ImapMailManager provides convenient OOP classes for performing common tasks when for managing incoming email via imap in php.
Note: This package is now under a beta realease. A fully stable realease is expected in the coming weeks.
- Provides convenient methods for searching imap mailboxes
- Automatic detection, decoding and encoding of email messages and attachments.
- Encodes messages in UTF-8 for optimal display.
- Provides simple methods for downloading attachments and embedded images.
- Configurable via a config file, rather than having to hardcode username and password information.
- Converts php's native imap responses in to simple value objects for easy access.
ImapMailManager provides two main service classes for performing tasks on the Mailbox (searching the mailbox for messages, folders etc) and on the Message itself (downloading attachments). Convenient factories have been provided to help with the creation of required objects.
The simplest way to connect to your mailbox is by providing the settings via a config file.
return [
'server' => 'imap.example.com',
'username' => 'USERNAME',
'password' => 'PASSWORD',
'port' => 993,
'ssl' => true,
'validate_cert' => true,
];
Aliases provide a convenient way to reference mailbox folders, for example if you use different config
files to connect to multiple mailboxes you can provide folder aliases in the config itself. This means you can avoid hardcoding folder names, and using if statements to detect which mailbox you are connected to to get the correct folder name. To create an alias, you simply need to add an aliases
array to your config
file, these aliases can then be passed to methods that request a folder name, e.g. moveToFolder('spam')
:
return [
'server' => 'imap.example.com',
'username' => 'USERNAME',
'password' => 'PASSWORD',
'port' => 993,
'ssl' => true,
'validate_cert' => true,
'aliases' => [
'trash' => 'INBOX.Trash',
'spam' => 'INBOX.Spam'
]
];
It's a good idea to add the trash
alias, as this is the alias that is automatically used by the moveToTrash()
and emptyTrash()
methods. Otherwise you will need to pass the folder name in as a parameter: e.g. moveToTrash('INBOX.Trash')
ImapMailManager
provides a config generator called createImapConfig.php
which can be run from composers vendor/bin
folder, which will create
'imap_config/config.php' in the folder the script is run from.
Alternatively, you can simply copy and paste the code from config.php to your own config file.
By default ImapMailManager
looks for your config file in imap_config/config.php
, you can change this by passing the config location directly in to the relevant class constructors or factory methods. (see docs)
This following example uses the provided factories to build a collection of messages from your inbox. See Creating Imap using constructors and no config below to see how you may use constructors to acheive the same results.
// Creates the relevant imap classes to be passed to a service
$imap = ImapFactory::create('INBOX');
// Create a new service
$mailboxService = new ImapMailboxService($imap);
// Get all messages in the folder (this returns an array of message numbers)
$all = $mailboxService->getAllMessages();
// Create a collection of Message objects
$messages = ImapMessagesCollectionFactory::create($all);
Now you can simply loop through the messages to display a list of message subjects:
if(count($messages)){
foreach($messages as $message){
echo $message->getSubject().'<br>';
}
}
$messageNum = $_REQUEST['messageNum'];
// Creates the relevant imap classes to be passed to a service
$imap = ImapFactory::create('INBOX');
// Get the current message
$message = ImapMessageFactory::create($messageNum, $imap);
// Create a new service
$messageService = new ImapMessageService($message, $imap);
echo $message->getSubject().'<br />';
echo $message->getHtmlBody();
You should look at the docs for the ImapMessage
class to see what methods are availble for retrieving message information. You can also look at examples\showMessage.php
which provides a more complete example of displaying a message.
ImapMailManager
takes all the pain out of downloading attachments by extracting the attachment information, decoding and saving the attachment to the relevant folder.
