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PHPMailer FAQ
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PHPMailer FAQ
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- - Q: I'm using the SMTP mailer and I keep on getting a timeout message
- well before the X seconds I set it for. What gives?
- A: PHP versions 4.0.4pl1 and earlier have a bug in which sockets timeout
- early. You can fix this by re-compiling PHP 4.0.4pl1 with this fix:
- timeoutfix.diff. Otherwise you can wait for the new PHP release.
-
- - Q: I am concerned that using include files will take up too much
- processing time on my computer. How can I make it run faster?
- A: PHP by itself is very fast. Much faster than ASP or JSP running on
- the same type of server. This is because it has very little overhead compared
- to its competitors and it pre-compiles all of
- its code before it runs each script (in PHP4). However, all of
- this compiling and re-compiling can take up a lot of valuable
- computer resources. However, there are programs out there that compile
- PHP code and store it in memory (or on mmaped files) to reduce the
- processing immensely. Two of these: APC
- (Alternative PHP Cache) and Afterburner
- (Win32 download)
- are excellent free tools that do just this. If you have the money
- you might also try Zend Cache, it is
- even faster than the open source varieties. All of these tools make your
- scripts run faster while also reducing the load on your server. I have tried
- them myself and they are quite stable too.
-
- - Q: What mailer gives me the best performance?
- A: On a single machine the sendmail (or Qmail) is fastest overall.
- Next fastest is mail() to give you the best performance. Both do not have the overhead of SMTP.
- If you have you have your mail server on a another machine then
- SMTP is your only option, but you do get the benefit of redundant mail servers.
- If you are running a mailing list with thousands of names, the fastest mailers in order are: SMTP, sendmail (or Qmail), mail().
-
- - Q: When I try to attach a file with on my server I get a
- "Could not find {file} on filesystem error". Why is this?
- A: If you are using a Unix machine this is probably because the user
- running your web server does not have read access to the directory in question. If you are using Windows,
- then the problem probably is that you have used single backslashes to denote directories (\).
- A single backslash has a special meaning to PHP so these are not
- valid. Instead use double backslashes ("\\") or a single forward
- slash ("/").
-
+ - Q: I am concerned that using include files will take up too much
+ processing time on my computer. How can I make it run faster?
+ A: PHP by itself is fairly fast, but it recompiles scripts every time they are run, which takes up valuable
+ computer resources. You can bypass this by using an opcode cache which compiles
+ PHP code and store it in memory to reduce overhead immensely. APC
+ (Alternative PHP Cache) is a free opcode cache extension in the PECL library.
+ - Q: Which mailer gives me the best performance?
+ A: On a single machine the sendmail (or Qmail) is fastest overall.
+ Next fastest is mail() to give you the best performance. Both do not have the overhead of SMTP.
+ If you do not have a local mail server (as is typical on Windows), SMTP is your only option.
+ - Q: When I try to attach a file with on my server I get a
+ "Could not find {file} on filesystem error". Why is this?
+ A: If you are using a Unix machine this is probably because the user
+ running your web server does not have read access to the directory in question. If you are using Windows,
+ then the problem is probably that you have used single backslashes to denote directories (\).
+ A single backslash has a special meaning to PHP so these are not
+ valid. Instead use double backslashes ("\\") or a single forward
+ slash ("/").
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