I'm fairly new to UNIX, coming from a Windows background.
I've created an instance on Amazon EC2 and installed apache, PHP and MySQl.
i've successfully uploaded the files for a PHP website.
Everything works well, except i have a problem sending mails from a contact form.
i went through the AWS tutorial here: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/ses/latest/DeveloperGuide/send-using-smtp-php.html
i successfully installed composer and ran it in Putty and i see the vendor directory is created and the phpmailer files are downloaded.
site structure looks like this:
html
test_mail.php
--vendor
----bin
----composer
----phpmailer
----autoload.php
I've tried using the sample email script included in the tutorial which looks something like this :
// If necessary, modify the path in the require statement below to refer to the
// location of your Composer autoload.php file.
require 'vendor/autoload.php';
use PHPMailer\PHPMailer\PHPMailer;
// Instantiate a new PHPMailer
$mail = new PHPMailer;
// Tell PHPMailer to use SMTP
$mail->isSMTP();
$mail->SMTPDebug = 2;
// Replace sender#example.com with your "From" address.
// This address must be verified with Amazon SES.
$mail->setFrom('sender#example.com', 'Sender Name');
but i get the following error:
Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Class 'PHPMailer\PHPMailer\PHPMailer' not found in /var/www/testSite/html/test_mail.php:10 Stack trace: #0 {main} thrown in /var/www/testSite/html/test_mail.php on line 10
line 10 is
$mail = new PHPMailer;
so i'm stumped as to what the problem is.
The required PHPMailer files seem to have been created correctly by composer, and the path to 'vendor\autoload.php' should be correct.
is it possible there's something in the server setup I've missed?
any suggestions gratefully received.
David
AWS Does not have autoload anymore, and PHPMailer should be initialized as follows:
<?php
require("/home/site/libs/PHPMailer-master/src/PHPMailer.php"); require("/home/site/libs/PHPMailer-master/src/SMTP.php");
$mail = new PHPMailer\PHPMailer\PHPMailer();
$mail->IsSMTP(); // enable SMTP
$mail->SMTPDebug = 1; // debugging: 1 = errors and messages, 2 = messages only
$mail->SMTPAuth = true; // authentication enabled
$mail->SMTPSecure = 'ssl'; // secure transfer enabled REQUIRED for Gmail
$mail->Host = "smtp.gmail.com";
$mail->Port = 465; // or 587
$mail->IsHTML(true);
$mail->Username = "xxxxxx";
$mail->Password = "xxxx";
$mail->SetFrom("xxxxxx#xxxxx.com");
$mail->Subject = "Test";
$mail->Body = "hello";
$mail->AddAddress("xxxxxx#xxxxx.com");
if(!$mail->Send()) {
echo "Mailer Error: " . $mail->ErrorInfo;
} else {
echo "Message has been sent";
} ?>
Thank you Lawrence for pointing me in the right direction...
The problem was, as you pointed out, with the version of phpmailer being used.
when i changed the composer.json for this project to
{
"require": {
"phpmailer/phpmailer":"~6.0"
}
}
and ran the composer update my scripts now run (mostly) successfully.
It looks like the example given in the AWS docs is incorrect as it says to use phpmailer 5.2, but the script it gives only works in version 6 onwards.
thank you!
David
I'm running Windows 10 Pro with IIS hosting PHP 5.6.11. In the past, an older version of PHPMail worked perfectly for sending emails via gmail in this type of windows/IIS/PHP setup. At some point in the past it quit working. So now I'm using the very latest PHPMail library as of January 6, 2018. Here is my simple example taken mostly from this gmail example.
