorter keys }, ], },}); The key configuration options: signingDomain: Must match your email's "From" domain selector: An arbitrary name that becomes part of your DNS record (e.g., mail creates a record at mail._domainkey.yourdomain.com) algorithm: RSA-SHA256 is widely supported; Ed25519-SHA256 offers shorter keys (see below) Adding the DNS record Add a TXT record to your domain's DNS: Name: mail._domainkey (or mail._domainkey.yourdomain.com depending on your DNS provider) Value: v=DKIM1; k=rsa; p=YOUR_PUBLIC_KEY_HERE Extract the public key value (remove headers, footers, and newlines from the .pem file): cat dkim-public.pem | grep -v "^-" | tr -d '\n' Using Ed25519 for shorter keys RSA-2048 keys are long—about 400 characters for the public key. This can be problematic because DNS TXT records have size limits, and some DNS providers struggle with long records. Ed25519 provides equivalent security with much shorter keys (around 44 characters). If your email infrastructure supports it, Ed25519 is the modern choice. # Generate Ed25519 key pairopenssl genpkey -algorithm ed25519 -out dkim-ed25519-private.pemopenssl pkey -in dkim-ed25519-private.pem -pubout -out dkim-ed25519-public.pemconst transport = new SmtpTransport({ // ... other config dkim: { signatures: [ { signingDomain: "yourdomain.com", selector: "mail2025", privateKey: readFileSync("./dkim-ed25519-private.pem", "utf8"), algorithm: "ed25519-sha256", }, ], },}); Part 6: Bulk email sending When you need to send emails to many recipients—newsletters, notifications, marketing campaigns—you have two approaches: The wrong way: looping with send() // ❌ Don't do this for bulk sendingfor (const subscriber of subscribers) { await transport.send(createMessage({ from: "[email protected]", to: subscriber.email, subject: "Weekly update", content: { text: "..." }, }));} This works, but it's inefficient: Each send() call waits for the previous one to complete No automatic batching or optimization Harder to track overall progress The right way: using sendMany() The sendMany() method is designed for bulk operations: import { createMessage } from "@upyo/core";import { ResendTransport } from "@upyo/resend";const transport = new ResendTransport({ apiKey: process.env.RESEND_API_KEY!,});const subscribers = [ { email: "[email protected]", name: "Alice" }, { email: "[email protected]", name: "Bob" }, { email: "[email protected]", name: "Charlie" }, // ... potentially thousands more];// Create personalized messagesconst messages = subscribers.map((subscriber) => createMessage({ from: "[email protected]", to: subscriber.email, subject: "Your weekly digest", content: { html: `<h1>Hi ${subscriber.name}!</h1><p>Here's what's new this week...</p>`, text: `Hi ${subscriber.name}!\n\nHere's what's new this week...`, }, tags: ["newsletter", "weekly"], }));// Send all messages efficientlylet successCount = 0;let failureCount = 0;for await (const receipt of transport.sendMany(messages)) { if (receipt.successful) { successCount++; } else { failureCount++; console.error("Failed:", receipt.errorMessages.join(", ")); }}console.log(`Sent: ${successCount}, Failed: ${failureCount}`); Why sendMany() is better: Automatic batching: Some transports (like Resend) combine multiple messages into a single API call Connection reuse: SMTP transport reuses connections from the pool Streaming results: You get receipts as they complete, not all at once Resilient: One failure doesn't stop the rest Progress tracking for large batches const totalMessages = messages.length;let processed = 0;for await (const receipt of transport.sendMany(messages)) { processed++; if (processed % 100 === 0) { console.log(`Progress: ${processed}/${totalMessages} (${Math.round((processed / totalMessages) * 100)}%)`); } if (!receipt.successful) { console.error(`Message ${processed} failed:`, receipt.errorMessages); }}console.log("Batch complete!"); When to use send() vs sendMany() ScenarioUseSingle transactional email (welcome, password reset)send()A few emails (under 10)send() in a loop is fineNewsletters, bulk notificationssendMany()Batch processing from a queuesendMany() Part 7: Testing without sending real emails Upyo includes a MockTransport for testing: No external dependencies: Tests run offline, in CI, anywhere Deterministic: No flaky tests due to network issues Fast: No HTTP requests or SMTP handshakes Inspectable: You can verify exactly what would have been sent Basic testing setup import { createMessage } from "@upyo/core";import { MockTransport } from "@upyo/mock";import assert from "node:assert";import { describe, it, beforeEach } from "node:test";describe("Email functionality", () => { let transport: MockTransport; beforeEach(() => { transport = new MockTransport(); }); it("should send welcome email after registration", async () => { // Your application code would call this const message = createMessage({ from: "[email protected]", to: "[email protected]", subject: "Welcome to our app!", content: { text: "Thanks for signing up!" }, }); const receipt = await transport.send(message); // Assertions assert.strictEqual(receipt.successful, true); assert.strictEqual(transport.getSentMessagesCount(), 1); const sentMessage = transport.getLastSentMessage(); assert.strictEqual(sentMessage?.subject, "Welcome to our