Skip to content

theamazingteam/mailgun-ruby

 
 

Repository files navigation

Mailgun-Ruby

Build Status Gem Version

** 🚧 This fork implements the latest fix mentioned in mailgun/mailgun-ruby#162 and is just a temporary fork until that PR is merged back to the main repo.**

This is the Mailgun Ruby Library. This library contains methods for easily interacting with the Mailgun API. Below are examples to get you started. For additional examples, please see our official documentation at https://documentation.mailgun.com

Installation

Via RubyGems

gem install mailgun-ruby

Gemfile:

gem 'mailgun-ruby', '~>1.1.6'

Usage

Here's how to send a message using the library:

require 'mailgun-ruby'

# First, instantiate the Mailgun Client with your API key
mg_client = Mailgun::Client.new 'your-api-key'

# Define your message parameters
message_params =  { from: 'bob@sending_domain.com',
                    to:   '[email protected]',
                    subject: 'The Ruby SDK is awesome!',
                    text:    'It is really easy to send a message!'
                  }

# Send your message through the client
mg_client.send_message 'sending_domain.com', message_params

Or obtain the last couple log items:

# First, instantiate the Mailgun Client with your API key
mg_client = Mailgun::Client.new 'your-secret-api-key'

# Define the domain you wish to query
domain = 'example.com'

# Issue the get request
result = mg_client.get("#{domain}/events", {:event => 'delivered'})

If you're using the EU domains, make sure you specify it when creating the client:

mg_client = Mailgun::Client.new 'your-api-key', 'api.eu.mailgun.net'

Rails

The library can be initialized with a Rails initializer containing similar:

Mailgun.configure do |config|
  config.api_key = 'your-secret-api-key'
end

Or have the initializer read your environment setting if you prefer.

To use as the ActionMailer delivery method, add this to your config/environments/whatever.rb and replace api-myapikey and mydomain.com with your secret API key and domain, respectively:

  config.action_mailer.delivery_method = :mailgun
  config.action_mailer.mailgun_settings = {
    api_key: 'api-myapikey',
    domain: 'mydomain.com',
    # api_host: 'api.eu.mailgun.net'  # Uncomment this line for EU region domains
  }

To specify Mailgun options such as campaign or tags:

class UserMailer < ApplicationMailer
  def welcome_email
    mail(to: params[:to], subject: "Welcome!").tap do |message|
      message.mailgun_options = {
        "tag" => ["abtest-option-a", "beta-user"],
        "tracking-opens" => true,
        "tracking-clicks" => "htmlonly"
      }
    end
  end
end   

To get the Mailgun message_id after ActionMailer has successfully delivered the email:

  mailer = UserNotifier.welcome_email(current_user)
  mailer_response = mailer.deliver_now
  mailgun_message_id = mailer_response.message_id

Response

The results are returned in a Response class:

result = mg_client.get("#{domain}/events", {:event => 'delivered'})

# To Ruby standard Hash.
result.to_h

# To YAML.
result.to_yaml

# Or raw JSON
result.body

Here's an example, breaking out the response:

mg_client = Mailgun::Client.new("your-api-key")

message_params =  {
                   from: '[email protected]',
                   to:   '[email protected]',
                   subject: 'The Ruby SDK is awesome!',
                   text:    'It is really easy to send a message!'
                  }

result = mg_client.send_message('example.com', message_params).to_h!

message_id = result['id']
message = result['message']

Debugging

Debugging the Ruby Library can be really helpful when things aren't working quite right. To debug the library, here are some suggestions:

Set the endpoint to Mailgun's Postbin. A Postbin is a web service that allows you to post data, which is then displayed through a browser. This allows you to quickly determine what is actually being transmitted to Mailgun's API.

Step 1 - Create a new Postbin. Go to http://bin.mailgun.net. The Postbin will generate a special URL. Save that URL.

Step 2 - Instantiate the Mailgun client using Postbin.

Tip: The bin id will be the URL part after bin.mailgun.net. It will be random generated letters and numbers. For example, the bin id in this URL, http://bin.mailgun.net/aecf68de, is "aecf68de".

# First, instantiate the Mailgun Client with your API key
mg_client = Mailgun::Client.new("your-api-key", "bin.mailgun.net", "aecf68de", ssl = false)

# Define your message parameters
message_params = {  from: 'bob@sending_domain.com',
                    to: '[email protected]',
                    subject: 'The Ruby SDK is awesome!',
                    text: 'It is really easy to send a message!'
                  }

# Send your message through the client
mg_client.send_message("sending_domain.com", message_params)

For usage examples on each API endpoint, head over to our official documentation pages. Or the Snippets file.

This SDK includes the following components:

Message Builder allows you to quickly create the array of parameters, required to send a message, by calling a methods for each parameter. Batch Message is an extension of Message Builder, and allows you to easily send a batch message job within a few seconds. The complexity of batch messaging is eliminated!

Testing mail deliveries

# First, instantiate the Mailgun Client with your API key
mg_client = Mailgun::Client.new 'your-api-key'

# Put the client in test mode
mg_client.enable_test_mode!

# Define your message parameters
message_params = {  from: 'bob@sending_domain.com',
                    to: '[email protected]',
                    subject: 'The Ruby SDK is awesome!',
                    text: 'It is really easy to send a message!'
                  }

# Send your message through the client
# Note: This will not actually hit the API, and will return a generic OK response.
mg_client.send_message('sending_domain.com', message_params)

# You can now access a copy of message_params
Mailgun::Client.deliveries.first[:from] # => 'bob@sending_domain.com'

Testing

There are unit tests and integration tests. Unit tests do not require Mailgun account keys. Integration tests do. By default:

bundle exec rake spec

will run just unit tests. To run integration tests:

bundle exec rake spec:integration

will run just integration tests.

bundle exec rake spec:all

will run all both types.

Integrations tests will run against VCR cassettes if they exist. If you'd like to run tests against your mailgun account, remove the cassettes.

To set up Mailgun key information. See the example file: .ruby-env.yml.example. Rename this file to .ruby-env.yml and replace the items between the <> (including the <>) with the private and public keys, and sandbox domain. Alternatively use a different domain registered in Mailgun if you have one you want to test against.

The MAILGUN_* variables in .ruby-env.yml(.example) can also be set as environment variables, if you'd like to do that instead.

Support and Feedback

Be sure to visit the Mailgun official documentation website for additional information about our API.

If you find a bug, please submit the issue in Github directly. Mailgun-Ruby Issues

As always, if you need additional assistance, drop us a note through your Control Panel at https://mailgun.com/cp/support.

About

Mailgun's Official Ruby Library

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Ruby 100.0%