Skip to content

mail queuing and management for the Django web framework

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

treyhunner/django-mailer

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

django-mailer by James Tauber <http://jtauber.com/>

http://code.google.com/p/django-mailer/

A reusable Django app for queuing the sending of email

Usage

django-mailer is asynchronous so in addition to putting mail on the queue you need to periodically tell it to clear the queue and actually send the mail.

The latter is done via a command extension.

Putting Mail On The Queue

Because django-mailer currently uses the same function signature as Django's core mail support you can do the following in your code:

# favour django-mailer but fall back to django.core.mail from django.conf import settings

if "mailer" in settings.INSTALLED_APPS:
from mailer import send_mail
else:
from django.core.mail import send_mail

and then just call send_mail like you normally would in Django:

send_mail(subject, message_body, settings.DEFAULT_FROM_EMAIL, recipients)

or to send a HTML e-mail (this function is not in Django):

send_html_mail(subject, message_plaintext, message_html, settings.DEFAULT_FROM_EMAIL, recipients)

Additionally you can send all the admins as specified in the ADMIN setting by calling:

mail_admins(subject, message_body)

or all managers as defined in the MANAGERS setting by calling:

mail_managers(subject, message_body)

Clear Queue With Command Extensions

With mailer in your INSTALLED_APPS, there will be two new manage.py commands you can run:

  • send_mail will clear the current message queue. If there are any failures, they will be marked deferred and will not be attempted again by send_mail.
  • retry_deferred will move any deferred mail back into the normal queue (so it will be attempted again on the next send_mail).

You may want to set these up via cron to run regularly:

          • (cd $PINAX; /usr/local/bin/python2.5 manage.py send_mail >> $PINAX/cron_mail.log 2>&1)

0,20,40 * * * * (cd $PINAX; /usr/local/bin/python2.5 manage.py retry_deferred >> $PINAX/cron_mail_deferred.log 2>&1)

This attempts to send mail every minute with a retry on failure every 20 minutes.

manage.py send_mail uses a lock file in case clearing the queue takes longer than the interval between calling manage.py send_mail.

Note that if your project lives inside a virtualenv, you also have to execute this command from the virtualenv. The same, naturally, applies also if you're executing it with cron. The Pinax documentation explains that in more details.

Pinax documentation: http://pinaxproject.com/docs/dev/deployment.html#sending-mail-and-notices

Using EMAIL_BACKEND

To automatically switch all your mail to use django-mailer, instead of changing imports you can also use the EMAIL_BACKEND feature that was introduced in Django 1.2. In your settings file, you first have to set EMAIL_BACKEND:

EMAIL_BACKEND = "mailer.backend.DbBackend"

If you were previously using a non-default EMAIL_BACKEND, you need to configure the MAILER_EMAIL_BACKEND setting, so that django-mailer knows how to actually send the mail:

MAILER_EMAIL_BACKEND = "your.actual.EmailBackend"

About

mail queuing and management for the Django web framework

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 100.0%