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Update inbound and outbound email documentation
Summary: Fixes T8636. Mention Herald for inbound, update some outbound stuff, do some language / organization tweaks. Test Plan: Read documentation. Reviewers: amckinley Reviewed By: amckinley Maniphest Tasks: T8636 Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19973
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@ -4,10 +4,36 @@
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This document contains instructions for configuring inbound email, so users
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may interact with some Phabricator applications via email.
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= Preamble =
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Preamble
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========
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This can be extremely difficult to configure correctly. This is doubly true if
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you use a local MTA.
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Phabricator can process inbound mail in two general ways:
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**Handling Replies**: When users reply to email notifications about changes,
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Phabricator can turn email into comments on the relevant discussion thread.
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**Creating Objects**: You can configure an address like `bugs@yourcompany.com`
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to create new objects (like tasks) when users send email.
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In either case, users can interact with objects via `!commands` mail commands
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to apply a broader set of changes to objects (like adding subscribers, closing
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tasks, or changing priorities) beyond simply commenting.
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To configure inbound mail, you will generally:
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- Configure some mail domain to submit mail to Phabricator for processing.
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- For handling replies, set `metamta.reply-handler-domain` in configuration.
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- For handling email that creates objects, configure inbound addresses in the
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relevant application.
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See below for details on each of these steps.
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Approaches
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==========
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Inbound mail can be extremely difficult to configure correctly. This is doubly
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true if you use a local MTA.
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There are a few approaches available:
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@ -22,11 +48,13 @@ The remainder of this document walks through configuring Phabricator to
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receive mail, and then configuring your chosen transport to deliver mail
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to Phabricator.
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= Configuring Phabricator =
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Configuring "Reply" Email
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=========================
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By default, Phabricator uses a `noreply@phabricator.example.com` email address
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as the 'From' (configurable with `metamta.default-address`) and sets
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'Reply-To' to the user generating the email (e.g., by making a comment), if the
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as the "From" (configurable with `metamta.default-address`) and sets
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"Reply-To" to the user generating the email (e.g., by making a comment), if the
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mail was generated by a user action. This means that users can reply (or
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reply-all) to email to discuss changes, but the conversation won't be recorded
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in Phabricator and users will not be able to take actions like claiming tasks or
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@ -44,22 +72,40 @@ etc. over email.
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If you don't want Phabricator to take up an entire domain (or subdomain) you
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can configure a general prefix so you can use a single mailbox to receive mail
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on. To make use of this set `metamta.single-reply-handler-prefix` to the
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prefix of your choice, and Phabricator will prepend this to the 'Reply-To'
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prefix of your choice, and Phabricator will prepend this to the "Reply-To"
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mail address. This works because everything up to the first (optional) '+'
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character in an email-address is considered the receiver, and everything
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character in an email address is considered the receiver, and everything
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after is essentially ignored.
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You can also set up application email addresses to allow users to create
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application objects via email. For example, you could configure
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`bugs@phabricator.example.com` to create a Maniphest task out of any email
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which is sent to it. To do this, see application settings for a given
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application at
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Configuring "Create" Email
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==========================
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You can set up application email addresses to allow users to create objects via
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email. For example, you could configure `bugs@phabricator.example.com` to creat
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a Maniphest task out of any email which is sent to it.
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You can find application email settings for each application at:
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{nav icon=home, name=Home >
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name=Applications >
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icon=cog, name=Settings}
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Applications >
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type=instructions, name="Select an Application" >
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icon=cog, name=Configure}
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= Security =
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Not all application support creating objects via email.
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In some applications, including Maniphest, you can also configure Herald rules
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with the `[ Content source ]` and/or `[ Receiving email address ]` fields to
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route or handle objects based on which address mail was sent to.
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You'll also need to configure the actual mail domain to submit mail to
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Phabricator by following the instructions below. Phabricator will let you add
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any address as an application address, but can only process mail which is
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actually delivered to it.
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Security
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========
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The email reply channel is "somewhat" authenticated. Each reply-to address is
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unique to the recipient and includes a hash of user information and a unique
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@ -99,7 +145,9 @@ signatures are sufficient to authenticate the sender under your configuration,
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or you are willing to require all users to sign their email), file a feature
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request.
