With php mail() I can write
mail('to@example.com','subject!','body','From: from@example.com','-f from@example.com');
But how can I do the same with phpmailer ?
The relevant line in Theolodis answer is:
$mail->SetFrom('name@yourdomain.com', 'First Last');
There is no need to use AddReplyTo()
this is something completely different.
You only need to set your from address (and name optionally) by using SetFrom()
. If you look at the code, SetFrom()
takes three parameters:
/**
* Set the From and FromName properties
* @param string $address
* @param string $name
* @param boolean $auto Whether to also set the Sender address, defaults to true
* @throws phpmailerException
* @return boolean
*/
public function SetFrom($address, $name = '', $auto = true) {
....
the third parameter (defaults to true) and therefor the envelope sender gets set to the same address as the sender.
It gets interesting if you want to set different addresses as envelope sender and From Address. This is the way how to CHANGE envelope sender. Therefor you have to set the $sender
property of your PHPMailer
instance like this:
$pMail->Sender='admin@yourdomain.com';
$pMail->SetFrom('name@yourdomain.com', 'First Last', FALSE);
the relevant lines:
$mail->SetFrom('name@yourdomain.com', 'First Last');
$mail->AddReplyTo('name@yourdomain.com', 'First Last');
As Hannes Morgenstern correctly suggested, the answer is:
$pMail->Sender='admin@yourdomain.com';
$pMail->SetFrom('name@yourdomain.com', 'First Last', FALSE);
SetFrom()
or AddReplyTo()
address the OP's questions of envelope sender. See the bottom of stackoverflow.com/a/18053334/4692205 regarding Sender
variable.
The -f flag is set with $email->Sender
This is the Envelope From which allows the email server to evaluate the sender's email address before receiving the rest of your email data
SetFrom - this is what email address the end user will see as the message coming from
AddReplyTo - this is what email address will pop up if they reply to the email
Sender needs to be clean to pass spam filters
SetFrom needs to be clean to pass spam filters
AddReplyTo doesn't really matter. This allows a service to send an email on behalf of a user with an email address not managed by the service.
What worked for me (obscurely) using
$mail->SetFrom('name@yourdomain.com', 'Rupert Bear');
was to use localhost rather than directly access the smtp server e.g.
$email->Host='localhost'; // SMTP server this way you get from name (don't know why)
Now mails arrive in Outlook from 'Rupert Bear' [name@yourdomain.com]