#Marketcircle fork additions
For iOS we’re using our build.sh script to generate an xcframework, for macOS we’re still using Carthage.
Example workflow:
git clone [email protected]:marketcircle/mailcore2.git
cd mailcore2
git submodule update --init
./build.sh
xcframework successfully written out to: ${APPS_REPO_DIR}/mailcore2/DerivedData/Build/Products/MailCore.xcframework
# Move DerivedData/Build/Products/MailCore.xcframework to
# the relevant Pre-Built-Frameworks folder
#Original Mailcore 2 readme
MailCore 2 provides a simple and asynchronous Objective-C API to work with the e-mail protocols IMAP, POP and SMTP. The API has been redesigned from the ground up. It features:
- POP, IMAP and SMTP support
- RFC822 parser and generator
- Asynchronous APIs
- HTML rendering of messages
- iOS and Mac support
Read instructions for iOS/OSX.
Read instructions for Android.
Read instructions for Windows.
Read instructions for Linux.
Using MailCore 2 is just a little more complex conceptually than the original MailCore. All fetch requests in MailCore 2 are made asynchronously through a queue. What does this mean? Well, let's take a look at a simple example:
MCOIMAPSession *session = [[MCOIMAPSession alloc] init];
[session setHostname:@"imap.gmail.com"];
[session setPort:993];
[session setUsername:@"[email protected]"];
[session setPassword:@"123456"];
[session setConnectionType:MCOConnectionTypeTLS];
MCOIMAPMessagesRequestKind requestKind = MCOIMAPMessagesRequestKindHeaders;
NSString *folder = @"INBOX";
MCOIndexSet *uids = [MCOIndexSet indexSetWithRange:MCORangeMake(1, UINT64_MAX)];
MCOIMAPFetchMessagesOperation *fetchOperation = [session fetchMessagesOperationWithFolder:folder requestKind:requestKind uids:uids];
[fetchOperation start:^(NSError * error, NSArray * fetchedMessages, MCOIndexSet * vanishedMessages) {
//We've finished downloading the messages!
//Let's check if there was an error:
if(error) {
NSLog(@"Error downloading message headers:%@", error);
}
//And, let's print out the messages...
NSLog(@"The post man delivereth:%@", fetchedMessages);
}];
In this sample, we retrieved and printed a list of email headers from an IMAP server. In order to execute the fetch, we request an asynchronous operation object from the MCOIMAPSession
instance with our parameters (more on this later). This operation object is able to initiate a connection to Gmail when we call the start
method. Now here's where things get a little tricky. We call the start
function with an Objective-C block, which is executed on the main thread when the fetch operation completes. The actual fetching from IMAP is done on a background thread, leaving your UI and other processing free to use the main thread.
MailCore 2 is BSD-Licensed.