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How do I receive email and process it in a web application
I simply was just thinking and I thought, wouldn't it be cool if my users could email us their posts and the server will post it for them.
So, John Smith might email "Wassup everyone" to post#mysite.com and it would post it for him?
Is there some kind of service that will do this, certain php function?
I'm just simply enquiring...
"One way to process the incoming messages is to configure the local mail server to start a PHP script when a message arrives on a given mailbox.
To achieve this, you need to learn specific details of how to configure your mail server because each mail server works in a different way.
For instance, if you use qmail mail server, you need to setup a .qmail file associated to the e-mail address that you want to handle. The .qmail file must contain the command that will be executed to start the PHP script that will handle the incoming messages.
...
An alternative solution to process received e-mail messages using PHP is to associate the incoming addresses to mailboxes accessible using POP3 or IMAP client scripts.
In this case, the messages are received and stored by the mail server, so they can be processed later by applications.
PHP scripts can use existing POP3 or IMAP client classes or extensions to regularly poll the mail server and retrieve the messages to perform the necessary processing tasks.
To perform this periodic poll, you can use the PHP CLI version command to start a PHP script by adding a task to cron on Linux and other Unix like systems, or the task scheduler on Windows.
Depending on how important the incoming messages may be, you may adjust the frequency of execution of the mailbox polling script."
http://www.phpclasses.org/blog/package/2/post/1-Process-incoming-email-messages-using-PHP.html
Not a php function, but there are libs that allow you easily reading email from server-side. The latest I saw was in Apache zetaComponents http://incubator.apache.org/zetacomponents/ . But I would prefer something more real than PHP for acting as a daemon, reading mail in every N timeframe and putting contents to DB.
Related
Is there any tutorials out on the web that would show how to setup a program that would use piping, PHP and MySQL to setup email where replies would be sent into the database, or something similar to this?
Thank you in advance for any direction in finding out more about this.
PHP and MySQL are both mutually exclusive, and even more so from an email server.
To use PHP to receive email and insert it to a MySQL Database, you would have to write PHP code that is going to connect to a POP3/IMAP box and receive email directly and read new emails, subsequently inserting them into the database for handling them as you wish.
Luckily for you there are a whole host of mail related extensions for PHP. Note that you will specifically want to look at the set of imap_* methods (despite the name, they also work for POP3, etc).
I know, you could write your own SMTP server in PHP but who on earth wants to do that?
You can write own script which will check (via IMAP or POP3) for new e-mails in e-mail box and will store some e-mails directly into database.
Writing PHP CLI scripts is easy but there are some differencies between operation systems. See http://www.php.net/manual/en/features.commandline.introduction.php
The script can be periodically triggered via CRON or any other similar mechanism.
I assume I will need to point MX records at my server (LAMP), -- what processes the incoming e-mail message?
Are there any existing PHP libraries to do this?
You don't want to use PHP as a mail server. You've got two options:
Set up a classic email server (postfix, sendmail, exim, etc) that delivers new messages to a local mailbox. Use IMAP or POP to access that mailbox from PHP, and pull messages out of it. Alternatively, this same method may be used with (virtually) any remote mail service as well, thus relieving you of the duty of administering a mail server. (Which you'll likely find to be not worth it for the sake of one mailbox.) This method would usually be run via cron every few minutes, so you're not going to get "instant" activation if that's a requirement.
Set up a classic email server (postfix, sendmail, exim, etc) and use procmail or similar to intercept messages at delivery time, and pipe them to a PHP script. This method will fire the script the instant the email arrives, so you'll have no lag time like in #1. However, it's more difficult to configure (especially if you haven't maintained a mail server before) and won't work with most external hosted email services.
Use a pipe alias to receive the emails.
I would recommend you to do processing in Perl (python is also ok, but Perl has very similar syntax to PHP), which is much more suitable for the task. You can also find a lot of libraries through CPAN there.
http://search.cpan.org/~rjbs/Email-Simple-2.100/lib/Email/Simple.pm
I'm thinking about how to handle sending large amounts of email from my web applications, and whether there are any best practices for doing so. StackOverflow is already labeling this as 'subjective', which it may be to an extent, but I need to know the most successful way to implement this system, or whether any standardized approach exists.
