# config/config.exs
config :my_app, mailgun_domain: "https://api.mailgun.net/v3/mydomain.com",
mailgun_key: "key-##############"
# lib/mailer.ex
defmodule MyApp.Mailer do
@config domain: Application.get_env(:my_app, :mailgun_domain),
key: Application.get_env(:my_app, :mailgun_key)
use Mailgun.Client, @config
@from "[email protected]"
def send_welcome_text_email(user) do
send_email to: user.email,
from: @from,
subject: "hello!",
text: "Welcome!"
end
def send_welcome_html_email(user) do
send_email to: user.email,
from: @from,
subject: "hello!",
html: "<strong>Welcome!</strong>"
end
# attachments expect a list of maps. Each map should have a filename and path/content
def send_greetings(user, file_path) do
send_email to: user.email,
from: @from,
subject: "Happy b'day",
html: "<strong>Cheers!</strong>",
attachments: [%{path: file_path, filename: "greetings.png"}]
end
def send_invoice(user) do
pdf = Invoice.create_for(user) # a string
send_email to: user.email,
from: @from,
subject: "Invoice",
html: "<strong>Your Invoice</strong>",
attachments: [%{content: pdf, filename: "invoice.pdf"}]
end
end
iex> MyApp.Mailer.send_welcome_text_email(user)
{:ok, ...}
Add mailgun to your mix.exs
dependencies:
def deps do
[ {:mailgun, "~> 0.1.2"} ]
end
For testing purposes mailgun can output emails to a local file instead of
actually sending them. Just set the mode
configuration key to :test
and the test_file_path
to where you want that file to appear.
# lib/mailer.ex
defmodule MyApp.Mailer do
@config domain: Application.get_env(:my_app, :mailgun_domain),
key: Application.get_env(:my_app, :mailgun_key),
mode: :test,
test_file_path: "/tmp/mailgun.json"
use Mailgun.Client, @config
...
end
Under the hood the client uses httpc
to call Mailgun REST API. You can inject any valid httpc
options to your
outbound requests by defining them within httpc_opts
config entry:
# lib/mailer.ex
defmodule MyApp.Mailer do
@config domain: Application.get_env(:my_app, :mailgun_domain),
key: Application.get_env(:my_app, :mailgun_key),
httpc_opts: [connect_timeout: 2000, timeout: 3000]
use Mailgun.Client, @config
...