use PHPMailer\PHPMailer\PHPMailer;
use PHPMailer\PHPMailer\Exception;
require 'src/Exception.php';
require 'src/PHPMailer.php';
require 'src/SMTP.php';
$mail = new PHPMailer;
$mail->isSMTP();
$mail->SMTPDebug = 2;
$mail->Host = "smtp.gmail.com";
$mail->Port = 587; // TLS only
$mail->SMTPSecure = "tls"; // ssl is depracated
$mail->SMTPAuth = true;
$mail->Username = $smtpUsername;
$mail->Password = $smtpPassword;
$mail->setFrom($emailFrom, $emailFromName);
$mail->addAddress($emailTo, $emailToName);
$mail->Subject = 'PHPMailer GMail SMTP test';
$mail->msgHTML("test body");
$mail->AltBody = 'HTML messaging not supported';
if(!$mail->send()){
echo "Mailer Error: " . $mail->ErrorInfo;
}else{
echo "Message sent!";
}
Here is the culprit:
Connection failed. Error #2: stream_socket_enable_crypto(): SSL operation failed with code 1. OpenSSL Error messages:error:14090086:SSL routines:SSL3_GET_SERVER_CERTIFICATE:certificate verify failed [.....\PHPMailer\src\SMTP.php line 405]
How can I solve this?
UPDATE: I found the true source of the problem and updated the error message in this post, but I don't know how to solve it.
There are many case you have to check like
open SSL in enable using you php ini
you have to check your firewall that you are successfully able to access gmail server.
etc
you can find more solution and cases here
Change below value in your code.
$mail->Port = 587;
$mail->SMTPSecure = 'tls';
$mail->SMTPDebug = 2; //Get Error Details
Hope that's work.
I have tried everything that have been written on Stackoverflow but no luck. At last I omitted the line:
$mail->isSMTP();
Of course it is not a solution but in my case I had to solve the problem and it just did it. Now I'm using php's original mail() function. By the way I tried to use Gmail and Hotmail SMTP services. I don't want anyone to spend so much time on this like me.
Everything was solved when I installed a correct certificate in IIS.
The other day I was experiencing some problems with my GoDaddy hosted site. I called their tech support, and the person that I spoke with suggested that my problems were related to the fact that I was on a Windows box and would be better served on a Linux box. Having no opinion on this, I agreed and they switched me over.
In the wake of that transition, my PHPMailer functionality has deserted me. I have had this working for months, so I know that my settings are accurate. I have confirmed with GoDaddy that the account I am trying to send out of has not changed from their perspective. No changes have been made on the user side (like a new password). Bottom line, the only thing that is different is that my site is now hosted on a Linux server. That's it.
So I assume that my PHPMailer difficulties must be related to that, since it is too much of a coincidence that a script that has worked for months fails at the exact moment that the server transition occurs. But why? I spent an hour with their tech support, and they see nothing wrong with the server settings. We verified my settings (just for fun). Everything looks good, but when I send an email, I get this error:
SMTP -> ERROR: Failed to connect to server: Connection refused (111)SMTP Connect() failed.
There are many posts about this type of error, and almost all of them relate to people getting set up for the first time who have mis-entered settings or omitted settings. However, I KNOW that my settings are complete and accurate since I've been using them successfully for months. I'll post them here just for completeness:
$mail = new PHPMailer();
$mail->IsSMTP(); //telling the class to use SMTP
$mail->isHTML(true);
$mail->Host = "smtpout.secureserver.net"; //also tried "relay-hosting.secureserver.net"
$mail->WordWrap = 50;
$mail->SMTPAuth = true;
$mail->SMTPSecure = "ssl";
$mail->Port = 465;
$mail->Username = "example#email.com";
$mail->Password = *******;
$mail->Subject = "Test Email";
$mail->SMTPDebug = 1;
Does anyone have any ideas why this might be happening? Is there some server setting that the tech support people might not be aware of, like maybe in my php.ini file? The guy I worked with did his best to help me out, but he may just not be aware of something.
Any help is appreciated. Let me know if there is any other information I can provide. Thanks!
EDIT: I should also mention some of the other attempts that I made. I get the same result no matter what.
1) TLS with port 587
2) Without SSL using ports 25, 80, and 3535.
2) My own gmail address modifying the server, username, password, etc.
