Please enable JavaScript to view this site.

A-Shell Reference

Navigation: Subroutines > EMAILX

EMAILX Troubleshooting

Scroll Prev Top Next More

Resources available to you for troubleshooting EMAILX problems include the log file, the SMTP response codes, and the A-Shell forum. See below for details.

Log file

The first go-to troubleshooting tool is the log file. Before spending much time on anything else, we highly recommend editing your CFG file to add LOGFILE and LOGLVL entries and then examining the log after the failure. Here's an example for a GMAIL session with LOGLVL=4 ...

26-Mar-18 10:49:04 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] > Opening socket smtp.gmail.com (port 587) Flags=2097153...

26-Mar-18 10:49:04 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2]   [Socket=1]

26-Mar-18 10:49:04 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] < 220 smtp.gmail.com ESMTP o4sm4316117oia.44 - gsmtp

26-Mar-18 10:49:04 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] > EHLO microsabio.com

26-Mar-18 10:49:04 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] < 250-smtp.gmail.com at your service, [174.77.78.50]

250-SIZE 35882577

250-8BITMIME

250-STARTTLS

250-ENHANCEDSTATUSCODES

250-PIPELINING

250-CHUNKING

250 SMTPUTF8

26-Mar-18 10:49:05 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] > STARTTLS

26-Mar-18 10:49:05 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] < 220 2.0.0 Ready to start TLS

26-Mar-18 10:49:05 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] > EHLO microsabio.com

26-Mar-18 10:49:05 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] < 250-smtp.gmail.com at your service, [174.77.78.50]

250-SIZE 35882577

250-8BITMIME

250-AUTH LOGIN PLAIN XOAUTH2 PLAIN-CLIENTTOKEN OAUTHBEARER XOAUTH

250-ENHANCEDSTATUSCODES

250-PIPELINING

250-CHUNKING

250 SMTPUTF826-Mar-18 10:49:06 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] > AUTH PLAIN AGpvYXF1aW4ubWNncmVnb3JAZ21haWwuY29tAE5kc3NvLTk3c2Vh

26-Mar-18 10:49:06 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] < 235 2.7.0 Accepted

26-Mar-18 10:49:06 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] > MAIL FROM: <return@microsabio.com>

26-Mar-18 10:49:06 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] < 250 2.1.0 OK o4sm4316117oia.44 - gsmtp

26-Mar-18 10:49:06 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] > RCPT TO: <jack@microsabio.com>

26-Mar-18 10:49:06 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] < 250 2.1.5 OK o4sm4316117oia.44 - gsmtp

26-Mar-18 10:49:06 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] > DATA

26-Mar-18 10:49:07 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] < 354  Go ahead o4sm4316117oia.44 - gsmtp

26-Mar-18 10:49:07 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] > To: test@microsabio.com...

26-Mar-18 10:49:07 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] > This is a nice little test message....

26-Mar-18 10:49:07 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] > M...

26-Mar-18 10:49:09 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] < 250 2.0.0 OK 1522079347 o4sm4316117oia.44 - gsmtp

26-Mar-18 10:49:09 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] > QUIT

26-Mar-18 10:49:09 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] < 221 2.0.0 closing connection o4sm4316117oia.44 - gsmtp

26-Mar-18 10:49:09 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] > Closing socket #1...

26-Mar-18 10:49:09 [EMAIL5M-joaquin-2] > Connection lock cleared.

 

Each line starts with a timestamp showing the date, time, program-user-job#, then either ">" for outgoing commands or "<" for incoming responses, followed by the command or response text, or a description thereof. Lines with no directory indicator are just reporting internal status (like the socket # on the second line), or are reporting a breakdown in the protocol (such as a timeout). Lines with no timestamp are generally continuations of a multi-line response. Most SMTP responses start with a three-digit numeric code indicating the status (as part of the SMTP protocol - see the table below), and are followed by some non-standard explanatory text. Some messages may contain the word "Status" followed by a number, often negative, indicating a local library error code, as in the following examples...

> Checking for data... [Status=-10057 (A request to send or receive data was disallowed because ...)]

 

> Opening socket mail.optonline.net (port 25) Flags=1... [Status=-10060 (A connection attempt failed because ...)]

 

*** (Status -10049) ***

 

Usually the error code is followed by a description, but if not, you can usually look them up on the Internet. In the case of Windows, search the Internet for "Windows System Errors"; for Linux, try "Linux errno values".

Table of SMTP Response Codes

The following table lists the most common response codes. Note that since the SMTP standard is constantly evolving, new codes are added periodically. These are typically easy to look up on the Internet.

Code

Description

200

(nonstandard success response, see rfc876)

211

System status, or system help reply

214

Help message

220

<domain> Service ready

221

<domain> Service closing transmission channel

250

Requested mail action okay, completed

251

User not local; will forward to <forward-path>

252

Cannot VRFY user, but will accept message and attempt delivery

354

Start mail input; end with <CRLF>.<CRLF>

421

<domain> Service not available, closing transmission channel

450

Requested mail action not taken: mailbox unavailable

451

Requested action aborted: local error in processing

452

Requested action not taken: insufficient system storage

500

Syntax error, command unrecognized

501

Syntax error in parameters or arguments

502

Command not implemented

503

Bad sequence of commands

504

Command parameter not implemented

521

<domain> does not accept mail (see rfc1846)

530

Access denied

534

Authorization failure

550

Requested action not taken: mailbox unavailable

551

User not local; please try <forward-path>

552

Requested mail action aborted: exceeded storage allocation

554

Requested action not taken: mailbox name not allowed

554

Transaction failed

 

Forum

If the log file doesn't reveal the solution, next, try searching the A-Shell Forum for "EMAILX". There should be several threads covering actual problems reported by users.

GMAIL-specific problems

GMAIL may be the most popular outgoing SMTP service, but it's also one of the most persnickety to use. you will find some useful tips relating specifically to GMAIL by searching the A-Shell Forum for "EMAILX GMAIL".