carbon
Carbon
Email library written in Crystal.
Installation
Add this to your application's shard.yml
:
dependencies:
carbon:
github: luckyframework/carbon
Adapters
Carbon::SendGridAdapter
- Ships with Carbon.Carbon::AwsSesAdapter
- See keizo3/carbon_aws_ses_adapter.Carbon::SendInBlueAdapter
- See atnos/carbon_send_in_blue_adapter.Carbon::MailgunAdapter
- See atnos/carbon_mailgun_adapter.Carbon::SmtpAdapter
- See oneiros/carbon_smtp_adapter.
Usage
First, create a base class for your emails
require "carbon"
# You can setup defaults in this class
abstract class BaseEmail < Carbon::Email
# For example, set up a default 'from' address
from Carbon::Address.new("My App Name", "support@myapp.com")
# Use a string if you just need the email address
from "support@myapp.com"
end
Configure the mailer class
BaseEmail.configure do |settings|
settings.adapter = Carbon::SendGridAdapter.new(api_key: "SEND_GRID_API_KEY")
end
Create a class for your email
# Create an email class
class WelcomeEmail < BaseEmail
def initialize(@name : String, @email_address : String)
end
to @email_address
subject "Welcome, #{@name}!"
header "My-Custom-Header", "header-value"
reply_to "no-reply@noreply.com"
# You can also do just `text` or `html` if you don't want both
templates text, html
end
Create templates
Templates go in the same folder the email is in:
- Text email:
<folder_email_class_is_in>/templates/<underscored_class_name>/text.ecr
- HTML email:
<folder_email_class_is_in>/templates/<underscored_class_name>/html.ecr
So if your email class is in src/my_app/emails/welcome_email.cr
, then your
templates would go in src/my_app/emails/welcome_email/text|html.ecr
.
# in <folder_of_email_class>/templates/welcome_email/text.ecr
# Templates have access to instance variables and methods in the email.
Welcome, <%= @name %>!
# in <folder_of_email_class>/templates/welcome_email/html.ecr
<h1>Welcome, <%= @name %>!</h1>
For more information on what you can do with Embedded Crystal (ECR), see the official Crystal documentation.
Deliver the email
# Send the email right away!
WelcomeEmail.new("Kate", "kate@example.com").deliver
# Send the email in the background using `spawn`
WelcomeEmail.new("Kate", "kate@example.com").deliver_later
Delay email delivery
The built-in delay uses the deliver_later_strategy
setting set to Carbon::SpawnStrategy
. You can create your own custom delayed strategy
that inherits from Carbon::DeliverLaterStrategy
and defines a run
method that takes a Carbon::Email
and a block.
One example might be a job processor:
# Define your new delayed strategy
class SendEmailInJobStrategy < Carbon::DeliverLaterStrategy
# `block.call` will run `deliver`, but you can call
# `deliver` yourself on the `email` when you need.
def run(email : Carbon::Email, &block)
EmailJob.perform_later(email)
end
end
class EmailJob < JobProcessor
def perform(email : Carbon::Email)
email.deliver
end
end
# configure to use your new delayed strategy
BaseEmail.configure do |settings|
settings.deliver_later_strategy = SendEmailInJobStrategy.new
end
Testing
Change the adapter
# In spec/spec_helper.cr or wherever you configure your code
BaseEmail.configure do
# This adapter will capture all emails in memory
settings.adapter = Carbon::DevAdapter.new
end
Reset emails before each spec and include expectations
# In spec/spec_helper.cr
# This gives you the `be_delivered` expectation
include Carbon::Expectations
Spec.before_each do
Carbon::DevAdapter.reset
end
Integration testing
# Let's say we have a class that signs the user up and sends the welcome email
# that was described at the beginning of the README
class SignUpUser
def initialize(@name : String, @email_address : String)
end
def run
sign_user_up
WelcomeEmail.new(name: @name, email_address: @email_address).deliver_now
end
end
it "sends an email after the user signs up" do
SignUpUser.new(name: "Emily", email_address: "em@gmail.com").run
# Test that this email was sent
WelcomeEmail.new(name: "Emily", email_address: "em@gmail.com").should be_delivered
end
Unit testing
Unit testing is simple. Instantiate your email and test the fields you care about.
it "builds a nice welcome email" do
email = WelcomeEmail.new(name: "David", email_address: "david@gmail.com")
# Note that recipients are converted to an array of Carbon::Address
# So if you use a string value for the `to` field, you'll get an array of
# Carbon::Address instead.
email.to.should eq [Carbon::Address.new("david@gmail.com")]
email.text_body.should contain "Welcome"
email.html_body.should contain "Welcome"
end
Note that unit testing can be superfluous in most cases. Instead, try unit testing just fields that have complex logic. The compiler will catch most other issues.
Development
shards install
- Make changes
crystal spec -D skip-integration
(will skip sending test emails to SendGrid)crystal spec
requires aSEND_GRID_API_KEY
ENV variable. Set this in a .env file:
# in .env
# If you want to run tests that actually test emails against the SendGrid server
SEND_GRID_API_KEY=get_from_send_grid
Note: When you open a PR, Github Actions will not run the integration suite. If you need the integeration suite to run, the
RUN_INTEGRATION_SPECS
env var must be set totrue
.
Contributing
- Fork it ( https://github.com/luckyframework/carbon/fork )
- Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
- Make your changes
- Run
./script/test
to run the specs, build shards, and check formatting - Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
- Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
- Create a new Pull Request
Contributors
- paulcsmith Paul Smith - creator, maintainer