spatie / laravel-database-mail-templates
Render Laravel mailables using a template stored in the database.
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Requires
- php: ^7.2|^8.0
- laravel/framework: ~5.8|^6.0|^7.0|^8.0|^9.0|^10.0|^11.0
- mustache/mustache: ^2.14.1|^2.14
Requires (Dev)
- ext-pdo_sqlite: *
- mockery/mockery: ^1.0|^1.3.1
- orchestra/testbench: ~3.8|^4.0|^5.0|^6.0|^7.0|^8.0|^9.0
- phpunit/phpunit: ^7.5|^8.0|^9.3|^10.5
README
Render Laravel mailables using a template stored in the database.
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Quick example
The following example will send a WelcomeMail
using a template stored in the database and wrapped in an HTML layout.
namespace App\Mail; use Spatie\MailTemplates\TemplateMailable; class WelcomeMail extends TemplateMailable { /** @var string */ public $name; public function __construct(User $user) { $this->name = $user->name; } public function getHtmlLayout(): string { $pathToLayout = storage_path('mail-layouts/main.html'); return file_get_contents($pathToLayout); } } MailTemplate::create([ 'mailable' => \App\Mail\WelcomeMail::class, 'subject' => 'Welcome, {{ name }}', 'html_template' => '<p>Hello, {{ name }}.</p>', 'text_template' => 'Hello, {{ name }}.' ]); Mail::to($user->email)->send(new WelcomeMail($user));
The HTML for the sent email will look like this:
<header>Welcome!</header> <p>Hello, John.</p> <footer>Copyright 2018</footer>
Installation
You can install the package via composer:
composer require spatie/laravel-database-mail-templates
Publish and run the database migrations:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Spatie\MailTemplates\MailTemplatesServiceProvider" --tag="migrations"
If you want to use the default MailTemplate
model, all that's left to do is run php artisan migrate
to create the mail_templates
table.
If you plan on creating a custom MailTemplate
model continue by modifying the migration and creating your custom model before running php artisan migrate
.
Usage
After installing the package and running the migrations you'll have a new table in your database called mail_templates
. This table will be used by the MailTemplate
model.
The default MailTemplate
has a mailable
property that corresponds to the Mailable
's class name. It also has a subject
and body
property which are both used to store mustache template strings.
You might want to set up a seeder that seeds your application's necessary templates:
use Illuminate\Database\Seeder; class MailTemplatesSeeder extends Seeder { public function run() { MailTemplate::create([ 'mailable' => \App\Mail\WelcomeMail::class, 'subject' => 'Welcome, {{ name }}', 'html_template' => '<h1>Hello, {{ name }}!</h1>', 'text_template' => 'Hello, {{ name }}!', ]); } }
As you can see in the above example, you can use mustache template tags in both the subject and body of the mail template!
Let's have a look at the corresponding mailable:
namespace App\Mail; use TemplateMailable; class WelcomeMail extends TemplateMailable { /** @var string */ public $name; /** @var string */ public $email; public function __construct(User $user) { $this->name = $user->name; $this->email = $user->email; } }
By extending the \Spatie\MailTemplates\TemplateMailable
class this mailable will be rendered using the corresponding MailTemplate
. All public properties on the WelcomeMail
will be available in the template.
If you need to use properties within your template that are initially defined within your WelcomeMail
(for example, data that comes from another source). You can call $this->setAdditionalData()
and pass it an array of you additional key => value pairs.
An example of this would be:
namespace App\Mail; use TemplateMailable; class WelcomeMail extends TemplateMailable { public function __construct(User $user) { $this->setAdditionalData([ 'name' => 'Joe Bloggs' ]); } }
Customizing the MailTemplate
model
The default MailTemplate
model is sufficient for using one database mail template for one mailable. If you want to use multiple mail templates for the same mailable or extend the MailTemplate
model, we highly encourage you to publish the mail_template
migration and create your own mail template model by extending MailTemplate
. Make sure to implement the MailTemplateInterface
interface as well.
Imagine an application like meetup.com that deals with different meetup groups. The application has a couple of different mailables like NewMeetupPlannedMail
and MeetupCancelledMail
to inform users of new meetups.
Using this package we can create a MeetupMailTemplate
for each meetup group. This way each group can add their own copy in the template. The MeetupMailTemplate
model would look something like this:
use Spatie\MailTemplates\Models\MailTemplate; class MeetupMailTemplate extends MailTemplate implements MailTemplateInterface { public function meetupGroup(): BelongsTo { return $this->belongsTo(MeetupGroup::class); } public function scopeForMailable(Builder $query, Mailable $mailable): Builder { return $query ->where('mailable', get_class($mailable)) ->where('meetup_group_id', $mailable->getMeetupGroupId()); } public function getHtmlLayout(): string { return $this->meetupGroup->mail_layout; } }
MeetupMailTemplate
extends the package's MailTemplate
and overrides a couple of methods. We've also added the relationship to the MeetupGroup
that this mail template belongs to.
