Introduced two new unit tests for SCRAM-SHA1-PLUS authentication with TLS exporter and TLS unique options. These tests ensure proper client creation, connection, and disconnection processes are functioning as expected in online environments.
Replaced direct TLSConnectionState call with error handling for TLS state retrieval. Introduced SCRAM-SHA-256 support in the SMTP authentication process.
Updated method names to more accurately reflect their authentication mechanisms (SCRAM-SHA-1, SCRAM-SHA-1-PLUS, SCRAM-SHA-256, SCRAM-SHA-256-PLUS). Revised corresponding comments to improve clarity and maintain consistency.
Introduce a go.sum.license file to explicitly state the licensing terms for the go.sum file. This ensures proper attribution and compliance with open-source licensing requirements.
Introduce a method to retrieve the TLS connection state of the client's current connection. This method checks if the connection uses TLS and is established, returning appropriate errors otherwise.
Added `golang.org/x/crypto v0.27.0` and `golang.org/x/text v0.18.0` to go.mod. Updated go.sum to reflect these changes for proper dependency management.
Extended SMTP authentication to include SCRAM-SHA-1, SCRAM-SHA-1-PLUS, SCRAM-SHA-256, and SCRAM-SHA-256-PLUS methods. This enhancement provides more secure and flexible authentication options for SMTP clients.
Updated the client creation check to skip test cases if the client cannot be created, instead of marking them as errors. This ensures tests dependent on a successful client creation do not fail unnecessarily but are instead skipped.
Loop iterations in `client_test.go` were reduced from 50 to 20 for efficiency. Added new tests to verify XOAUTH2 authentication support and error handling by simulating SMTP server responses.
Correct the sequence of mutex unlocking in TLSConnectionState to ensure the mutex is always released properly. This prevents potential deadlocks and ensures the function behaves as expected in a concurrent context.
Introduced TestClient_DialSendConcurrent_online and TestClient_DialSendConcurrent_local to validate concurrent sending of messages. These tests ensure that the Client's send functionality works correctly under concurrent conditions, both in an online environment and using a local test server.
Mutex locking was relocated from the Send method in client_120.go and client_119.go to sendSingleMsg in client.go. This ensures thread-safety specifically during the message transmission process.
This commit revises locking mechanism usage around connection operations to avoid potential deadlocks and improve code clarity. Specifically, defer statements were removed and explicit unlocks were added to ensure that mutexes are properly released after critical sections. This change affects several methods, including `Close`, `cmd`, `TLSConnectionState`, `UpdateDeadline`, and newly introduced locking for concurrent data writes and reads in `dataCloser`.
This change ensures that the SetTLSConfig method is thread-safe by adding a mutex lock. The lock is acquired before any changes to the TLS configuration and released afterward to prevent concurrent access issues.
This commit removes the 'connection' field from the 'Client' struct and updates the related test logic accordingly. By using 'smtpClient.HasConnection()' to check for connections, code readability and maintainability are improved. All necessary test cases have been adjusted to reflect this change.
This commit introduces a RWMutex to the Client struct in the smtp package to ensure thread-safe access to shared resources. Critical sections in methods like Close, StartTLS, and cmd are now protected with appropriate locking mechanisms. This change helps prevent potential race conditions, ensuring consistent and reliable behavior in concurrent environments.
Modified the build tags to exclude Go 1.20 and above instead of targeting only Go 1.19. This change ensures the code is compatible with future versions of Go by not restricting it to a specific minor version.
Rearranged and grouped struct fields more logically within Client. Introduced the dialContextFunc and fallbackPort fields to enhance connection flexibility. Minor code style adjustments were also made for better readability.
Added mutex locking in the `Send` method for both `client_120.go` and `client_119.go`. This ensures thread-safe access to the connection checks and prevents potential race conditions.
Reordered and grouped fields in the Client struct for clarity. The reorganization separates logical groups of fields, making it easier to understand and maintain the code. This includes proper grouping of TLS parameters, DSN options, and debug settings.
Add mutex locking for client connections to ensure thread safety. Introduce `HasConnection` method to check active connections and `UpdateDeadline` method to handle timeout updates. Refactor connection handling in `checkConn` and `tls` methods accordingly.
Remove `connpool.go` and `connpool_test.go`. This eliminates the connection pool feature from the codebase, including associated functionality and tests. The connection pool feature is much to complex and doesn't provide the benefits expected by the concurrency feature
Updated the test name from `TestConnPool_GetContextTimeout` to `TestConnPool_GetContextCancel` to better reflect its functionality. This change improves test readability and maintains consistency with the context usage in the test.
Updated the Get method in connpool.go and its usage in tests to include a context argument for better cancellation and timeout handling. Removed the redundant dialContext field from the connection pool struct and added a new test to validate context timeout behavior.
This commit introduces two new tests: `TestConnPool_Close` and `TestConnPool_Concurrency`. The former ensures the proper closing of connection pool resources, while the latter checks for concurrency issues by creating and closing multiple connections in parallel.
Introduces `TestPoolConn_MarkUnusable` to ensure the pool maintains its integrity when a connection is marked unusable. This test validates that the connection pool size adjusts correctly after marking a connection as unusable and closing it.
Removed redundant fmt.Printf error print statements for connection read and write errors. This cleans up the test output and makes error handling more streamlined.
Add error checks to Close() calls in connpool_test.go to ensure connection closures are handled properly, with descriptive error messages. Update comment in connpool.go to improve clarity on the source of code inspiration.
This commit introduces a new test, `TestPoolConn_Close`, to verify that connections are correctly closed and returned to the pool. It sets up a simple SMTP server, creates a connection pool, tests writing to and closing connections, and checks the pool size to ensure proper behavior.
Added new test cases `TestConnPool_Get_Type` and `TestConnPool_Get` to verify connection pool operations. These tests ensure proper connection type and handling of pool size after connection retrieval and usage.
The check for io.EOF and the associated print statement were unnecessary because the loop breaks on any error. This change simplifies the error handling logic in the `client_test.go` file and avoids redundant code.
Introduced unit tests for the connection pool to ensure robust functionality. Also, renamed the Len method to Size in the Pool interface and its implementation for better clarity and consistency.
Introduce ErrClosed and ErrNilConn errors for better error handling. Implement Close and MarkUnusable methods for improved connection lifecycle management. Add put method to return connections to the pool or close them if necessary.
Introduced context support and enhanced error handling in connpool.go. Added detailed comments for better maintainability and introduced a wrapper for net.Conn to manage connection close behavior. The changes improve the robustness and clarity of the connection pool's operation.
Introduce connPool struct and implement the Pool interface. Add error handling for invalid pool capacity settings and provide a constructor for creating new connection pools with specified capacities.