Symfony's Mailer & :doc:`Mime </components/mime>` components form a powerful system for creating and sending emails - complete with support for multipart messages, Twig integration, CSS inlining, file attachments and a lot more. Get them installed with:
$ composer require symfony/mailer
Emails are delivered via a "transport". And without installing anything else, you
can deliver emails over smtp
by configuring your .env
file:
# .env
MAILER_DSN=smtp://user:[email protected]
Warning
If you are migrating from Swiftmailer (and the Swiftmailer bundle), be warned that the DSN format is different.
But an easier option is to send emails via a 3rd party provider. Mailer supports several - install whichever you want:
Service | Install with |
---|---|
Amazon SES | composer require symfony/amazon-mailer |
Gmail | composer require symfony/google-mailer |
MailChimp | composer require symfony/mailchimp-mailer |
Mailgun | composer require symfony/mailgun-mailer |
Postmark | composer require symfony/postmark-mailer |
SendGrid | composer require symfony/sendgrid-mailer |
Each library includes a :ref:`Symfony Flex recipe <symfony-flex>` that will add
example configuration to your .env
file. For example, suppose you want to
use SendGrid. First, install it:
$ composer require symfony/sendgrid-mailer
You'll now have a new line in your .env
file that you can uncomment:
# .env
SENDGRID_KEY=
MAILER_DSN=sendgrid://$SENDGRID_KEY@default
The MAILER_DSN
isn't a real address: it's a simple format that offloads
most of the configuration work to mailer. The sendgrid
scheme activates the
SendGrid provider that you just installed, which knows all about how to deliver
messages to SendGrid.
The only part you need to change is to set SENDGRID_KEY
to your key (in
.env
or .env.local
).
Each provider has different environment variables that the Mailer uses to
configure the actual protocol, address and authentication for delivery. Some
also have options that can be configured with query parameters at the end of the
MAILER_DSN
- like ?region=
for Amazon SES. Some providers support
sending via http
, api
or smtp
. Symfony chooses the best available
transport, but you can force to use one:
# .env
# force to use SMTP instead of HTTP (which is the default)
MAILER_DSN=sendgrid+smtp://$SENDGRID_KEY@default
Tip
Check the :ref:`DSN formats <mailer_dsn>` for all supported providers.
To send an email, autowire the mailer using
:class:`Symfony\\Component\\Mailer\\MailerInterface` (service id mailer
)
and create an :class:`Symfony\\Component\\Mime\\Email` object:
// src/Controller/MailerController.php namespace App\Controller; use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Controller\AbstractController; use Symfony\Component\Mailer\MailerInterface; use Symfony\Component\Mime\Email; class MailerController extends AbstractController { /** * @Route("/email") */ public function sendEmail(MailerInterface $mailer) { $email = (new Email()) ->from('[email protected]') ->to('[email protected]') //->cc('[email protected]') //->bcc('[email protected]') //->replyTo('[email protected]') //->priority(Email::PRIORITY_HIGH) ->subject('Time for Symfony Mailer!') ->text('Sending emails is fun again!') ->html('<p>See Twig integration for better HTML integration!</p>'); $mailer->send($email); // ... } }
That's it! The message will be sent via whatever transport you configured.
All the methods that require email addresses (from()
, to()
, etc.) accept
both strings or address objects:
// ... use Symfony\Component\Mime\Address; $email = (new Email()) // email address as a simple string ->from('[email protected]') // email address as an object ->from(new Address('[email protected]')) // defining the email address and name as an object // (email clients will display the name) ->from(new NamedAddress('[email protected]', 'Fabien')) // defining the email address and name as a string // (the format must match: 'Name <[email protected]>') ->from(Address::fromString('Fabien Potencier <[email protected]>')) // ... ;
Tip
Instead of calling ->from()
every time you create a new email, you can
create an :doc:`event subscriber </event_dispatcher>` and listen to the
MessageEvent::class
event to set the same From
email to all messages.
Multiple addresses are defined with the addXXX()
methods:
$email = (new Email()) ->to('[email protected]') ->addTo('[email protected]') ->addTo('[email protected]') // ... ;
Alternatively, you can pass multiple addresses to each method:
$toAddresses = ['[email protected]', new Address('[email protected]')]; $email = (new Email()) ->to(...$toAddresses) ->cc('[email protected]', '[email protected]') // ... ;
The text and HTML contents of the email messages can be strings (usually the result of rendering some template) or PHP resources:
$email = (new Email()) // ... // simple contents defined as a string ->text('Lorem ipsum...') ->html('<p>Lorem ipsum...</p>') // attach a file stream ->text(fopen('/path/to/emails/user_signup.txt', 'r')) ->html(fopen('/path/to/emails/user_signup.html', 'r')) ;
Tip
You can also use Twig templates to render the HTML and text contents. Read the Twig: HTML & CSS section later in this article to learn more.
