mail.php 3.90 KiB
<?php
return array(
	/*
	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
	| Mail Driver
	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
	| Laravel supports both SMTP and PHP's "mail" function as drivers for the
	| sending of e-mail. You may specify which one you're using throughout
	| your application here. By default, Laravel is setup for SMTP mail.
	| Supported: "smtp", "mail", "sendmail", "mailgun", "mandrill", "log"
	'driver' => 'smtp',
	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
	| SMTP Host Address
	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
	| Here you may provide the host address of the SMTP server used by your
	| applications. A default option is provided that is compatible with
	| the Mailgun mail service which will provide reliable deliveries.
	'host' => 'smtp.mailgun.org',
	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
	| SMTP Host Port
	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
	| This is the SMTP port used by your application to deliver e-mails to
	| users of the application. Like the host we have set this value to
	| stay compatible with the Mailgun e-mail application by default.
	'port' => 587,
	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
	| Global "From" Address
	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
	| You may wish for all e-mails sent by your application to be sent from
	| the same address. Here, you may specify a name and address that is
	| used globally for all e-mails that are sent by your application.
	'from' => array('address' => null, 'name' => null),
	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
	| E-Mail Encryption Protocol
	|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
	| Here you may specify the encryption protocol that should be used when
	| the application send e-mail messages. A sensible default using the
	| transport layer security protocol should provide great security.
	'encryption' => 'tls',
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/* |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | SMTP Server Username |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | If your SMTP server requires a username for authentication, you should | set it here. This will get used to authenticate with your server on | connection. You may also set the "password" value below this one. | */ 'username' => null, /* |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | SMTP Server Password |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | Here you may set the password required by your SMTP server to send out | messages from your application. This will be given to the server on | connection so that the application will be able to send messages. | */ 'password' => null, /* |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | Sendmail System Path |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | When using the "sendmail" driver to send e-mails, we will need to know | the path to where Sendmail lives on this server. A default path has | been provided here, which will work well on most of your systems. | */ 'sendmail' => '/usr/sbin/sendmail -bs', /* |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | Mail "Pretend" |-------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | When this option is enabled, e-mail will not actually be sent over the | web and will instead be written to your application's logs files so | you may inspect the message. This is great for local development. | */ 'pretend' => false, );