I'm on GoDaddy on a Linux like #surfbird0713. On my 32nd attempt, the following worked for me as well:
$mail2->Host = localhost;
//$mail2->SMTPAuth = false;
//$mail2->Username = 'xxxx#xxxxxx.com';
//$mail2->Password = '*******';
//$mail2->SMTPSecure = 'tls';
//$mail2->Port = 465;
I was previously trying with the username, login, port, etc. When I commented out all those, and just went with localhost it worked.
As it seems this is a continuing problem, let me add my own experience.
Our website uses PHPMailer and the site is hosted on a GoDaddy linux server. The settings that seemed to be correct (according to everything I could find on SO and the goDaddy support site) were as follows:
SMTP_SERVER: smtpout.secureserver.net (or alternatively relay-hosting.secureserver.net)
SMTP_PORT: 465 //or 3535 or 80 or 25
SMTP_AUTH: true //always
SMTP_Secure: 'ssl' //only if using port 465
After spending 6+ hours trying every variation of ports(25, 3535, 4655), servers relay-hosting.secureserver.net,smtpout.secureserver.net:[port], etc.), usernames, passwords,etc. I called goDaddy. Another 40 minutes later, it was revealed that:
1) the "workspace" email accounts are being retired. That's important because if you have an email account with goDaddy today, you likely have a Workspace account. This is, according to the tech support rep, hosted separately from you linux account.
2) goDaddy is moving toward cPanel email accounts. Hurray! Time table? "...in the next 2 to 3 years!"
3) I moved our accounts from Workspace to cPanel accounts while I was on the phone with the rep. Really easy to do.
4) After you change your email accounts (including editing your MX records) to a cPanel email (vs. a "workspace" email) the appropriate settings for a web-form email using PHPMailer are:
SMTP_SERVER: localhost //(and I mean literally: "localhost"- in place of smtp.secureserver.net and relay-hosting.secureserver.net, etc.)
... and everything else (as above) the same...
The webform I built with PHPMailer worked perfectly after this change!
Use your cPaneL email account login (username) and password in the PHPMailer setup and your web emails will work seamlessly!
An added bonus is that webmail (does anybody use this anymore?) can be accessed at [yourdoman]\webmail. No more cryptic url's to remember! And the accounts cand be IMAP or POP!
Admittedly, this means you must use goDaddy's cPanel email accounts, but getting the webform to work flawslessly with PHPMailer was the real reward!
After a lot of frustration, this also worked for me.
include("includes/class.phpmailer.php");
date_default_timezone_set('UTC');
define('SMTP_HOST','relay-hosting.secureserver.net');
define('SMTP_PORT',25);**
define('SMTP_USERNAME','me#aravindnc.com');
define('SMTP_PASSWORD','me123');
define('SMTP_AUTH',false);
$email = 'aravind_n_c#yahoo.co.in';
$firstName = 'Aravind';
$mail = new PHPMailerR();
$mail->IsSMTP();
$mail->SMTPDebug = 1;
$mail->SMTPAuth = SMTP_AUTH;
$mail->Host = SMTP_HOST;
$mail->Port = 25;
$mail->Username = SMTP_USERNAME;
$mail->Password = SMTP_PASSWORD;
$mail->SetFrom(SMTP_USERNAME,'AravindNC.IN');
$mail->AddReplyTo(SMTP_USERNAME,"AravindNC.IN");
$mail->Subject = "Welcome to AravindNC.IN";
$mail->AltBody = "To view the message, please use an HTML compatible email viewer!";
$mail->MsgHTML('This is a test.');
$mail->AddAddress($email, 'Aravind NC');
$mail->Send();
?>
these will be your SMTP settings for GoDaddy:
require("PHPMailer-master/PHPMailerAutoload.php");
$mail = new PHPMailer();
$mail->IsSMTP();
$mail->SMTPDebug = 2;
$mail->From = "yourmail#ddd.com";
$mail->FromName = "name";
$mail->Host = "localhost";
$mail->SMTPAuth = false;
$mail->SMTPSecure = false;
$mail->SMTPAutoTLS = false;
I have been experiencing this problem for many weeks. Finally, got it resolved.