Use the attachFromPath()
method to attach files that exist on your file system:
$email = (new Email()) // ... ->attachFromPath('/path/to/documents/terms-of-use.pdf') // optionally you can tell email clients to display a custom name for the file ->attachFromPath('/path/to/documents/privacy.pdf', 'Privacy Policy') // optionally you can provide an explicit MIME type (otherwise it's guessed) ->attachFromPath('/path/to/documents/contract.doc', 'Contract', 'application/msword') // you can also use an absolute URL if your PHP config allows getting URLs using fopen() // (this is not recommended because your application may or may not work depending on PHP config) ->attachFromPath('http://example.com/path/to/documents/contract.doc', 'Contract', 'application/msword') ;
Alternatively you can use the attach()
method to attach contents from a stream:
$email = (new Email()) // ... ->attach(fopen('/path/to/documents/contract.doc', 'r')) ;
If you want to display images inside your email, you must embed them instead of adding them as attachments. When using Twig to render the email contents, as explained later in this article, the images are embedded automatically. Otherwise, you need to embed them manually.
First, use the embed()
or embedFromPath()
method to add an image from a
file or stream:
$email = (new Email()) // ... // get the image contents from a PHP resource ->embed(fopen('/path/to/images/logo.png', 'r'), 'logo') // get the image contents from an existing file ->embedFromPath('/path/to/images/signature.gif', 'footer-signature') ;
The second optional argument of both methods is the image name ("Content-ID" in the MIME standard). Its value is an arbitrary string used later to reference the images inside the HTML contents:
$email = (new Email()) // ... ->embed(fopen('/path/to/images/logo.png', 'r'), 'logo') ->embedFromPath('/path/to/images/signature.gif', 'footer-signature') // reference images using the syntax 'cid:' + "image embed name" ->html('<img src="cid:logo"> ... <img src="cid:footer-signature"> ...') ;
The :class:`Symfony\\Component\\Mailer\\SentMessage` object returned by the
send()
method of the :class:`Symfony\\Component\\Mailer\\Transport\\TransportInterface`
provides access to the original message (getOriginalMessage()
) and to some
debug information (getDebug()
) such as the HTTP calls done by the HTTP
transports, which is useful to debug errors.
The exceptions related to mailer transports (those which implement
:class:`Symfony\\Component\\Mailer\\Exception\\TransportException`) also provide
this debug information via the getDebug()
method.
The Mime component integrates with the :ref:`Twig template engine <twig-language>` to provide advanced features such as CSS style inlining and support for HTML/CSS frameworks to create complex HTML email messages. First, make sure Twig is installed:
$ composer require symfony/twig-bundle
To define the contents of your email with Twig, use the :class:`Symfony\\Bridge\\Twig\\Mime\\TemplatedEmail` class. This class extends the normal :class:`Symfony\\Component\\Mime\\Email` class but adds some new methods for Twig templates:
use Symfony\Bridge\Twig\Mime\TemplatedEmail; $email = (new TemplatedEmail()) ->from('[email protected]') ->to(new Address('[email protected]')) ->subject('Thanks for signing up!') // path of the Twig template to render ->htmlTemplate('emails/signup.html.twig') // pass variables (name => value) to the template ->context([ 'expiration_date' => new \DateTime('+7 days'), 'username' => 'foo', ]) ;
Then, create the template:
{# templates/emails/signup.html.twig #}
<h1>Welcome {{ email.toName }}!</h1>
<p>
You signed up as {{ username }} the following email:
</p>
<p><code>{{ email.to[0].address }}</code></p>
<p>
<a href="#">Click here to activate your account</a>
(this link is valid until {{ expiration_date|date('F jS') }})
</p>
The Twig template has access to any of the parameters passed in the context()
method of the TemplatedEmail
class and also to a special variable called
email
, which is an instance of
:class:`Symfony\\Bridge\\Twig\\Mime\\WrappedTemplatedEmail`.
When the text content of a TemplatedEmail
is not explicitly defined, mailer
will generate it automatically by converting the HTML contents into text. If you
have league/html-to-markdown installed in your application,
it uses that to turn HTML into Markdown (so the text email has some visual appeal).
Otherwise, it applies the :phpfunction:`strip_tags` PHP function to the original
HTML contents.
If you want to define the text content yourself, use the text()
method
explained in the previous sections or the textTemplate()
method provided by
the TemplatedEmail
class:
+ use Symfony\Bridge\Twig\Mime\TemplatedEmail;
$email = (new TemplatedEmail())
// ...
->htmlTemplate('emails/signup.html.twig')
+ ->textTemplate('emails/signup.txt.twig')
// ...
