* Add option to set sendmail path. Fix default
Testing this in an application, it would seem that sendmail -bs is the wrong option for this case?
What Laravel appears to do is pipe an RFC-2822 formatted message on STDIN and requires the sendmail emulation to deal with it,
rather than -bs which initiates an SMTP session.
if Exim is the default MTA then -t would seem to be the correct option.
If you have an alternative installed instead of sendmail/exim, then there's no way to set the path, so I added MAIL_SENDMAIL_PATH
so you can do, e.g.:
MAIL_SENDMAIL_PATH="/usr/bin/msmtp -t --tls=off --from=${MAIL_FROM_ADDRESS} --auto-from=off"
msmtp doesn't support -bs at all
* Update mail.php
Co-authored-by: Taylor Otwell <taylor@laravel.com>
Per https://github.com/laravel/framework/pull/35588 , the term "schema" (a namespace) has been corrected to "search_path" (a list of namespaces), where appropriate, throughout the framework.
Accordingly, the `schema` configuration key should be changed to `search_path` to better reflect the fact that it may specify a _list_ of schemata (schemas), and not just a single schema. (In several Laravel versions prior to 9.0, the `schema` key could already specify more than one schema, but this fact was undocumented and non-obvious without examining the implementation carefully.)
As of Laravel 9.0, the `search_path` may specify any number of schemata, in any of the following formats:
'search_path' => 'public',
'search_path' => 'public,laravel',
'search_path' => ['public', '"laravel"', "'foobar'", '$bat'],
'search_path' => '\'public\', "laravel", "\'foobar\'", \'$bat\'',
'search_path' => '"$user", public',
Note that in the last example, the `$user` variable refers to PostgreSQL's special $user variable, as described in the Schema Documentation ( https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/ddl-schemas.html ).
Note also that Laravel's default `search_path` value, 'public', is not necessarily the best choice for every use case. Developers should consult the "Usage Patterns" section of the aforementioned documentation before deciding how best to set the `search_path`, as it has security implications.