This is the Mailgun PHP SDK. This SDK contains methods for easily interacting with the Mailgun API. Below are examples to get you started. For additional examples, please see our official documentation at http://documentation.mailgun.com
To install the SDK, you will need to be using Composer in your project. If you aren't using Composer yet, it's really simple! Here's how to install composer:
curl -sS https://getcomposer.org/installer | php
The Mailgun api client is not hard coupled to Guzzle or any other library that sends HTTP messags. It uses an abstraction called HTTPlug. This will give you the flexibilty to choose what PSR-7 implementaion and HTTP client to use.
If you just want to get started quickly you should run the following command:
php composer.phar require mailgun/mailgun-php php-http/curl-client guzzlehttp/psr7 php-http/message
For shared hosts without SSH access, check out our Shared Host Instructions.
Mailgun has a dependency on the virtual package php-http/client-implementation which requires to you install an adapter, but we do not care which one. That is an implemnetation detail in your application. We also need a PSR-7 implementation and a message factory.
You do not have to use the php-http/curl-client
if you do not want to. You may use the php-http/guzzle6-adapter
. Read more about the virtual packages, why this is a good idea and about the flexibility it brings at the HTTPlug docs.
You should always use Composer's autoloader in your application to automatically load the your dependencies. All examples below assumes you've already included this in your file:
require 'vendor/autoload.php';
use Mailgun\Mailgun;
Here's how to send a message using the SDK:
# First, instantiate the SDK with your API credentials and define your domain.
$mg = new Mailgun("key-example");
$domain = "example.com";
# Now, compose and send your message.
$mg->sendMessage($domain, array('from' => 'bob@example.com',
'to' => 'sally@example.com',
'subject' => 'The PHP SDK is awesome!',
'text' => 'It is so simple to send a message.'));
Or obtain the last 25 log items:
# First, instantiate the SDK with your API credentials and define your domain.
$mg = new Mailgun("key-example");
$domain = "example.com";
# Now, issue a GET against the Logs endpoint.
$mg->get("$domain/log", array('limit' => 25,
'skip' => 0));
The results, provided by the endpoint, are returned as an object, which you can traverse like an array.
Example:
$mg = new Mailgun("key-example");
$domain = "example.com";
$result = $mg->get("$domain/log", array('limit' => 25,
'skip' => 0));
$httpResponseCode = $result->http_response_code;
$httpResponseBody = $result->http_response_body;
# Iterate through the results and echo the message IDs.
$logItems = $result->http_response_body->items;
foreach($logItems as $logItem){
echo $logItem->message_id . "\n";
}
Example Contents:
$httpResponseCode will contain an integer. You can find how we use HTTP response
codes in our documentation:
http://documentation.mailgun.com/api-intro.html?highlight=401#errors
$httpResponseBody will contain an object of the API response. In the above example, a var_dump($result) would contain the following:
object(stdClass)#26 (2) {
["http_response_body"]=>
object(stdClass)#26 (2) {
["total_count"]=>
int(12)
["items"]=>
array(1) {
[0]=>
object(stdClass)#31 (5) {
["hap"]=>
string(9) "delivered"
["created_at"]=>
string(29) "Tue, 20 Aug 2013 20:24:34 GMT"
["message"]=>
string(66) "Delivered: me@samples.mailgun.org → travis@mailgunhq.com 'Hello'"
["type"]=>
string(4) "info"
["message_id"]=>
string(46) "20130820202406.24739.21973@samples.mailgun.org"
}
}
}
}
Debugging the PHP SDK can be really helpful when things aren't working quite right. To debug the SDK, here are some suggestions:
Set the endpoint to Mailgun's Postbin. A Postbin is a web service that allows you to post data, which is then displayed through a browser. This allows you to quickly determine what is actually being transmitted to Mailgun's API.
Step 1 - Create a new Postbin.
Go to http://bin.mailgun.net. The Postbin will generate a special URL. Save that URL.
Step 2 - Instantiate the Mailgun client using Postbin.
Tip: The bin id will be the URL part after bin.mailgun.net. It will be random generated letters and numbers. For example, the bin id in this URL, http://bin.mailgun.net/aecf68de, is "aecf68de".
# First, instantiate the SDK with your API credentials and define your domain.
$mg = new Mailgun('key-example', null, 'bin.mailgun.net');
$mg->setApiVersion('aecf68de');
$mg->setSslEnabled(false);
$domain = 'example.com';
# Now, compose and send your message.
$mg->sendMessage($domain, array('from' => 'bob@example.com',
'to' => 'sally@example.com',
'subject' => 'The PHP SDK is awesome!',
'text' => 'It is so simple to send a message.'));
For usage examples on each API endpoint, head over to our official documentation pages.
This SDK includes a Message Builder, Batch Message and Opt-In Handler component.
Message Builder allows you to quickly create the array of parameters, required to send a message, by calling a methods for each parameter. Batch Message is an extension of Message Builder, and allows you to easily send a batch message job within a few seconds. The complexity of batch messaging is eliminated!
If you are using a framework you might consider these composer packages to make the framework integration easier.
- tehplague/swiftmailer-mailgun-bundle for Symfony2
- Bogardo/Mailgun for Laravel 4
- katanyoo/yii2-mailgun-mailer for Yii2
Be sure to visit the Mailgun official documentation website for additional information about our API.
If you find a bug, please submit the issue in Github directly. Mailgun-PHP Issues
As always, if you need additional assistance, drop us a note through your Control Panel at https://mailgun.com/cp/support.