By extending the getHtmlLayout()
method we can provide the group's custom mail header and footer. Read more about adding a header and footer to a mail template.
We've also extended the scopeForMailable()
method which is used to fetch the corresponding mail template from the database.
On top of the default mailable
where-clause we've added a meetup_group_id
where-clause that'll query for the mailable's meeting_group_id
.
Next, let's have a look at what our NewMeetupPlannedMail
might look like:
use Spatie\MailTemplates\TemplateMailable; class NewMeetupPlannedMail extends TemplateMailable { // use our custom mail template model protected static $templateModelClass = MeetupMailTemplate::class; /** @var string */ public $location; /** @var \App\Models\Meetup */ protected $meetup; // protected property, we don't want this in the template data public function __construct(Meetup $meetup) { $this->meetup = $meetup; $this->location = $meetup->location; } // provide a method to get the meetup group id so we can use it in MeetupMailTemplate public function getMeetupGroupId(): int { return $this->meetup->meetup_group_id; } }
When sending a NewMeetupPlannedMail
the right MeetupMailTemplate
for the meetup group will be used with its own custom copy and mail layout. Pretty neat.
Template variables
When building a UI for your mail templates you'll probably want to show a list of available variables near your wysiwyg-editor.
You can get the list of available variables from both the mailable and the mail template model using the getVariables()
.
WelcomeMail::getVariables(); // ['name', 'email'] MailTemplate::create(['mailable' => WelcomeMail::class, ... ])->getVariables(); // ['name', 'email'] MailTemplate::create(['mailable' => WelcomeMail::class, ... ])->variables; // ['name', 'email']
Adding a header and footer around a mail template
You can extend the getHtmlLayout()
method on either a template mailable or a mail template. getHtmlLayout()
should return a string layout containing the {{{ body }}}
placeholder.
When sending a TemplateMailable
the compiled template will be rendered inside of the {{{ body }}}
placeholder in the layout before being sent.
If using a Blade view, the placeholder will need to be @{{{ body }}}
.
The following example will send a WelcomeMail
using a template wrapped in a layout.
use Spatie\MailTemplates\TemplateMailable; class WelcomeMail extends TemplateMailable { // ... public function getHtmlLayout(): string { /** * In your application you might want to fetch the layout from an external file or Blade view. * * External file: `return file_get_contents(storage_path('mail-layouts/main.html'));` * * Blade view: `return view('mailLayouts.main', $data)->render();` */ return '<header>Site name!</header>{{{ body }}}<footer>Copyright 2018</footer>'; } } MailTemplate::create([ 'mailable' => WelcomeMail::class, 'html_template' => '<p>Welcome, {{ name }}!</p>', ]); Mail::to($user->email)->send(new WelcomeMail($user));
The rendered HTML for the sent email will look like this:
<header>Site name!</header> <p>Welcome, John!</p> <footer>Copyright 2018</footer>
Adding a layout to a mail template model
It is also possible to extend the getHtmlLayout()
method of the MailTemplate
model (instead of extending getHtmlLayout()
on the mailable).
You might for example want to use a different layout based on a mail template model property. This can be done by adding the getHtmlLayout()
method on your custom MailTemplate
model instead.
The following example uses a different layout based on what EventMailTemplate
is being used. As you can see, in this case the layout is stored in the database on a related Event
model.
use Spatie\MailTemplates\Models\MailTemplate; class EventMailTemplate extends MailTemplate { public function event(): BelongsTo { return $this->belongsTo(Event::class); } public function getHtmlLayout(): string { return $this->event->mail_layout_html; } }
Translating mail templates
Out of the box this package doesn't support multi-langual templates. However, it integrates perfectly with Laravel's localized mailables and our own laravel-translatable package.
Simply install the laravel-translatable package, publish the create_mail_template_table
migration, change its text
columns to json
and extend the MailTemplate
model like this:
use \Spatie\MailTemplates\MailTemplate; class MailTemplate extends MailTemplate { use HasTranslations; public $translatable = ['subject', 'html_template']; }
Testing
composer test
Changelog
Please see CHANGELOG for more information on what has changed recently.
Contributing
Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.
Security
If you've found a bug regarding security please mail security@spatie.be instead of using the issue tracker.
Credits
License
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.