/FluentEmail

All in one email sender for .NET. Supports popular senders (SendGrid, MailGun, etc) and Razor templates.

Primary LanguageC#MIT LicenseMIT

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FluentEmail - All in one email sender for .NET and .NET Core

The easiest way to send email from .NET and .NET Core. Use Razor for email templates and send using SendGrid, MailGun, SMTP and more.

Forked from original by @lukencode

My packages are the same names, but prefixed with jcamp. to differentiate them.

The original repo has not been updated in almost a year and I needed some updates to the package that were provided by various PRs. I've tried to give all credit where due.

Original blog post here for a detailed guide A complete guide to send email in .NET

Nuget Packages

Core Library

  • FluentEmail.Core - Just the domain model. Includes very basic defaults, but is also included with every other package here.
  • FluentEmail.Smtp - Send email via SMTP server.

Renderers

Mail Provider Integrations

Basic Usage

var email = await Email
    .From("john@email.com")
    .To("bob@email.com", "bob")
    .Subject("hows it going bob")
    .Body("yo bob, long time no see!")
    .SendAsync();

Dependency Injection

Configure FluentEmail in startup.cs with these helper methods. This will inject IFluentEmail (send a single email) and IFluentEmailFactory (used to send multiple emails in a single context) with the ISender and ITemplateRenderer configured using AddRazorRenderer(), AddSmtpSender() or other packages.

public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
    services
        .AddFluentEmail("fromemail@test.test")
        .AddRazorRenderer()
        .AddSmtpSender("localhost", 25);
}

Example to take a dependency on IFluentEmail:

public class EmailService {

   private IFluentEmail _fluentEmail;

   public EmailService(IFluentEmail fluentEmail) {
     _fluentEmail = fluentEmail;
   }

   public async Task Send() {
     await _fluentEmail.To("hellO@gmail.com")
     .Body("The body").SendAsync();
   }
}

Using a Razor template

// Using Razor templating package (or set using AddRazorRenderer in services)
Email.DefaultRenderer = new RazorRenderer();

var template = "Dear @Model.Name, You are totally @Model.Compliment.";

var email = Email
    .From("bob@hotmail.com")
    .To("somedude@gmail.com")
    .Subject("woo nuget")
    .UsingTemplate(template, new { Name = "Luke", Compliment = "Awesome" });

Using a Liquid template

Liquid templates are a more secure option for Razor templates as they run in more restricted environment. While Razor templates have access to whole power of CLR functionality like file access, they also are more insecure if templates come from untrusted source. Liquid templates also have the benefit of being faster to parse initially as they don't need heavy compilation step like Razor templates do.

Model properties are exposed directly as properties in Liquid templates so they also become more compact.

See Fluid samples for more examples.

// Using Liquid templating package (or set using AddLiquidRenderer in services)

// file provider is used to resolve layout files if they are in use
var fileProvider = new PhysicalFileProvider(Path.Combine(someRootPath, "EmailTemplates"));
var options = new LiquidRendererOptions
{
    FileProvider = fileProvider
};

Email.DefaultRenderer = new LiquidRenderer(Options.Create(options));

// template which utilizes layout
var template = @"
{% layout '_layout.liquid' %}
Dear {{ Name }}, You are totally {{ Compliment }}.";

var email = Email
    .From("bob@hotmail.com")
    .To("somedude@gmail.com")
    .Subject("woo nuget")
    .UsingTemplate(template, new ViewModel { Name = "Luke", Compliment = "Awesome" });

Sending Emails

// Using Smtp Sender package (or set using AddSmtpSender in services)
Email.DefaultSender = new SmtpSender();

//send normally
email.Send();

//send asynchronously
await email.SendAsync();

Template File from Disk

var email = Email
    .From("bob@hotmail.com")
    .To("somedude@gmail.com")
    .Subject("woo nuget")
    .UsingTemplateFromFile($"{Directory.GetCurrentDirectory()}/Mytemplate.cshtml", new { Name = "Rad Dude" });

Embedded Template File

Note for .NET Core 2 users: You'll need to add the following line to the project containing any embedded razor views. See this issue for more details.

<MvcRazorExcludeRefAssembliesFromPublish>false</MvcRazorExcludeRefAssembliesFromPublish>
var email = new Email("bob@hotmail.com")
	.To("benwholikesbeer@twitter.com")
	.Subject("Hey cool name!")
	.UsingTemplateFromEmbedded("Example.Project.Namespace.template-name.cshtml",
		new { Name = "Bob" },
		TypeFromYourEmbeddedAssembly.GetType().GetTypeInfo().Assembly);