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I need to test a function that uses PHP's mail()
How can I do this without uploading the script to a server and test it online?
What's even more I am developing with no Internet connection at all.
I am on Mac OSX running localhost from XAMPP.

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Can't you just run your script from localhost? – Jason McCreary Jul 4 '10 at 17:09

5 Answers

You don't have to install an MTA on your computer to test PHP's mail() function. On Unix based systems (Linux, *BSD, OS X, etc.) you can set sendmail_path to something like tee mail.out > /dev/null. This will put the emails (including the headers) in a file called mail.out.

Here is an example of how it would work:

daniel@daniel-laptop:~$ cat | php -d sendmail_path='tee mail.out > /dev/null'
<?php
mail('test@example.com', 'the subject', 'the body');
?>
daniel@daniel-laptop:~$ cat mail.out
To: test@example.com
Subject: the subject
X-PHP-Originating-Script: 1000:-


the body

You can set sendmail_path in your php.ini file. If you want to append emails to the file instead of overwriting each time, you can use tee -a instead of just tee.

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2  
shouldn't this get a 'answered'? – RCNeil Apr 9 '12 at 18:06
2  
wish I saw this before I spent ages figuring out how to get sendmail/postfix working – aland Nov 30 '12 at 23:44
1  
Can I read this file with an email client? In my case I'm using tee -a – Cesar Feb 4 at 21:55

A nice and simple solution for testing:

http://blogs.bigfish.tv/adam/2009/12/03/setup-a-testing-mail-server-using-php-on-mac-os-x/

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just set this up on my dev machine. very useful - thanks! – benedict_w Aug 22 '12 at 10:47
Any non-mac version of this? – AlxVallejo Sep 5 '12 at 21:43
There is a small Windows section at the end of the page. On other Unix systems I think you could solve it similarly to the Mac case. – biziclop Sep 6 '12 at 6:13

Edit the php.ini central file with your current mail server for sending out mails...

For example, sendmail...

sendmail_path =/usr/sbin/sendmail

Look for the above line in your php.ini and see if it is commented or not and change it to your working mail server path.

Also if you dont know where the php.ini is, you could always run a php with the above code to see it:

<? phpinfo(); ?>

SIDE NOTES: Make sure your mail server is running and that you can send mails using it from a command line for example. If that is possible and you have changed php.ini it will work just fine.

Here is some more reference to the same question i belive: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2450589/php-mail-using-sendmail-on-mac-os-x-leopard-10-5-8

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Does this work without an Internet connection? What do you mean with "your current mail server"? Do I need to run my own mailserver? Which program? – FFish Jul 4 '10 at 17:20
yes you need, i dont know what you have installed but if you have sendmail, that is one. You can send it locally if you have it configured to do so ... for example if you want to send an email from x@domain.com to y@anotherdomain.com you must have both domains configured in your machine so the servers knows where to delivery it otherwise it will try to send it to the outside to find it out. – Prix Jul 4 '10 at 17:22
Yes, configure sendmail. Also, note, you can test locally by sending the email to yourlogin@machinename.local (like ffish@devmachine.local). Then use mail command from command line to check. I believe that doesn't require a net connection as it goes through local loop. – Ben Jul 4 '10 at 23:29

Setup a pop3 server in local Machine. Many available for free. and send mails within your local domain using sendmail.

By default its not required to set the sendmail path in Linux. at least I never needed it. just use the mail() function and hit mails on local domain

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That would be a SMTP server buddy pop3 is to actually receive emails not send mails out. – Prix Jul 4 '10 at 17:23
LOL Ya But where would the sendmail send the mails ??????????? he have no internet connection. Okay ?????? Thats the reasonhe needs a POP3 Server to run a local test. >> we are not talking about SMTP server. its sendmail – Neel Basu Jul 4 '10 at 17:25
having access to the machine as he does with only the mail server he can verify it without having to go thru a pop3 connection. – Prix Jul 4 '10 at 17:27

Hmm. I haven't tried this, but in php.ini you can set "sendmail_path" ... so in theory you could write your own shell script that simply wrote the input into text files, and change your php.ini to use that? Then simply run tests and check text files!

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