You can run MailHog locally from the command line.
go get github.com/mailhog/MailHog
MailHog -h
To configure MailHog, use the environment variables or command line flags described in the CONFIG.
MailHog can be started as a daemon using supervisord/upstart/etc.
See this example init script and this Ansible role by geerlingguy.
If installed with Homebrew on OSX you can have launchd start mailhog now and restart at login: brew services start mailhog
The example Dockerfile can be used to run MailHog in a Docker container.
You can run it directly from Docker Hub (thanks humboldtux)
docker run -d -p 1025:1025 -p 8025:8025 mailhog/mailhog
To mount the Maildir to the local filesystem, you can use a volume:
docker run -d -e "MH_STORAGE=maildir" -v $PWD/maildir:/maildir -p 1025:1025 -p 8025:8025 mailhog/mailhog
You can deploy MailHog using AWS Elastic Beanstalk.
- Open the Elastic Beanstalk console
- Create a zip file containing the Dockerfile and MailHog binary
- Create a new Elastic Beanstalk application
- Launch a new environment and upload the zip file
Note You'll need to reconfigure nginx in Elastic Beanstalk to expose both ports as TCP, since by default it proxies the first exposed port to port 80 as HTTP.
If you're using in-memory storage, you can only use a single instance of MailHog. To use a load balanced EB application, use MongoDB backed storage.
To configure your Elastic Beanstalk MailHog instance, either:
- Set environment variables using the Elastic Beanstalk console
- Edit the Dockerfile to pass in command line arguments
You may face restrictions on outbound SMTP from EC2, for example if you are releasing messages to real SMTP servers.
For deploying MailHog using SaltStack, there's a SaltStack Formula available in github.com/ssc-services/salt-formulas-public.