;
Instead of dealing with the <img src="cid: ...">
syntax explained in the
previous sections, when using Twig to render email contents you can refer to
image files as usual. First, to simplify things, define a Twig namespace called
images
that points to whatever directory your images are stored in:
# config/packages/twig.yaml
twig:
# ...
paths:
# point this wherever your images live
'%kernel.project_dir%/assets/images': images
Now, use the special email.image()
Twig helper to embed the images inside
the email contents:
{# '@images/' refers to the Twig namespace defined earlier #}
<img src="{{ email.image('@images/logo.png') }}" alt="Logo">
<h1>Welcome {{ email.toName }}!</h1>
{# ... #}
Designing the HTML contents of an email is very different from designing a
normal HTML page. For starters, most email clients only support a subset of all
CSS features. In addition, popular email clients like Gmail don't support
defining styles inside <style> ... </style>
sections and you must inline
all the CSS styles.
CSS inlining means that every HTML tag must define a style
attribute with
all its CSS styles. This can make organizing your CSS a mess. That's why Twig
provides a CssInlinerExtension
that automates everything for you. Install
it with:
$ composer require twig/cssinliner-extra
The extension is enabled automatically. To use this, wrap the entire template
with the inline_css
filter:
{% apply inline_css %}
<style>
{# here, define your CSS styles as usual #}
h1 {
color: #333;
}
</style>
<h1>Welcome {{ email.toName }}!</h1>
{# ... #}
{% endapply %}
You can also define CSS styles in external files and pass them as arguments to the filter:
{% apply inline_css(source('@css/email.css')) %}
<h1>Welcome {{ username }}!</h1>
{# ... #}
{% endapply %}
You can pass unlimited number of arguments to inline_css()
to load multiple
CSS files. For this example to work, you also need to define a new Twig namespace
called css
that points to the directory where email.css
lives:
# config/packages/twig.yaml
twig:
# ...
paths:
# point this wherever your css files live
'%kernel.project_dir%/assets/css': css
Twig provides another extension called MarkdownExtension
that lets you
define the email contents using Markdown syntax. To use this, install the
extension and a Markdown conversion library (the extension is compatible with
several popular libraries):
# instead of league/commonmark, you can also use erusev/parsedown or michelf/php-markdown
$ composer require twig/markdown-extension league/commonmark
The extension adds a markdown
filter, which you can use to convert parts or
the entire email contents from Markdown to HTML:
{% apply markdown %}
Welcome {{ email.toName }}!
===========================
You signed up to our site using the following email:
`{{ email.to[0].address }}`
[Click here to activate your account]({{ url('...') }})
{% endapply %}
Creating beautifully designed emails that work on every email client is so complex that there are HTML/CSS frameworks dedicated to that. One of the most popular frameworks is called Inky. It defines a syntax based on some simple tags which are later transformed into the real HTML code sent to users:
<!-- a simplified example of the Inky syntax -->
<container>
<row>
<columns>This is a column.</columns>
</row>
</container>
Twig provides integration with Inky via the InkyExtension
. First, install
the extension in your application:
$ composer require twig/inky-extra
The extension adds an inky_to_html
filter, which can be used to convert
parts or the entire email contents from Inky to HTML:
{% apply inky_to_html %}
<container>
<row class="header">
<columns>
<spacer size="16"></spacer>
<h1 class="text-center">Welcome {{ email.toName }}!</h1>
</columns>
{# ... #}
</row>
</container>
{% endapply %}
You can combine all filters to create complex email messages:
{% apply inky_to_html|inline_css(source('@css/foundation-emails.css')) %}
{# ... #}
{% endapply %}
This makes use of the :ref:`css Twig namespace <mailer-css-namespace>` we created
earlier. You could, for example, download the foundation-emails.css file
directly from GitHub and save it in assets/css
.
It's possible to sign and/or encrypt email messages applying the S/MIME standard to increase their integrity/security. Both options can be combined to encrypt a signed message and/or to sign an encrypted message.
Before signing/encrypting messages, make sure to have:
- The OpenSSL PHP extension properly installed and configured;
- A valid security certificate (you can get it for free from Let's Encrypt project).
When signing a message, a cryptographic hash is generated for the entire content of the message (including attachments). This hash is added as an attachment so the recipient can validate the integrity of the received message. However, the contents of the original message are still readable for mailing agents not supporting signed messages, so you must also encrypt the message if you want to hide its contents:
use Symfony\Component\Mime\Crypto\SMimeSigner; use Symfony\Component\Mime\Email; $email = (new Email()) ->from('[email protected]') // ... ->html('...'); $signer = new SMimeSigner('/path/to/certificate.crt', '/path/to/certificate-private-key.key'); // if the private key has a passphrase, pass it as the third argument // new SMimeSigner('/path/to/certificate.crt', '/path/to/certificate-private-key.key', 'the-passphrase'); $signedEmail = $signer->sign($email); // now use the Mailer component to send this $signedEmail instead of the original email
The certificate and private key must be PEM encoded, and can be either created using for example OpenSSL or obtained at an official Certificate Authority (CA). The email recipient must have the CA certificate in the list of trusted issuers in order to verify the signature.
