EmailConfiguration » History » Revision 50
« Previous |
Revision 50/58
(diff)
| Next »
Go MAEDA, 2017-08-21 05:43
Removed outdated stuff (Ruby 1.8.7, Rails 2.3.5)
Email Configuration¶
- Table of contents
- Email Configuration
Configuration Directives¶
This page is a work in progress, the following configuration directives are only a partial list. Please consult Action Mailer Configuration
for detailed information.
authentication¶
The type of authentication method expected by your service provider.
Valid settings:nil
(or omit the key) for no authentication:plain
:login
:cram_md5
(note: if you set this to nil
or omit it, you must not include the user_name
and password
settings)
delivery_method¶
The mail transport method to be used.
Valid settings::smtp
- :
sendmail
:async_smtp
:async_sendmail
Asynchronous delivery_methods¶
The :async_smtp
and :async_sendmail
use asynchronous sends, which means Redmine does not wait for the email to be sent to display the next page. See Asynchronous Email Delivery for more details. Some SMTP servers have delay period before processing takes place as anti-spam feature, during which time synchronous method will block Redmine (10 seconds could be default value, see also #11376 for more information) .
With this delivery method, smtp configuration is specified using async_smtp_settings
keyword:
development:
email_delivery:
delivery_method: :async_smtp
async_smtp_settings:
...
Example configuration.yml Configurations¶
Simple Login Authentication (default settings)¶
# Outgoing email settings
production:
email_delivery:
delivery_method: :smtp
smtp_settings:
address: smtp.example.net
port: 25
domain: example.net
authentication: :login
user_name: redmine@example.net
password: redmine
development:
email_delivery:
delivery_method: :smtp
smtp_settings:
address: 127.0.0.1
port: 25
domain: example.net
authentication: :login
user_name: redmine@example.net
password: redmine
GMail, Google Apps¶
If you want to use GMail/Google Apps and other TLS-requiring SMTP servers, you'll have to add some TLS-related settings:
production:
email_delivery:
delivery_method: :smtp
smtp_settings:
enable_starttls_auto: true
address: "smtp.gmail.com"
port: '587'
domain: "smtp.gmail.com"
authentication: :plain
user_name: "your_email@gmail.com"
password: "your_password"
When sending from G Suite (formerly Google Apps), it's good to use SMTP relay which has much larger sending limits.More information and detailed guide how to enable SMTP relay is here: https://support.google.com/a/answer/2956491
When configuring SMTP relay service use something like this:
- Name: Redmine
- 1. Allowed senders:
- Only registered Apps users in my domains - in case You have created dedicated G Suite user for Redmine
- 2. Authentication
- [x] Only accept mail from the specified IP addresses - IP address of your Redmine server
- [x] Require SMTP Authentication
- 3. Encryption
- [x] Require TLS encryption
And config can be really simple:
production:
email_delivery:
delivery_method: :smtp
smtp_settings:
address: smtp-relay.gmail.com
port: 587
domain: smtp-relay.gmail.com
authentication: :plain
user_name: your_email@gmail.com
password: your_password
Office 365, Exchange Online¶
Here is an example for Office 365 users (Exchange online). The sender must have an account, or if you want to send from a shared mailbox, the account below must have authorization to "Send As" the sender which is defined in Redmine email notifications settings.
production:
email_delivery:
delivery_method: :smtp
smtp_settings:
enable_starttls_auto: true
address: "smtp.office365.com"
port: '587'
domain: "your_domain.com"
authentication: :login
user_name: "email@your_domain.com"
password: "password"
No Authentication¶
Example for an SMTP service provider with no authentication.
production:
email_delivery:
delivery_method: :smtp
smtp_settings:
address: smtp.knology.net
port: 25
domain: cybersprocket.com
Using sendmail command¶
Example for a unix system that uses the /usr/sbin/sendmail
command.
production:
email_delivery:
delivery_method: :sendmail
Troubleshooting¶
Error: "hostname was not match with the server certificate"¶
If you get this error, there's probably a problem verifying the SSL certificate of your smtp relay. As a temporary fix, you can set this option in the appropriate "email_delivery" section:
enable_starttls_auto: false
Error: "Mail failure - no recipient addresses"¶
When this error happens, the notification is not delivered to the destination address. Instead, you will probably receive a rejection message on your sender address, where you can see the header of the message sent, containing "From:" fields but not containing any "To:" fields.
This error is common on Debian boxes, due to the way exim4 is configured by default, which is "-i -t"
. This configuration tells exim4 that the destination address is inside the header of the message. Instead, we need to configure exim4 so that the destination address will be retrieved from the command line.
The solution consists on editing your config/configuration.yml and making sure you define arguments
containing the string "-i"
, as shown below:
# default configuration options for all environments
default:
email_delivery:
delivery_method: :sendmail
sendmail_settings:
arguments: "-i"
The example above employs :sendmail
method, which employs sendmail_settings
. In case you are using :smtp
or :async_smtp
methods, try smtp_settings
instead.
Error: "Timeout:Error" due to SSL SMTP server connection¶
add an ssl option to the configuration.yml #17239
default:
# Outgoing emails configuration (see examples above)
email_delivery:
delivery_method: :smtp
smtp_settings:
address: smtp.domain.com
port: 465
ssl: true
enable_starttls_auto: true
domain: domain.com
authentication: :login
user_name: redmine@domain.com
password: xxxx
More information¶
Updated by Go MAEDA over 7 years ago · 50 revisions