= has_emails
+has_emails+ adds support for emailing capabilities between ActiveRecord models.
== Resources
API
* http://api.pluginaweek.org/has_emails
Wiki
* http://wiki.pluginaweek.org/Has_emails
Announcement
* http://www.pluginaweek.org
Source
* http://svn.pluginaweek.org/trunk/plugins/active_record/has/has_emails
Development
* http://dev.pluginaweek.org/browser/trunk/plugins/active_record/has/has_emails
== Description
Emailing between users and other parts of a system is a fairly common feature in
web applications, especially for those that support social networking. Emailing
doesn't necessarily need to be between users, but can also act as a way for the
web application to send notices and other notifications to users.
Rails already provides ActionMailer as a way of sending emails. However, the
framework does not provide an easy way to persist emails, track their status, and
process them asynchronously. Designing and building this type of framework can
become complex and cumbersome and takes away from the focus of the web application.
This plugin helps ease that process by providing a complete implementation for
sending and receiving emails to and between models in your application.
== Usage
=== Adding emailing support
If you want to use the built-in support for email addresses (using the EmailAddress
model), you can add emailing support for users like so:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
has_email_address
# has_email_addresses if you want to support multiple addresses
end
On the other hand, if you already have the email address for users stored as a
column in your users table, you can add emailing support like so:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
has_messages :emails,
:message_class => 'Email'
end
=== Creating new emails
email = user.emails.build
email.to << [user1, email_address1, 'someone@somewhere.com']
email.subject = 'Hey!'
email.body = 'Does anyone want to go out tonight?'
email.deliver!
As can be seen in the above example, you can use Users, EmailAddresses, or even
Strings as recipients in emails. Each will be automatically converted to the
EmailRecipient class so that it can be stored in the database.
=== Replying to emails
reply = email.reply_to_all
reply.body = "I'd love to go out!"
reply.deliver!
=== Forwarding emails
forward = email.forward
forward.body = 'Interested?'
forward.deliver!
=== External process messaging
In addition to delivering emails immediately, you can also *queue* emails so
that an external application processes and delivers them. This is especially
useful when you want to asynchronously send e-mails so that it doesn't block the
user interface on your web application.
To queue emails for external processing, you can simply use the queue!
event, rather than deliver!. This will indicate to any external processes
that the email is ready to be sent. The external process can then invoke deliver!
whenever it is ready to send the queued email.
=== Running migrations
To migrate the tables required for this plugin, you can either run the
migration from the command line like so:
rake db:migrate:plugins PLUGIN=has_emails
or (more ideally) generate a migration file that will integrate into your main
application's migration path:
ruby script/generate plugin_migration has_emails
== Testing
Before you can run any tests, the following gems must be installed:
* plugin_test_helper[http://wiki.pluginaweek.org/Plugin_test_helper]
* dry_validity_assertions[http://wiki.pluginaweek.org/Dry_validity_assertions]
== Dependencies
This plugin depends on the presence of the following plugins:
* has_messages[http://wiki.pluginaweek.org/Has_messages]
This plugin is also a plugin+. That means that it contains a slice of an
application, such as models and migrations. To test or use a plugin+, you
must have the following plugins/gems installed:
* plugin_dependencies[http://wiki.pluginaweek.org/Plugin_dependencies]
* loaded_plugins[http://wiki.pluginaweek.org/Loaded_plugins]
* appable_plugins[http://wiki.pluginaweek.org/Appable_plugins]
* plugin_migrations[http://wiki.pluginaweek.org/Plugin_migrations]
Instead of installing each individual plugin+ feature, you can install them all
at once using the plugins+[http://wiki.pluginaweek.org/Plugins_plus] meta package,
which contains all additional features.