Tip
When using OpenSSL to generate certificates, make sure to add the
-addtrust emailProtection
command option.
Tip
The SMimeSigner
class defines other optional arguments to pass
intermediate certificates and to configure the signing process using a
bitwise operator options for :phpfunction:`openssl_pkcs7_sign` PHP function.
When encrypting a message, the entire message (including attachments) is encrypted using a certificate. Therefore, only the recipients that have the corresponding private key can read the original message contents:
use Symfony\Component\Mime\Crypto\SMimeEncrypter; use Symfony\Component\Mime\Email; $email = (new Email()) ->from('[email protected]') // ... ->html('...'); $encrypter = new SMimeEncrypter('/path/to/certificate.crt'); $encryptedEmail = $encrypter->encrypt($email); // now use the Mailer component to send this $encryptedEmail instead of the original email
You can pass more than one certificate to the SMimeEncrypter()
constructor
and it will select the appropriate certificate depending on the To
option:
$firstEmail = (new Email()) // ... ->to('[email protected]'); $secondEmail = (new Email()) // ... ->to('[email protected]'); $encrypter = new SMimeEncrypter([ // key = email recipient; value = path to the certificate file '[email protected]' => '/path/to/first-certificate.crt', '[email protected]' => '/path/to/second-certificate.crt', ]); $firstEncryptedEmail = $encrypter->encrypt($firstEmail); $secondEncryptedEmail = $encrypter->encrypt($secondEmail);
When you call $mailer->send($email)
, the email is sent to the transport immediately.
To improve performance, you can leverage :doc:`Messenger </messenger>` to send
the messages later via a Messenger transport.
Start by following the :doc:`Messenger </messenger>` documentation and configuring
a transport. Once everything is set up, when you call $mailer->send()
, a
:class:`Symfony\\Component\\Mailer\\Messenger\\SendEmailMessage` message will
be dispatched through the default message bus (messenger.default_bus
). Assuming
you have a transport called async
, you can route the message there:
.. configuration-block:: .. code-block:: yaml # config/packages/messenger.yaml framework: messenger: transports: async: "%env(MESSENGER_TRANSPORT_DSN)%" routing: 'Symfony\Component\Mailer\Messenger\SendEmailMessage': async .. code-block:: xml <!-- config/packages/messenger.xml --> <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?> <container xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:framework="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/symfony" xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services https://symfony.com/schema/dic/services/services-1.0.xsd http://symfony.com/schema/dic/symfony https://symfony.com/schema/dic/symfony/symfony-1.0.xsd"> <framework:config> <framework:messenger> <framework:routing message-class="Symfony\Component\Mailer\Messenger\SendEmailMessage"> <framework:sender service="async"/> </framework:routing> </framework:messenger> </framework:config> </container> .. code-block:: php // config/packages/messenger.php $container->loadFromExtension('framework', [ 'messenger' => [ 'routing' => [ 'Symfony\Component\Mailer\Messenger\SendEmailMessage' => 'async', ], ], ]);
Thanks to this, instead of being delivered immediately, messages will be sent to the transport to be handled later (see :ref:`messenger-worker`).
You may want to use more than one mailer transport for delivery of your messages.
This can be configured by replacing the dsn
configuration entry with a
transports
entry, like:
# config/packages/mailer.yaml
framework:
mailer:
transports:
main: '%env(MAILER_DSN)%'
important: '%env(MAILER_DSN_IMPORTANT)%'
By default the first transport is used. The other transports can be used by
adding a text header X-Transport
to an email:
// Send using first "main" transport ... $mailer->send($email); // ... or use the "important" one $email->getHeaders()->addTextHeader('X-Transport', 'important'); $mailer->send($email);
While developing (or testing), you may want to disable delivery of messages entirely.
You can do this by forcing Mailer to use the NullTransport
in only the dev
environment:
# config/packages/dev/mailer.yaml
framework:
mailer:
dsn: 'null://null'
Note
If you're using Messenger and routing to a transport, the message will still be sent to that transport.
Instead of disabling delivery entirely, you might want to always send emails to
a specific address, instead of the real address. To do that, you can take
advantage of the EnvelopeListener
and register it only for the dev
environment:
# config/services_dev.yaml
services:
mailer.dev.set_recipients:
class: Symfony\Component\Mailer\EventListener\EnvelopeListener
tags: ['kernel.event_subscriber']
arguments:
$sender: null
$recipients: ['[email protected]']