.. index:: single: Emails
Sending emails is a classic task for any web application and one that has special complications and potential pitfalls. Instead of recreating the wheel, one solution to send emails is to use the SwiftmailerBundle, which leverages the power of the Swift Mailer library. This bundle comes with the Symfony Standard Edition.
To use Swift Mailer, you'll need to configure it for your mail server.
Tip
Instead of setting up/using your own mail server, you may want to use a hosted mail provider such as Mandrill, SendGrid, Amazon SES or others. These give you an SMTP server, username and password (sometimes called keys) that can be used with the Swift Mailer configuration.
In a standard Symfony installation, some swiftmailer
configuration is
already included:
.. configuration-block:: .. code-block:: yaml # app/config/config.yml swiftmailer: transport: '%mailer_transport%' host: '%mailer_host%' username: '%mailer_user%' password: '%mailer_password%' .. code-block:: xml <!-- app/config/config.xml --> <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?> <container xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:swiftmailer="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/swiftmailer" xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services/services-1.0.xsd http://symfony.com/schema/dic/swiftmailer http://symfony.com/schema/dic/swiftmailer/swiftmailer-1.0.xsd"> <swiftmailer:config transport="%mailer_transport%" host="%mailer_host%" username="%mailer_user%" password="%mailer_password%" /> </container> .. code-block:: php // app/config/config.php $container->loadFromExtension('swiftmailer', array( 'transport' => "%mailer_transport%", 'host' => "%mailer_host%", 'username' => "%mailer_user%", 'password' => "%mailer_password%", ));
These values (e.g. %mailer_transport%
), are reading from the parameters
that are set in the :ref:`parameters.yml <config-parameters.yml>` file. You
can modify the values in that file, or set the values directly here.
The following configuration attributes are available:
transport
(smtp
,mail
,sendmail
, orgmail
)username
password
host
port
encryption
(tls
, orssl
)auth_mode
(plain
,login
, orcram-md5
)spool
type
(how to queue the messages,file
ormemory
is supported, see :doc:`/email/spool`)path
(where to store the messages)
delivery_addresses
(an array of email addresses where to send ALL emails)disable_delivery
(set to true to disable delivery completely)
Caution!
Starting from SwiftMailer 5.4.5, the mail
transport is deprecated
and will be removed in version 6. Consider using another transport like
smtp
, sendmail
or gmail
.
The Swift Mailer library works by creating, configuring and then sending
Swift_Message
objects. The "mailer" is responsible for the actual delivery
of the message and is accessible via the mailer
service. Overall, sending
an email is pretty straightforward:
public function indexAction($name) { $message = \Swift_Message::newInstance() ->setSubject('Hello Email') ->setFrom('[email protected]') ->setTo('[email protected]') ->setBody( $this->renderView( // app/Resources/views/Emails/registration.html.twig 'Emails/registration.html.twig', array('name' => $name) ), 'text/html' ) /* * If you also want to include a plaintext version of the message ->addPart( $this->renderView( 'Emails/registration.txt.twig', array('name' => $name) ), 'text/plain' ) */ ; $this->get('mailer')->send($message); return $this->render(...); }
To keep things decoupled, the email body has been stored in a template and
rendered with the renderView()
method. The registration.html.twig
template might look something like this:
{# app/Resources/views/Emails/registration.html.twig #}
<h3>You did it! You registered!</h3>
Hi {{ name }}! You're successfully registered.
{# example, assuming you have a route named "login" #}
To login, go to: <a href="{{ url('login') }}">...</a>.
Thanks!
{# Makes an absolute URL to the /images/logo.png file #}
<img src="{{ absolute_url(asset('images/logo.png')) }}">
The $message
object supports many more options, such as including attachments,
adding HTML content, and much more. Fortunately, Swift Mailer covers the topic
of Creating Messages in great detail in its documentation.
.. toctree:: :maxdepth: 1 :glob: email/*