In my webapp, there are users who are heads of groups of 1 to 10,000 users. This user must be able to email send a message to all of these users through my system. Therefore, my system is responsible for sending up to 10,000 emails to individual users for each group head.
As far as I can tell, there is no rate limit in GMail for sending messages to individuals (although there is a 500 recipient max).
Right now, my current setup is:
When a message is sent through the system, it enters an email queue.
A cron script grabs messages from the queue every few minutes, and sends out those emails.
All email is taking place through GMail's SMTP server.
The actual application doing the mailing is PHPMailer.
This setup, as the user base grows, will probably not suffice. The questions I have are:
Should I be using a local SMTP server instead?
Should I use a mail binary on the local machine instead? I this case, I could probably skip the queue altogether?
Is there an accepted way to do this?
Thanks!
Google App Engine
I would write this in Google app engine (python) because:
It scales well.
It has a good email api.
It has a taskqueue with a good api to access it.
Because python is a real nice language.
It is (relatively) cheap.
PHP
If I would implement it in PHP I would
Find yourself a good SMTP server which allows you to sent this volume of mails because Gmail will not allow you to sent this kind of volume. I am for sure that this will cost you some money.
Find yourself a decent PHP email library to sent messages with like for example PHPMailer like you said.
Use a message queue like for example beanstalkd to put email messages in queue and sent email asynchronously. First because with this the user will have snappier page load. Second with a message queue like beanstalkd you can regulate speed of sending better which will prevent from overloading your pc with work. You will need to have ssh access to the server to compile(install) beanstalkd. You can find beanstalkd at beanstalkd
You would also need ssh access to run a PHP script in the background which will process the message queue. You can find a beanstalkd-client at php beanstalkd-client
from php/apache/webpage
This is the page from which you will sent messages out to user. From this page you will sent message to beanstalkd by coding something in the lines of this:
// register Pheanstalk class loader
require_once('pheanstalk_init.php');
$pheanstalk = new Pheanstalk('127.0.0.1');
$message = ""; // This would contain your message
$pheanstalk->put(json_encode($message);
You have to put messages in message queue using put command
From long running PHP script in background:
The code would look something like this:
// register Pheanstalk class loader
require_once('pheanstalk_init.php');
$pheanstalk = new Pheanstalk('127.0.0.1');
while(true) {
$job = $pheanstalk->reserve();
$email = json_decode($job->getData());
// Sent email using PHP mailer.
$pheanstalk->delete($job);
}
Like I am saying it is possible with both PHP and Google app engine but I would go for app engine because it is easier to implement.
With an email count as "high" as 10.000 a day, I wouldn't rely on GMail (or any other) SMTP. Not that they can't handle it, obviously they can handle A LOT more. But they possibly don't want to.
Having a local SMTP server is IMO the way to go :
It's pretty easy to set up (just DON'T let people use it without a strong authent scheme)
Most modern MTA handle sending queues very well
You won't have to deal with GMail (or others) deciding to block your account someday for quota reasons
Gmail and Google Apps limits you to around 500 emails a day. I'm not sure how that combines with the 500 recipient max, but if you want to send 10 000 emails you'll probably want to find another mail server. I personally use a local server or the ISP or datacenter's SMTP.
If you are sending that many emails, I would recommend using the queue so the user's isn't sitting there waiting for the email to be sent.
Be very careful that your domain doesn't get blacklisted as a spam domain. If it does, you can expect most of your emails to be blocked, support, sales, etc. Which could in turn be very expensive.
You may instead want to use a service like AWeber. Not only are they setup to handle these amounts of emails, but they can probably give you more metrics than you can implement on your own.
I'm not sure if it's publishe anywhere, but from experience I can tell you that Gmail will put a fifteen minute or so freeze on your account if you start sending hundreds of messages at a time. This happened to me last week. I think you should host your own SMTP server. Using the mail() function often will put your mail in someone's spam folder.
Just install Postfix on the local machine, or a machine on the same LAN for maximum access speeds. Make sure it is well secured from the outside, and quickly accessible from the inside.
Then code your PHP script to directly inject the emails to the Postfix queue. That shall dramatically increase the processing speed of mail delivery.
Is there a way to configure a server or a script to execute a php script when an email is received?