app!"); assert.strictEqual(sentMessage?.recipients[0].address, "[email protected]"); }); it("should handle email failures gracefully", async () => { // Simulate a failure transport.setNextResponse({ successful: false, errorMessages: ["Invalid recipient address"], }); const message = createMessage({ from: "[email protected]", to: "invalid-email", subject: "Test", content: { text: "Test" }, }); const receipt = await transport.send(message); assert.strictEqual(receipt.successful, false); assert.ok(receipt.errorMessages.includes("Invalid recipient address")); });}); The key testing methods: getSentMessagesCount(): How many emails were "sent" getLastSentMessage(): The most recent message getSentMessages(): All messages as an array setNextResponse(): Force the next send to succeed or fail with specific errors Simulating real-world conditions import { MockTransport } from "@upyo/mock";// Simulate network delaysconst slowTransport = new MockTransport({ delay: 500, // 500ms delay per email});// Simulate random failures (10% failure rate)const unreliableTransport = new MockTransport({ failureRate: 0.1,});// Simulate variable latencyconst realisticTransport = new MockTransport({ randomDelayRange: { min: 100, max: 500 },}); Testing async email workflows import { MockTransport } from "@upyo/mock";const transport = new MockTransport();// Start your async operation that sends emailsstartUserRegistration("[email protected]");// Wait for the expected emails to be sentawait transport.waitForMessageCount(2, 5000); // Wait for 2 emails, 5s timeout// Or wait for a specific emailconst welcomeEmail = await transport.waitForMessage( (msg) => msg.subject.includes("Welcome"), 3000);console.log("Welcome email was sent:", welcomeEmail.subject); Part 8: Provider failover with PoolTransport What happens if your email provider goes down? For mission-critical applications, you need redundancy. PoolTransport combines multiple providers with automatic failover—if one fails, it tries the next. import { PoolTransport } from "@upyo/pool";import { ResendTransport } from "@upyo/resend";import { SendGridTransport } from "@upyo/sendgrid";import { MailgunTransport } from "@upyo/mailgun";import { createMessage } from "@upyo/core";// Create multiple transportsconst resend = new ResendTransport({ apiKey: process.env.RESEND_API_KEY! });const sendgrid = new SendGridTransport({ apiKey: process.env.SENDGRID_API_KEY! });const mailgun = new MailgunTransport({ apiKey: process.env.MAILGUN_API_KEY!, domain: "mg.yourdomain.com",});// Combine them with priority-based failoverconst transport = new PoolTransport({ strategy: "priority", transports: [ { transport: resend, priority: 100 }, // Try first { transport: sendgrid, priority: 50 }, // Fallback { transport: mailgun, priority: 10 }, // Last resort ], maxRetries: 3,});const message = createMessage({ from: "[email protected]", to: "[email protected]", subject: "Critical alert", content: { text: "This email will try multiple providers if needed." },});const receipt = await transport.send(message);// Automatically tries Resend first, then SendGrid, then Mailgun if others fail The priority values determine the order—higher numbers are tried first. If Resend fails (network error, rate limit, etc.), the pool automatically retries with SendGrid, then Mailgun. For more advanced routing strategies (weighted distribution, content-based routing), see the pool transport documentation. Part 9: Observability with OpenTelemetry In production, you'll want to track email metrics: send rates, failure rates, latency. Upyo integrates with OpenTelemetry: import { createOpenTelemetryTransport } from "@upyo/opentelemetry";import { SmtpTransport } from "@upyo/smtp";const baseTransport = new SmtpTransport({ host: "smtp.example.com", port: 587, auth: { user: "user", pass: "password" },});const transport = createOpenTelemetryTransport(baseTransport, { serviceName: "email-service", tracing: { enabled: true }, metrics: { enabled: true },});// Now all email operations generate traces and metrics automaticallyawait transport.send(message); This gives you: Delivery success/failure rates Send operation latency histograms Error classification by type Distributed tracing for debugging See the OpenTelemetry documentation for details. Quick reference: choosing the right transport ScenarioRecommended TransportDevelopment/testingGmail SMTP or MockTransportSmall production appResend or SendGridHigh volume (100k+/month)Amazon SESEdge functionsResend, SendGrid, or MailgunSelf-hosted infrastructureSMTP with DKIMMission-criticalPoolTransport with failoverEU data residencyMailgun (EU region) or self-hosted Wrapping up This guide covered the most popular transports, but Upyo also supports: JMAP: Modern email protocol (RFC 8620/8621) for JMAP-compatible servers like Fastmail and Stalwart Plunk: Developer-friendly email service with self-hosting option And you can always create a custom transport for any email service not yet supported. Resources 📚 Documentation 📦 npm packages 📦 JSR packages 🐙 GitHub repository Have questions or feedback? Feel free to open an issue. What's been your biggest pain point when sending emails from JavaScript? Let me know in the comments—I'm curious what challenges others have run into. Upyo (pronounced /oo-pyo/) comes from the Korean word 郵票, meaning “postage stamp.”
