First things first... I know mail deliverability is effected by hundreds of factors and so it's never possible to say for SURE if one specific thing is the cause. (I do not expect this.)
My question is whether is normal/expected for mail servers to block messages which have a different From:
header. My contact form handler uses this so that the reciptient can reply to the sender (code below). Gmail accounts are able to receive the messages. But my client has an institutional .edu
email address and the emails aren't getting delivered.
Here's a minimal version of my code:
<?php
$first_name = 'John';
$last_name = 'Smithy';
$email = "[email protected]";
$msg = "This is a test email. If you received it things are working.";
$test_email = (isset($_POST['test_email'])) ? $_POST['test_email'] : FALSE;
$to;
$from = $email;
$subject = "Contact from JamesGregoryMD.com";
$body = wordwrap( "{$first_name} {$last_name}:\n\n{$msg}\n\n{$email}\n{$phone}", 70);
$headers = "From: {$from}" . "\r\n";
if ($test_email) {
# send email
$return = mail($test_email,"Test email",$body, $headers);
if ($return) {
echo "<h1>MAIL SENT</h1>";
} else {
echo "<h1>MAIL NOT SENT</h1>";
}
}
?>
<form id="contact" method="post">
<input type="email" name="test_email" placeholder="email" />
<input type="submit" value="Send" />
</form>