In theory this could be extended to other protocols, such as XMPP or SMS, etc.
What I have in mind is a user could send a message to checking-in#example.org and this would trigger a script which would then do whatever needed to be done, either irrelevant to the message (an automated message that gets sent whenever some other even occurs, like a server having issues) or related to the message (like it could store the subject in a database that other users could view as an RSS feed).
I know that most list-serve software have a means of sending commands (like unsubscribe), but I'm not sure how complicated the process is and if it is feasible to have something like this on a server-script level.
Would this need to occur at the IMAP/SMTP level, or could it be done closer to the script or HTTP server?
Just to give some context, one of the things I'm considering is a message-based clock in server for one of my work sites. Users could IM/email/text that they are at their scheduled location and this could trigger a script that would update a DB, rather then send the managers a direct message they need to log. This would just be one option (a web-based method is already in the works), but we want to make it as platform/protocol independent as possible. But if we can achieve that, we can look at implementing it for many other day-to-day needs.
Another way of asking might be: is there a way to have "discovery" of users from a server-script app or does something need to be doing a constant check to relevant sources to see such changes?
If you control your own machine you can configure it to pipe the e-mail through a filter. Simplest would be to setup a new account and setup a .forward or alias
The following examples are for Sendmail, but (all?) Unix e-mail programs offer a similar service.
Setting up an alias (option 1)
Look in the directory /etc on your server for your alias file. Add the line:
script: "|/path/toyourscript/pipe.php"
Using a .forward file (option 2)
Create a .forward file in your main home directory.
"|/path/toyourscript/pipe.php"
or:
myemail#example.com,"|/path/toyourscript/pipe.php"
If you are on shared hosting then most hosting providers also provide the possiblity to "pipe" e-mails received to a particular account through a script instead of storing them in a mailbox. Check the CPanel setup.
Use a cron job to check for emails through a pop3 interface. If an "interesting" mail is found, run your php script.
Note that the cron script can be in PHP too.
As jldupont said, it is easy to do ith php itself, simple reading the smtp continuosly with a cronjob.
Otherwise, you could use a daemon, in python for example.
Both ways allow you to do an important thing: check if the sender of the email is a your user (you have the users in a db, right?), or a spambot (nomatter what kind of anti-spam you use, soon or later, checking-in#example.org will be full of spam)
We've built a web service that needs to check constantly for email messages. Basically, an user sends us an email, and the server should make actions based on that email. We could use a crontab PHP script that checks for new messages every minute, with POP. But that's kind of offensive to the popserver and not very efficient (1min is too long).
But, I've read about PUSH email using IMAP around mobile devices. In my case is not a mobile device but a webserver.
Can I push an email to my webserver and have it execute a PHP script? We're using GMail as POP/SMTP/IMAP server.
EDIT 1 from the answers, we figured out:
there must be a 24/7 running process (daemon) on my webserver checking for emails
this daemon may communicate with Gmail using: i) POP with NOOP coomand or ii) IMAP with IDLE command
What's the best? POP or IMAP? Google seems to invite more the use of IMAP.
I don't want to overuse gmail (what's their 'fair use' for checking email? every 10secs?
If you want to use postfix as your MTA you can alias an email address to any executable like this. It really isn't that difficult to setup on a *nix box...
I've no experience with IMAP, but had to do the same thing. If I were you, I'd install Postfix and use the pipe command (basically lets you run an arbitrary script) to invoke a small http client that parses the email and sends it to your server.
You can replace postfix with whatever MTA you'd like, of course. The point is: don't implement your own email server. Use an existing one and use its hooks to send the mail off to where ever it is you want, however it is you want.
email_scheduler.c
int main()
{
while(1){
sleep(5); // every 5 secs the email_parser.php would get executed.
system("/usr/bin/php -q /var/www/html/email_parser.php");
}
}
email_parser.php :
/* Use any email message parser to
parse the email messages like MIME
message parser based on your purpose
: Refer :
http://www.phpclasses.org/browse/package/3169.html
*/
Also check relevant answers here for more info
There's an old (but great) article on Evolt about piping emails to a php script, which therefore gets the full content of the email and can act on it.
http://www.evolt.org/article/Incoming_Mail_and_PHP/18/27914/index.html