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= Testing and Debugging Inbound Email =
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Testing and Debugging Inbound Email
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===================================
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You can use the `bin/mail` utility to test and review inbound mail. This can
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help you determine if mail is being delivered to Phabricator or not:
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@ -116,7 +164,9 @@ if your inbound email configuration is incorrect or even disabled.
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Run `bin/mail help <command>` for detailed help on using these commands.
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= Mailgun Setup =
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Mailgun Setup
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=============
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To use Mailgun, you need a Mailgun account. You can sign up at
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<http://www.mailgun.com>. Provided you have such an account, configure it
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@ -128,6 +178,7 @@ like this:
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example domain with your actual domain.
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- Configure a mailer in `cluster.mailers` with your Mailgun API key.
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Postmark Setup
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==============
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@ -143,7 +194,8 @@ discussion of the remote address whitelist used to verify that requests this
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endpoint receives are authentic requests originating from Postmark.
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= SendGrid Setup =
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SendGrid Setup
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==============
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To use SendGrid, you need a SendGrid account with access to the "Parse API" for
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inbound email. Provided you have such an account, configure it like this:
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@ -159,14 +211,16 @@ inbound email. Provided you have such an account, configure it like this:
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- If you get an error that the hostname "can't be located or verified", it
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means your MX record is either incorrectly configured or hasn't propagated
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yet.
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- Set `metamta.reply-handler-domain` to `phabricator.example.com`"
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- Set `metamta.reply-handler-domain` to `phabricator.example.com`
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(whatever you configured the MX record for).
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That's it! If everything is working properly you should be able to send email
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to `anything@phabricator.example.com` and it should appear in
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`bin/mail list-inbound` within a few seconds.
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= Local MTA: Installing Mailparse =
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Local MTA: Installing Mailparse
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===============================
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If you're going to run your own MTA, you need to install the PECL mailparse
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extension. In theory, you can do that with:
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@ -189,7 +243,8 @@ If you get a linker error like this:
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mailparse.so. This is not the default if you have individual files in
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`php.d/`.
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= Local MTA: Configuring Sendmail =
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Local MTA: Configuring Sendmail
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===============================
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Before you can configure Sendmail, you need to install Mailparse. See the
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section "Installing Mailparse" above.
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@ -11,8 +11,8 @@ including a local mailer or various third-party services. Options include:
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| Send Mail With | Setup | Cost | Inbound | Notes |
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|---------|-------|------|---------|-------|
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| Mailgun | Easy | Cheap | Yes | Recommended |
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| Postmark | Easy | Cheap | Yes | Recommended |
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| Mailgun | Easy | Cheap | Yes | Recommended |
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| Amazon SES | Easy | Cheap | No | Recommended |
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| SendGrid | Medium | Cheap | Yes | Discouraged |
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| External SMTP | Medium | Varies | No | Gmail, etc. |
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@ -23,12 +23,11 @@ including a local mailer or various third-party services. Options include:
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See below for details on how to select and configure mail delivery for each
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mailer.
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Overall, Mailgun and SES are much easier to set up, and using one of them is
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recommended. In particular, Mailgun will also let you set up inbound email
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easily.
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Overall, Postmark and Mailgun are much easier to set up, and using one of them
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is recommended. Both will also let you set up inbound email easily.
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If you have some internal mail service you'd like to use you can also
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write a custom mailer, but this requires digging into the code.
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If you have some internal mail service you'd like to use you can also write a
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custom mailer, but this requires digging into the code.
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Phabricator sends mail in the background, so the daemons need to be running for
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it to be able to deliver mail. You should receive setup warnings if they are
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@ -39,14 +38,15 @@ not. For more information on using daemons, see
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Basics
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======
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Regardless of how outbound email is delivered, you should configure these keys
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in your configuration:
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Before configuring outbound mail, you should first set up
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`metamta.default-address` in Configuration. This determines where mail is sent
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"From" by default.
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- **metamta.default-address** determines where mail is sent "From" by
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default. If your domain is `example.org`, set this to something like
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`noreply@example.org`.
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- **metamta.can-send-as-user** should be left as `false` in most cases,
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but see the documentation for details.
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If your domain is `example.org`, set this to something
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like `noreply@example.org`.
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Ideally, this should be a valid, deliverable address that doesn't bounce if
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users accidentally send mail to it.