First, I'd to state the causes of problem (as I experienced it).
GoDaddy allows only port 25, 465, 80 to get out. So, you cannot reach any SMTP server that are not using any of those 3 ports.
But if you are using SMTP from GMAIL per example, or any other replay server (especially from Bell Canada, on port 465), then any relay request from GoDaddy will be blocked - hence you will see the Connection Refused (111). Yes, they are competitors in hosting services... so draw your own conclusion on when this problem will get solved between them.
Worse, when you send an email from relay-hosting.secureserver.net provided by GoDaddy, you are facing a major inconvenience of long queuing that could take a couple of minutes to get the email out. Worse yet, people with Bell Canada (or Bell affiliates') email account will not see email from this relay server - the email does not even get to your spam box! As the email is completely blocked by Bell (their excuse = too much spams from GoDaddy).
So, recently I did this and it worked fine for me. If you have a hosting service with GoDaddy, then register an email account. Then using that email account, example mywebmail#mydomain.com, do this with PHPMail:
$mail = new PHPMailer();
$mail->IsSMTP();
$mail->Host = "smtpout.secureserver.net";
$mail->Username = "mywebmail#mydomain.com"; /*Substitute with your real email*/
$mail->Password = "myverylongpassword"; /*Substitute with your real password*/
$mail->SMTPAuth = true;
$mail->Port = 80;
Then do your regular PHPMailing things... This works great for me. I hope it does the same for you.
Earlier to make it work, the GoDaddy SMTP host was:
$mail->Host = 'smtpout.secureserver.net';
Then GoDaddy SMTP host was changed to:
$mail->Host = 'relay-hosting.secureserver.net';
But Now GoDaddy SMTP host which works properly is:
$mail->Host = 'localhost';
Also you can keep “SMTPAuth = false” and “Username/Password = Blank”. It doesn’t matters if you are using a GoDaddy Hosting Email or GoDaddy cPanel Email.
The main line of code is, so please make sure you include it:
$mail->SMTPAutoTLS = false;
You can copy whole of below code, it will work exactly as it is:
if(isset($_POST["submit"])){
include('phpmailer/PHPMailerAutoload.php');
//Create a new PHPMailer instance
$mail = new PHPMailer;
$mail->SMTPDebug = 0; // Enable verbose debug output
//SMTP settings start
$mail->isSMTP(); // Set mailer to use SMTP
$mail->Host = 'localhost'; // Specify main and backup SMTP servers
$mail->SMTPAuth = false; // Enable SMTP authentication
$mail->Username = ''; // SMTP username
$mail->Password = ''; // SMTP password
$mail->SMTPAutoTLS = false;
$mail->SMTPSecure = false; // Enable TLS encryption, `ssl` also accepted
$mail->Port = 25;
//Sender
$mail->setFrom('fromemail#domain.com');
//Receiver
$mail->addAddress('yourinbox#domain.com');
//Email Subject & Body
$mail->Subject = 'New Form Submission';
//Form Fields
$mail->Body = '
Name = '$name'
Email = '$email'
Subject = '$subject'
Message = '$message'
';
$mail->isHTML(true); // Set email format to HTML
//Send the message, check for errors
if (!$mail->send()) {
echo 'Message could not be sent.';
echo 'Mailer Error: ' . $mail->ErrorInfo;
}
else {
echo 'Form Submitted Successfully.';
// code for saving in data in database can be added here
}
I have same problem But I tried this
$mail->SMTPAuth = false;
and HOSTNAME: relay-hosting.secureserver.net
And Bingoooooo its working
please just do once this setting in SMTP
GoDaddy/Linux (cPanel)/PHPMailer
require_once("../include/PHPMailer-master/PHPMailerAutoload.php");
$mail = new PHPMailer();
$mail->isSMTP();
$mail->Host = "a2plcpnXXXXX.prod.iad2.secureserver.net";
$mail->SMTPDebug = 2;
$mail->SMTPAuth = true;
$mail->Username = "your username";
$mail->Password = "your password";
$mail->SMTPSecure = "tls";
$mail->Port = 587;
Feel free to use whatever email/name you want for the $mail->From and $mail->FromName values. Hope this helps.
