zfr/zfr-mail

Lightweight abstraction around common mail API

2.2.0 2017-10-16 07:45 UTC

This package is auto-updated.

Last update: 2024-10-29 04:53:01 UTC


README

Build Status

ZfrMail is a lightweight abstraction around common mail API. It provides only a way to send a message (or templated mail if the provider

Dependencies

  • PHP 7.0+
  • Guzzle 6.0+

Installation

Installation of ZfrMail is only officially supported using Composer:

php composer.phar require 'zfr/zfr-mail:1.*'

Usage

Creating a mail

The first thing is to create a mail. Mails are immutable and follow a similar logic to PSR-7 objects. There are two different kinds of mails in ZfrMail:

  • Rendered mails: those are mails that you are rendering yourself, so you set manually the text and HTML body. ZfrMail does not come with any integration with template engine such as Twig or Plates. It's up to you to render them.
  • Templated mails: some providers like Postmark or Mandrill provide a template system where the templates are stored in the provider. This allows non-technical people to edit the mail, and make maintenance easier. Make sure that the provider you are using supports templated emails before using it.

For instance, here is how you can create a simple rendered email:

$mail = (new RenderedMail())->withFrom('from@test.com')
    ->withTo('to@test.com')
    ->withSubject('Hello')
    ->withTextBody('This is a mail')
    ->withHtmlBody('<p>This is a mail</p>');

And a templated email:

$mail = (new TemplatedMail())->withFrom('from@test.com')
    ->withTo('to@test.com')
    ->withTemplate('templ-1234')
    ->withTemplateVariables(['first_name' => 'Foo']);

Mail can also accepts options. Those options are specific to the mail provider you're using. For instance, if you are using Postmark, the accepted options are (we're following Postmark convention on naming to make it easy):

  • Tag
  • InlineCss
  • TrackOpens
  • Headers

Configuring a mailer

For now, ZfrMail provides integration with Postmark and Amazon SES.

Postmark

In order to configure Postmark, add the following code to your config:

return [
    'zfr_mail' => [
        'postmark' => [
            'server_token' => 'YOUR_SERVER_TOKEN'
        ]
    ],
];

The server token can be found in your Postmark account.

Amazon SES

In order to configure Amazon SES, add the following code to your config:

return [
    'aws' => [
        'credentials' => [
            'key' => 'YOUR_AWS_KEY',
            'secret' => 'YOUR_AWS_SECRET'
        ],
        'region' => 'YOUR_AWS_REGION',
        'version' => 'AWS_VERSION' // most of the time 'latest'
    ],
];

You have to had those dependencies in order to use Amazon SES :

php composer.phar require 'zfr/zfr-aws-utils'
php composer.phar require 'aws/aws-sdk-php:^3.36'

Using the mailer

You can now inject the ZfrMail\Mailer\PostmarkMailer or ZfrMail\Mailer\AwsSesMailer class into your services. Those class comes with a single send method. The mailer will automatically either send a templated or rendered mail for you:

$mailer->send($mail);

Mailer also returns the message ID of the underlying platform (if supported). This can be useful if you need to implement features such as open tracking, where you would need to save into your database the message ID of the mailer:

$messageId = $mailer->send($mail);

ZfrMail is meant to be a lightweight solution with minimal overhead. As a consequence, it does not any validation to check whether your email addresses are valid, or if you are properly formatting the options according to your chosen provider.

To-do

  • Add more providers
  • Better error support (for now it will throw Guzzle exceptions, but we may create some pre-defined exceptions in the future and extract those from the Guzzle error)