I am trying to let users fill out a contact form, which will then be sent to my email. But its not working for some reason. I just get a blank page with no error message or any text and email is also not sent.
if (isset($_POST['submit']))
{
include_once('class.phpmailer.php');
$name = strip_tags($_POST['full_name']);
$email = strip_tags ($_POST['email']);
$msg = strip_tags ($_POST['description']);
$subject = "Contact Form from DigitDevs Website";
$mail = new PHPMailer();
$mail->IsSMTP();
$mail->CharSet = 'UTF-8';
$mail->Host = "mail.example.com"; // SMTP server example
//$mail->SMTPDebug = 1; // enables SMTP debug information (for testing)
$mail->SMTPAuth = true; // enable SMTP authentication
$mail->Port = 26; // set the SMTP port for the GMAIL server
$mail->Username = "info@example.com"; // SMTP account username example
$mail->Password = "password"; // SMTP account password example
$mail->From = $email;
$mail->FromName = $name;
$mail->AddAddress('info@example.com', 'Information');
$mail->AddReplyTo($email, 'Wale');
$mail->IsHTML(true);
$mail->Subject = $subject;
$mail->Body = $msg;
$mail->AltBody = 'This is the body in plain text for non-HTML mail clients';
if(!$mail->Send()) {
echo 'Message could not be sent.';
echo 'Mailer Error: ' . $mail->ErrorInfo;
exit;
}
echo 'Message has been sent';
Its working now, i didnt include the 'class.smtp.php' file. The working code is below:
if (isset($_POST['submit']))
{
include_once('class.phpmailer.php');
require_once('class.smtp.php');
$name = strip_tags($_POST['full_name']);
$email = strip_tags ($_POST['email']);
$msg = strip_tags ($_POST['description']);
$subject = "Contact Form from DigitDevs Website";
$mail = new PHPMailer();
$mail->IsSMTP();
$mail->CharSet = 'UTF-8';
$mail->Host = "mail.example.com"; // SMTP server example
//$mail->SMTPDebug = 1; // enables SMTP debug information (for testing)
$mail->SMTPAuth = true; // enable SMTP authentication
$mail->Port = 26; // set the SMTP port for the GMAIL server
$mail->Username = "info@example.com"; // SMTP account username example
$mail->Password = "password"; // SMTP account password example
$mail->From = $email;
$mail->FromName = $name;
$mail->AddAddress('info@example.com', 'Information');
$mail->AddReplyTo($email, 'Wale');
$mail->IsHTML(true);
$mail->Subject = $subject;
$mail->Body = $msg;
$mail->AltBody = 'This is the body in plain text for non-HTML mail clients';
if(!$mail->Send()) {
echo 'Message could not be sent.';
echo 'Mailer Error: ' . $mail->ErrorInfo;
exit;
}
echo 'Message has been sent';
You need to call:
$mail = new PHPMailer(true); // with true in the parenthesis
From the documentation:
The true
param means it will throw exceptions on errors, which we need
to catch.
I had the same problem with no error message even with SMTPDebug enabled. After searching around for working examples I noticed that I didn't include the SMTP Secure value. Try adding this line:
$mail->SMTPSecure = 'ssl'; //secure transfer enabled
Work like a charm now.
I had a similar problem. In reference to @Syclone's answer. I was using the default "tls".
$mail->SMTPSecure = 'tls';
After I changed it to
$mail->SMTPSecure = 'ssl';
It worked ! My mailserver was only accepting connections over SSL.
PHPMailer use exception.
Try this
try {
include_once('class.phpmailer.php');
$name = strip_tags($_POST['full_name']);
$email = strip_tags ($_POST['email']);
$msg = strip_tags ($_POST['description']);
$subject = "Contact Form from DigitDevs Website";
$mail = new PHPMailer();
$mail->IsSMTP();
$mail->CharSet = 'UTF-8';
$mail->Host = "mail.example.com"; // SMTP server example
//$mail->SMTPDebug = 1; // enables SMTP debug information (for testing)
$mail->SMTPAuth = true; // enable SMTP authentication
$mail->Port = 26; // set the SMTP port for the GMAIL server
$mail->Username = "info@example.com"; // SMTP account username example
$mail->Password = "password"; // SMTP account password example
$mail->From = $email;
$mail->FromName = $name;
$mail->AddAddress('info@example.com', 'Information');
$mail->AddReplyTo($email, 'Wale');
$mail->IsHTML(true);
$mail->Subject = $subject;
$mail->Body = $msg;
$mail->AltBody = 'This is the body in plain text for non-HTML mail clients';
$mail->Send();
exit;
} catch (phpmailerException $e) {
echo $e->errorMessage(); //error messages from PHPMailer
} catch (Exception $e) {
echo $e->getMessage();
}
I was trying to load an HTML file to send, which did not belong to the www-data group on my Ubuntu server.
chown -R www-data *
chgrp -R www-data *
Problem solved!
What worked for me was setting From as Username and FromName as $_POST['email']
Hope this helps
I was debating whether to write my own handler or crow-bar PHPMailer into my existing class structure. In the event it was very easy because of the versatility of the spl_autoload_register function which is used within the PHPMailer system as well as my existing class structure.
I simply created a basic class Email in my existing class structure as follows
<?php
/**
* Provides link to PHPMailer
*
* @author Mike Bruce
*/
class Email {
public $_mailer; // Define additional class variables as required by your application
public function __construct()
{
require_once "PHPMail/PHPMailerAutoload.php" ;
$this->_mailer = new PHPMailer() ;
$this->_mailer->isHTML(true);
return $this;
}
}
?>
From a calling Object class the code would be:
$email = new Email;
$email->_mailer->functionCalls();
// continue with more function calls as required
Works a treat and has saved me re-inventing the wheel.