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Configure WordPress #wp_mail function to send through #SMTP server https://b.utler.co/Y3
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<?php | |
/* | |
* Set the following constants in wp-config.php. | |
* These should be added somewhere BEFORE the constant ABSPATH is defined. | |
* | |
* Author: Chad Butler | |
* Author URI: https://butlerblog.com | |
* | |
* For more information and instructions, see: https://b.utler.co/Y3 | |
*/ | |
define( 'SMTP_USER', '[email protected]' ); // Username to use for SMTP authentication | |
define( 'SMTP_PASS', 'smtp password' ); // Password to use for SMTP authentication | |
define( 'SMTP_HOST', 'smtp.example.com' ); // The hostname of the mail server | |
define( 'SMTP_FROM', '[email protected]' ); // SMTP From email address | |
define( 'SMTP_NAME', 'e.g Website Name' ); // SMTP From name | |
define( 'SMTP_PORT', '25' ); // SMTP port number - likely to be 25, 465 or 587 | |
define( 'SMTP_SECURE', 'tls' ); // Encryption system to use - ssl or tls | |
define( 'SMTP_AUTH', true ); // Use SMTP authentication (true|false) | |
define( 'SMTP_DEBUG', 0 ); // for debugging purposes only set to 1 or 2 |
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/** | |
* This function will connect wp_mail to your authenticated | |
* SMTP server. This improves reliability of wp_mail, and | |
* avoids many potential problems. | |
* | |
* Values are constants set in wp-config.php. Be sure to | |
* define the using the wp_config.php example in this gist. | |
* | |
* Author: Chad Butler | |
* Author URI: https://butlerblog.com | |
* | |
* For more information and instructions, see: https://b.utler.co/Y3 | |
*/ | |
add_action( 'phpmailer_init', 'send_smtp_email' ); | |
function send_smtp_email( $phpmailer ) { | |
if ( ! is_object( $phpmailer ) ) { | |
$phpmailer = (object) $phpmailer; | |
} | |
$phpmailer->Mailer = 'smtp'; | |
$phpmailer->Host = SMTP_HOST; | |
$phpmailer->SMTPAuth = SMTP_AUTH; | |
$phpmailer->Port = SMTP_PORT; | |
$phpmailer->Username = SMTP_USER; | |
$phpmailer->Password = SMTP_PASS; | |
$phpmailer->SMTPSecure = SMTP_SECURE; | |
$phpmailer->From = SMTP_FROM; | |
$phpmailer->FromName = SMTP_NAME; | |
} |
This doesn't work for me. I've implemented exactly as shown, but I get this:
`[0] => Invalid address: (From): wordpress@localhost`
I was forced to implement these hooks as well:
add_filter('wp_mail_from', 'set_wp_mail_from');
function set_wp_mail_from($current_from) {
if (SMTP_FROM) {
return SMTP_FROM;
}
throw new Exception('SMTP_FROM not detected...');
}
add_filter('wp_mail_from_name', 'set_wp_mail_from');
function set_wp_mail_from_name($current_from_name) {
if (SMTP_NAME) {
return SMTP_NAME;
}
throw new Exception('SMTP_NAME not detected...');
}
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If you save it in another site, that's still the web root for that site. I'm talking about keeping it outside your web root. BTW, you can do that for the entire wp config as well. See: https://wordpress.stackexchange.com/questions/58391/is-moving-wp-config-outside-the-web-root-really-beneficial