To download all attachments for a message you simply need the following:
$messageNum = $_REQUEST['messageNum'];
// Creates the relevant imap classes to be passed to a service
$imap = ImapFactory::create('INBOX');
// Get the current message
$message = ImapMessageFactory::create($messageNum, $imap);
$message->downloadAttachments('path/to/download/to');
You will often want to download a single attachment, in order to do this ImapMailManager
provides a few convenience methods: downloadAttachmentByFilename()
, downloadAttachmentByPart()
and downloadAttachment()
. You can use the getAttachments()
method on the returned message to retrieve a collection of Attachment
objects which provide getFilename()
and getPart()
methods:
Downloading attachment by filename
// Filename passed from the previous page, this can be retrieved using the `getFilename()` method on the Attachment object.
$filename = $_REQUEST['filename'];
// The folder for the message, this can be retreived using `getFolder()` on the Mailbox object (see `examples\exmple.php`)
$folder = $_REQUEST['folder'];
// Creates the relevant imap classes to be passed to a service
$imap = ImapFactory::create($folder);
// Get the current message
$message = ImapMessageFactory::create($messageNum, $imap);
// Create a new service
$messageService = new ImapMessageService($message, $imap);
$messageService->downloadAttachmentByFilename($filename, 'attachment/download/path');
Some E-mails have images directly embedded in them, by default ImapMailManager
will not download these images, so they will not be displayed. If you want to download and display embedded images you simply need to call the downloadEmbeddedImages()
method, when displaying the message:
$messageNum = $_REQUEST['messageNum'];
// The folder for the message, this can be retreived using `getFolder()` on the Mailbox object (see `examples\exmple.php`)
$folder = $_REQUEST['folder'];
// Creates the relevant imap classes to be passed to a service
$imap = ImapFactory::create(folder);
// Get the current message
$message = ImapMessageFactory::create($messageNum, $imap);
// Create a new service
$messageService = new ImapMessageService($message, $imap);
// Download any embedded images, without this embedded images will not display.
$messageService->downloadEmbeddedImages('path/to/download/to');
// Display Message with embedded images
$message->getHtmlBody()
In order to avoid overwriting images embedded images are saved to your/path/folderName/messageNumber
.
Note: Embedded images are only downloaded if they do not exist in the download location, they will not be downloaded each time the message is opened.
While the factory methods provide a convenient way to create an the Imap class that is passed in to a service or factory, it hides a lot of what is going on. In order to better understand how ImapMailManager works, the following shows how you would directly construct the MailboxService
object:
// We don't have a config file, so lets create the mailbox directly
$mailbox = new Mailbox('imap.example.com', 'username', 'password', 'INBOX');
// Now lets connect to the mailbox
$imapConnection = new ImapConnection($mailbox);
// Now create an ImapHandler object, which is used to perform various tasks on the mailbox
$imap = new ImapHandler($imapConnection);
// Finally create the service
$mailboxService = new MailboxService($imap);
Note: Creating a Message object directly is quite involved, so the Factories should still be used to create Message objects and collections.
The examples require you to provide your own config file in examples/imap_config/config.php
, you can do this by using the generator found
in vendor\bin
or simply creating one manually, you can find the basic config file in config.php
in the root of this project.
You then need to change the settings in your config.php
file to match your email account and you should then be able to run the examples.
There's a lot more that can be done with ImapMailManager
than just these examples. You can find the full list of methods and descriptions in the docs
folder, provided as HTML. I hope to have these online soon.
ImapMailMainager
returns collections as Collection objects. You can treat these exactly as you would a normal php array, so you can still use count
and foreach
on them as well as access them via their array index MessageCollection[0]
All value objects and collections are designed to be easily json encodable (and provide a toJson()
method), however, you may find that some parts of an object are not included when json encoded, these are generally the raw responses from php's imap functions which could cause json_encode()
to fail if they are not UTF-8
encoded.
All value objects and collections have a __toString()
method that will automatically display their json representations if echoed or printed to the screen, so you don't need to var_dump()
. You should be aware that json is not the actual returned value when creating an object, but it's string represntation, so all methods can be used on the object as normal.
Classes that contain properties that are objects are deep cloned, so those object properties are thmeselves clones.