I've uploaded my recent changes to #fcli to the origin repo:
https://github.com/philcowans/fcli
This is my personal project which is becoming a set of MTA / MDA tools for bridging the #Fediverse into the email universe so I can use #mutt as my client. It's roughly along the lines of #fetchmail, #sendmail, #promail, etc. Currently it's a bit of an unholy mess as it transitions from being a stand-alone client to a piece of plumbing, and the new stuff is completely undocumented. I'll update the documentation and write a blog post covering the state of play later, but let me know if you want any more info before then.
At some point soon I'm also planning to migrate hosting away from GitHub, but I'll stick with it for the time being so I have somewhere to share the most recent version of the code.
Configure nullmailer with a relay host
If you wish to receive status updates from your Debian or Ubuntu system, you need to install and configure a mail transfer agent (MTA). nullmailer is a relay-only forwarding MTA that can be used as an alternative to more complex MTAs, such as Exim, Sendmail or Postfix.
A relay host, also referred to as a smarthost, can be defined as an email server for outgoing mail that is being afforded a good reputation by its peers. In this example, we use Fastmail because email deliverability depends on a number of different factors.
Configuration of nullmailer with Email Service Providers (ESPs) other than Fastmail should be similar, given that all ESPs implement the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP).
Step 1
Generate an app password
Log into your Fastmail account and set up a new app password for SMTP authentication.
Create an alias
Set up a dedicated Fastmail alias to receive incoming messages.
Step 2
Use copy and paste to enter the following commands. Be careful not to miss any punctuation.
Create the new directory /etc/nullmailer and the file /etc/nullmailer/adminaddr.
The Fastmail alias you created in Step 1 should be the only entry in /etc/nullmailer/adminaddr.
Step 3
Install the required packages.
$ sudo apt-get install --yes nullmailer mailutilsStep 4
Enter the system mailname. If you are setting up on a home network, you should use home.arpa as the domain name.
Configuring the smarthost
Configure nullmailer to use the Fastmail SMTP server as a smarthost. Use your Fastmail username and the app password from Step 1.
Step 5
Test your configuration with the following command.
$ echo "Test mail from nullmailer on tux.home.arpa to the local root user and forwarded on to Fastmail" | mail -s "Test nullmailer" rootCheck your inbox!
Step 6
You can reconfigure nullmailer at any time by issuing the following comand.

"If you want to receive status updates from your Debian or Ubuntu system, you need to employ the help of a mail tansfer agent (MTA). nullmailer is a relay-only forwarding MTA that can be used as an alternative to more complex MTAs such as Exim, Sendmail or Postfix."
Configure nullmailer with a relay host
If you wish to receive status updates from your Debian or Ubuntu system, you need to install and configure a mail tansfer agent (MTA). nullmailer is a relay-only forwarding MTA that can be used as an alternative to more complex MTAs, such as Exim, Sendmail or Postfix.
In this example, the hostname is debian, the local username bookworm and the Fastmail username [email protected].
Step 1
Because email deliverability depends on a multitude of factors, we use Fastmail as a relay host.
1) log into your Fastmail account and set up a new app password for SMTP authentication
2) set up a new Fastmail alias to receive incoming messages. In this example, we use [email protected]
Step 2
Create the new directory /etc/nullmailer and the file /etc/nullmailer/adminaddr.
The Fastmail alias is the only entry in /etc/nullmailer/adminaddr.
Step 3
Install the required packages.
$ sudo apt-get install --yes nullmailer mailutilsStep 4
Set the system mail name. If you are setting up on a home network, you should use home.arpa as the domain name.
Configuring the smarthost
Set the Fastmail server as the smarthost. Use the app password you set in Step 1.
Configuring nullmailerSmarthosts:smtp.fastmail.com smtp --port=587 --auth-login --starttls [email protected] --pass=passwordOkStep 5
Test your configuration with the following command.
$ echo "Test mail from nullmailer on debian.home.arpa to the local root user and forwarded on to Fastmail" | mail -s "Test nullmailer" rootCheck your inbox!
Step 6
You can reconfigure nullmailer at any time by using the following comand.
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Upyo 0.3.0: Multi-provider resilience and deployment flexibility
Upyo 0.3.0 introduces three new transports designed to enhance email delivery capabilities and reliability. The update focuses on multi-provider support and flexible deployment options. The new pool transport, via the `@upyo/pool` package, combines multiple email providers with routing strategies like round-robin, weighted distribution, and priority-based routing, ensuring high availability and cost optimization. Additionally, the `@upyo/resend` package integrates Resend, an email service provider known for its developer-friendly approach and intelligent batch optimization. For those needing self-hosting options, the `@upyo/plunk` package supports Plunk, offering both cloud-hosted and Docker-based self-hosted deployments. These new transports maintain Upyo's consistent API design, ensuring they can be easily integrated into existing workflows. This release expands Upyo's utility by providing more robust and adaptable email delivery solutions.