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Configuring Mailers
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@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ The `type` field can be used to select these third-party mailers:
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- `mailgun`: Use Mailgun.
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- `ses`: Use Amazon SES.
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- `sendgrid`: Use Sendgrid.
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- `sendgrid`: Use SendGrid.
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- `postmark`: Use Postmark.
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It also supports these local mailers:
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@ -104,12 +104,12 @@ It also supports these local mailers:
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- `smtp`: Connect directly to an SMTP server.
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- `test`: Internal mailer for testing. Does not send mail.
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You can also write your own mailer by extending
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`PhabricatorMailAdapter`.
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You can also write your own mailer by extending `PhabricatorMailAdapter`.
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The `media` field supports these values:
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- `email`: Configure this mailer for email.
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- `sms`: Configure this mailer for SMS.
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Once you've selected a mailer, find the corresponding section below for
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instructions on configuring it.
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@ -149,22 +149,10 @@ For alternatives and more information on configuration, see
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@{article:Configuration User Guide: Advanced Configuration}
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Mailer: Mailgun
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===============
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Mailgun is a third-party email delivery service. You can learn more at
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<http://www.mailgun.com>. Mailgun is easy to configure and works well.
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To use this mailer, set `type` to `mailgun`, then configure these `options`:
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- `api-key`: Required string. Your Mailgun API key.
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- `domain`: Required string. Your Mailgun domain.
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Mailer: Postmark
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================
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Postmark is a third-party email delivery serivice. You can learn more at
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Postmark is a third-party email delivery service. You can learn more at
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<https://www.postmarkapp.com/>.
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To use this mailer, set `type` to `postmark`, then configure these `options`:
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@ -191,6 +179,18 @@ The default address ranges were last updated in January 2019, and were
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documented at: <https://postmarkapp.com/support/article/800-ips-for-firewalls>
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Mailer: Mailgun
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===============
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Mailgun is a third-party email delivery service. You can learn more at
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<http://www.mailgun.com>. Mailgun is easy to configure and works well.
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To use this mailer, set `type` to `mailgun`, then configure these `options`:
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- `api-key`: Required string. Your Mailgun API key.
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- `domain`: Required string. Your Mailgun domain.
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Mailer: Amazon SES
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==================
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@ -204,7 +204,7 @@ To use this mailer, set `type` to `ses`, then configure these `options`:
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- `endpoint`: Required string. Your Amazon SES endpoint.
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NOTE: Amazon SES **requires you to verify your "From" address**. Configure
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which "From" address to use by setting "`metamta.default-address`" in your
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which "From" address to use by setting `metamta.default-address` in your
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config, then follow the Amazon SES verification process to verify it. You
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won't be able to send email until you do this!
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@ -221,27 +221,25 @@ API. To use SMTP, configure Phabricator to use an `smtp` mailer.
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To use the REST API mailer, set `type` to `sendgrid`, then configure
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these `options`:
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- `api-user`: Required string. Your SendGrid login name.
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- `api-key`: Required string. Your SendGrid API key.
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NOTE: Users have experienced a number of odd issues with SendGrid, compared to
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fewer issues with other mailers. We discourage SendGrid unless you're already
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using it.
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Older versions of the SendGrid API used different sets of credentials,
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including an "API User". Make sure you're configuring your "API Key".
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Mailer: Sendmail
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================
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This requires a `sendmail` binary to be installed on
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the system. Most MTAs (e.g., sendmail, qmail, postfix) should do this, but your
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machine may not have one installed by default. For install instructions, consult
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the documentation for your favorite MTA.
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This requires a `sendmail` binary to be installed on the system. Most MTAs
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(e.g., sendmail, qmail, postfix) should do this, but your machine may not have
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one installed by default. For install instructions, consult the documentation
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for your favorite MTA.
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Since you'll be sending the mail yourself, you are subject to things like SPF
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rules, blackholes, and MTA configuration which are beyond the scope of this
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document. If you can already send outbound email from the command line or know
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how to configure it, this option is straightforward. If you have no idea how to
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do any of this, strongly consider using Mailgun or Amazon SES instead.
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do any of this, strongly consider using Postmark or Mailgun instead.
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To use this mailer, set `type` to `sendmail`. There are no `options` to
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configure.
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