public function DefaultMailSystem::mail in Drupal 7
Send an e-mail message, using Drupal variables and default settings.
Parameters
$message: A message array, as described in hook_mail_alter().
Return value
TRUE if the mail was successfully accepted, otherwise FALSE.
Overrides MailSystemInterface::mail
See also
http://php.net/manual/function.mail.php
1 method overrides DefaultMailSystem::mail()
- TestingMailSystem::mail in modules/
system/ system.mail.inc - Accept an e-mail message and store it in a variable.
File
- modules/
system/ system.mail.inc, line 42 - Drupal core implementations of MailSystemInterface.
Class
- DefaultMailSystem
- The default Drupal mail backend using PHP's mail function.
Code
public function mail(array $message) {
// If 'Return-Path' isn't already set in php.ini, we pass it separately
// as an additional parameter instead of in the header.
// However, if PHP's 'safe_mode' is on, this is not allowed.
if (isset($message['headers']['Return-Path']) && !ini_get('safe_mode')) {
$return_path_set = strpos(ini_get('sendmail_path'), ' -f');
if (!$return_path_set) {
$message['Return-Path'] = $message['headers']['Return-Path'];
unset($message['headers']['Return-Path']);
}
}
$mimeheaders = array();
foreach ($message['headers'] as $name => $value) {
$mimeheaders[] = $name . ': ' . mime_header_encode($value);
}
$line_endings = variable_get('mail_line_endings', MAIL_LINE_ENDINGS);
// Prepare mail commands.
$mail_subject = mime_header_encode($message['subject']);
// Note: e-mail uses CRLF for line-endings. PHP's API requires LF
// on Unix and CRLF on Windows. Drupal automatically guesses the
// line-ending format appropriate for your system. If you need to
// override this, adjust $conf['mail_line_endings'] in settings.php.
$mail_body = preg_replace('@\\r?\\n@', $line_endings, $message['body']);
// For headers, PHP's API suggests that we use CRLF normally,
// but some MTAs incorrectly replace LF with CRLF. See #234403.
$mail_headers = join("\n", $mimeheaders);
// We suppress warnings and notices from mail() because of issues on some
// hosts. The return value of this method will still indicate whether mail
// was sent successfully.
if (!isset($_SERVER['WINDIR']) && strpos($_SERVER['SERVER_SOFTWARE'], 'Win32') === FALSE) {
// We validate the return path, unless it is equal to the site mail, which
// we assume to be safe.
if (isset($message['Return-Path']) && !ini_get('safe_mode') && (variable_get('site_mail', ini_get('sendmail_from')) === $message['Return-Path'] || self::_isShellSafe($message['Return-Path']))) {
// On most non-Windows systems, the "-f" option to the sendmail command
// is used to set the Return-Path. There is no space between -f and
// the value of the return path.
$mail_result = @mail($message['to'], $mail_subject, $mail_body, $mail_headers, '-f' . $message['Return-Path']);
}
else {
// The optional $additional_parameters argument to mail() is not
// allowed if safe_mode is enabled. Passing any value throws a PHP
// warning and makes mail() return FALSE.
$mail_result = @mail($message['to'], $mail_subject, $mail_body, $mail_headers);
}
}
else {
// On Windows, PHP will use the value of sendmail_from for the
// Return-Path header.
$old_from = ini_get('sendmail_from');
ini_set('sendmail_from', $message['Return-Path']);
$mail_result = @mail($message['to'], $mail_subject, $mail_body, $mail_headers);
ini_set('sendmail_from', $old_from);
}
return $mail_result;
}