According to Godaddy, replace
$mail->Host = "smtpout.secureserver.net"; //also tried "relay-hosting.secureserver.net"
with
$mail->Host = "smtp.secureserver.net"; //also tried "relay-hosting.secureserver.net"
It worked for me.
Using some of the advice above I was able to get a turnkey bootstrap site up and running with email on shared hosting on GoDaddy.
I made an AJAX call to email.php which contained:
<?php
require 'PHPMailerAutoload.php';
if ($_POST) {
$name = $_POST['contactName'];
$email = $_POST['contactEmail'];
$message = $_POST['contactMessage'];
/* Don't touch */
$mail = new PHPMailer();
$mail->isSMTP();
$mail->Host = "relay-hosting.secureserver.net";
$mail->SMTPAuth = false;
$mail->setFrom($email, $name);
/* end */
/* Configure the address the email will be sent to */
$mail->addAddress('administrator#stackchampion.com', 'Adam InTae Gerard');
$mail->Subject = 'Re: StackChampion Inquest';
/* This is forwarded through a GoDaddy forwarding account */
$mail->Body = $message;
if (!$mail->send()) {
echo "Mailer Error: " . $mail->ErrorInfo;
} else {
echo "Message sent!";
}
}
?>
I put together a working demo on GitHub available here:
https://github.com/Thoughtscript/wp_postlib_godaddy_php_emailer
That's free to use and opensource but the relevant code is listed above. There are apparently a lot of problems with their SMTP servers - I've found that you can bypass that by using their offered relay servers which don't require authentication though they can still be associated with one of your registered emails acounts.
Hope that helps somebody!
Cheers!
After wrestling with this issue for a couple days and getting it to work I thought I would update this thread for 2017. Hopefully I can save someone a few wasted hours. I am hosted on Godaddy with cpanel. It was the SMTPAutoTLS setting I finally ran across and tried that was the missing piece. The error I was receiving is as follows:
PHP Warning: stream_socket_enable_crypto(): Peer certificate CN=*.prod.iad2.secureserver.net' did not match expected CN=localhost' in /home/username/public_html/classes/PHPMailer/class.smtp.php on line 369
Mailer Error: SMTP connect() failed. https://github.com/PHPMailer/PHPMailer/wiki/Troubleshooting
The following are the PHPMailer settings that worked for me.
$mail->isSMTP();
$mail->Host = 'localhost';
$mail->Port = 25;
$mail->SMTPSecure = false;
$mail->SMTPAutoTLS = false;
$mail->SMTPAuth = false;
Well, I got this resolved, but not in a good way. After exhausting everything I could think of, I just threw my hands up and told GoDaddy to switch me back to the Windows server. As soon as they did that, the problem disappeared. Since I don't really care what type of server I'm on, this result is satisfactory, but hardly satisfying.
So, my advice for any GoDaddy customers who believe that they have PHPMailer set up correctly but can't make it work is to find out if you are on a Linux server. It looks to me like GoDaddy has their Linux servers set up to block this type of mail transaction. I can't say that definitively, since I only believe that because I failed at making it work. But I can clearly say that my PHPMailer setup was accurate, at least with Windows.
Maybe this will help save someone some time and frustration. If anyone has a better idea, please post.
if on your hosting have a own email server, your email server using the following ports 25,465,587.
Settings for GoDaddy:
$mail->isSMTP();
$mail->Host = localhost;
$mail->SMTPAuth = true;
$mail->Username = 'example#gmail.com';
$mail->Password = 'password';
//$mail->SMTPSecure = 'tls';
//$mail->Port = 587;
On the other servers need to create a mailbox with your domain:
$mail->isSMTP();
$mail->Host = localhost;
$mail->SMTPAuth = true;
$mail->Username = 'example#yourdomain.com';
$mail->Password = 'password';
//$mail->SMTPSecure = 'tls';
//$mail->Port = 587;
Update for Jan 2015: I just had to solve this exact problem. You need to have GoDaddy linux hosting with cPanel email accounts:
In the email accounts section, next to each email address in a dropdown, click the option to 'configure email client'.
