This password can't be one hand encrypted because I need it later to fire the e-mail with SMTP.
And then you go on to say...
It cant be an encripty that anyone can decrypt like md5 cause it still unsecure
You can't encrypt something in a way that can't be decrypted and expect to be able to decrypt it yourself.
Additionally, MD5 isn't encryption; it's a hash. A one-way function. You can't take the output from MD5 and deterministically get the input. That's impossible. What is possible is generating a "rainbow table" from known inputs and reversing that way.
You need plain ol' symmetrical encryption. AES is a usual go-to for this. What matters most here is how you handle your keys, as once someone has the key, they can decrypt the data. Start by ensuring that you're using a different key for each record. You can do this using a key derivation algorithm. You still need to keep your master keys safe though.
I need to store the user's mail password in a database to send mails later
Are you absolutely sure you need to do this? Consider alternatives:
- Send e-mail on behalf of someone. It's common to use their name, but not their e-mail address in sending the e-mail, and then setting a
Reply-To
to go back to the original user.
- If you're authorized on the e-mail server, you can send e-mail on behalf of someone without having their credentials.