On the next page, scroll down to 'Manual Settings'. Here you'll see that GoDaddy now creates a bespoke incoming/outgoing servers for each email address. So use the outgoing server, SSL, auth:true, port:465, email/password.
Hope that helps.
Change this:
$mail->Host = 'smtpout.secureserver.net:465';
$mail->SMTPSecure = "ssl";
To this:
$mail->Host = 'smtpout.secureserver.net:25';
and it worked for me!
If using cPanel and WPForms in WordPress
What helped me is to create email address from cPanel
and use its settings from Manual Settings section either with SSL or Non SSL
Godaddy is s nightmare.
If you are using an older work space email account and are unfamiliar with cpanel try this
require '/home/content/94/8357694/html/SHTECH/server/PHPMailer.php';
use PHPMailer\PHPMailer\PHPMailer;
function sendmail($to,$subject,$message,$name)
{
define('SMTP_HOST','relay-hosting.secureserver.net');
define('SMTP_PORT',25);
define('SMTP_AUTH',true);
$mail = new PHPMailer();
$mail->IsSMTP();
$mail -> SMTPDebug = 1;
$mail->Host = "smtpout.secureserver.net";
$mail->SMTPAuth = SMTP_AUTH;
$mail->Port = 80;
$mail->Username = "info#signalhilltechnology.com";
$mail->Password = "allen1";
//$mail->SMTPSecure = 'ssl';
$mail->SetFrom('info#signalhilltechnology.com', 'Cagney');
$mail->AddReplyTo("info#signalhilltechnology.com","Cagney");
$mail->Subject = $subject;
$body = $message;
$mail->AltBody = "To view the message, please use an HTML compatible email viewer!";
$mail->MsgHTML($body);
$address = $to;
$mail->AddAddress($address, $name);
if(!$mail->Send()) {
return 0;
} else {
return 1;
}
}
Just had this problem, contacted GoDaddy and they switched my MX over from Local to Remote and it solved the problem instantly! Just a heads up for anyone that is still experiencing this issue.
Updated 8-25-2019 For those seeking an answer to the proper way to set up Rd-Mailform and PHPmailer for Godaddy.
First off make sure that you have the latest files from Github.
Second here are the CORRECT settings for the Cpanel Email with SMTP and GODaddy
Edit the following file: rd-mailform.config.json (if your not using this file, then hard code in rd-mailform.php)
File to edit is:rd-mailform.config.json
~~~
"useSmtp": false,
"host": "localhost",
"port": 25,
"username": "youraccountname#yourdoamin.com",
"password": "yourpasswordforthataccount",
"recipientEmail": "youremailaddress"
~~~
Now after you have that edit open rd-mailform.php and edit the folling lines to be as follows:
// Whether to use SMTP authentication
$mail->SMTPAuth = false;
$mail->SMTPAutoTLS = false;
$mail->SMTPSecure = "tls";
That should work for all Godaddy servers using rd-mailform with phpmailer
-D
After hours of dirty work I realized that with go daddy, the configure mail client host details given for both SSL and TLS do not work. For this reason you have to copy part of the Cpanel url as your host.
**NB:**Make sure the url is what is resolved after typing your server ip and port on the search bar e.g 0:0:0:0:2083
The configuration should look something like
$smtp = Mail::factory('smtp', array (
'host' =>'2ueywefewueyuyeyryruw.prod.xxx.secureserver.net',
'port' => '587', 'auth' => true, 'username' => "youremail",
'password' => "yourEmailPassword", 'secure' => 'ssl'));
you can also refer to this link here
GoDaddy Server SMTP Connection Refused.
Bigrock
$mail->Port =587;// SMTP ser*vers
GoDaddy
$mail->Port =25;// SMTP ser*vers