I've done a terrible job keeping this up to date, handling PRs and the rest. You shouldn't use this for anything new, try the (actually maintained!) mailgun-js package instead.
I'm keeping this up for any existing users, but it's essentially read-only at this point. Don't use node-mailgun
if you have a choice.
This library provides simple access to Mailgun's API for node.js applications. It's MIT licensed, and being used in production over at Hipsell.
$ npm install mailgun
Or you can just throw mailgun.js
into your application. There are
no dependencies outside of node's standard library.
Note: master
on Github is going to be untested/unstable at times,
as this is a small enough library that I don't want to bother
with a more complicated repo structure. As such, you should
really only rely on the version of mailgun
in npm
, as
I'll only ever push stable and tested code there.
At the time of writing, Mailgun's documentation is actually incorrect in places,
which is unfortunate. As such, I'm going to re-document everything in this README
according to the actual way it's implemented in node-mailgun
, which itself
is based off the implementation from Mailgun's github account, and not the API
docs on the site.
Access to the API is done through a Mailgun object. It's instantiated like so:
var Mailgun = require('mailgun').Mailgun;
var mg = new Mailgun('api-key');
Mailgun's API provides two methods for sending email: raw, and text. Both of them are exposed here.
Sends a simple plain-text email. This also allows for slightly easier
sending of Mailgun options, since with sendRaw
you have to set them
in the MIME body yourself.
sendText(sender, recipients, subject, text, [servername=''], [options={}], [callback(err)])
sender
- Sender of the message; this should be a full email address (e.g.example@example.com
).recipients
- A string (example@example.com
) or array of strings (['a@example.com', 'b@example.com']
) of recipients; these can be email addresses or HTTP URLs.subject
- Message subjecttext
- Message body textservername
- The name of the Mailgun server. If you only have one server on your Mailgun account, this can be omitted. Otherwise, it should be set to the server you want to send from.options
- Optional parameters. See Mailgun's API docs for details on these. At the time of writing, the only supported value isheaders
, which should be a hash of additional MIME headers you want to send.callback
- Callback to be fired when the email is done being sent. This should take a single parameter,err
, that will be set to the status code of the API HTTP response code if the email failed to send; on success,err
will beundefined
.
sendText('sender@example.com',
['recipient1@example.com', 'http://example.com/recipient2'],
'Behold the wonderous power of email!',
{'X-Campaign-Id': 'something'},
function(err) { err && console.log(err) });
Sends a raw MIME message. Don't just use this with text; instead, you should either build a MIME message manually or by using some MIME library such as andris9's mailcomposer module https://github.com/andris9/mailcomposer (FWIW mailcomposer is the same module used by the popular nodemailer module http://github.com/andris9/Nodemailer).
sendRaw(sender, recipients, rawBody, [servername], [callback(err)])
sender
- Sender of the message; this should be a full email address (e.g.example@example.com
)recipients
- A string (example@example.com
) or array of strings (['a@example.com', 'b@example.com']
) of recipients; these can be email addresses or HTTP URLs.rawBody
- MIME message to sendservername
- The name of the Mailgun server. If you only have one server on your Mailgun account, this can be omitted. Otherwise, it should be set to the server you want to send from.callback
- Callback to be fired when the email is done being sent. This should take a single parameter,err
, that will be set to the status code of the API HTTP response code if the email failed to send; on success,err
will beundefined
.
sendRaw('sender@example.com',
['recipient1@example.com', 'http://example.com/recipient2'],
'From: sender@example.com' +
'\nTo: ' + 'recipient1@example.com, http://example.com/recipient2' +
'\nContent-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8' +
'\nSubject: I Love Email' +
'\n\nBecause it\'s just so awesome',
function(err) { err && console.log(err) });
Mailgun allows sender and recipient email addresses to be formatted in several different ways:
'John Doe' <john@example.com>
"John Doe" <john@example.com>
John Doe <john@example.com>
<john@example.com>
john@example.com
Mailgun understands a couple special headers, specified via options
when using
sendText
, or in the MIME headers when using sendRaw
. These are defined
below.
X-Mailgun-Tag
- Used to tag sent emails (defined inMailgun.MAILGUN_TAG
)X-Campaign-Id
- Used for tracking campaign data (defined inMailgun.CAMPAIGN_ID
)
Here's a complete sending example.
var Mailgun = require('mailgun').Mailgun;
var mg = new Mailgun('some-api-key');
mg.sendText('example@example.com', ['Recipient 1 <rec1@example.com>', 'rec2@example.com'],
'This is the subject',
'This is the text',
'noreply@example.com', {},
function(err) {
if (err) console.log('Oh noes: ' + err);
else console.log('Success');
});
Mailgun lets you route incoming email to different destinations. TODO - more docs
Creates a new route. TODO - more docs
createRoute(pattern, destination, [callback(err, id)])
TODO - document arguments
Deletes the route with the specified ID if it exists, otherwise fails silently.
deleteRoute(id, [callback(err)])
- id - Route ID, as returned by
getRoutes()
orcreateRoute
. - Callback to be fired when the deletion is completed. This callback
takes a single argument,
err
, that will be set to an Error object if something went wrong with the deletion. If the deletion succeeded, or no route existed with the specified ID,err
will beundefined
.
Gets a list of all routes.
getRoutes(callback(err, routes))
callback
- Callback to be fired when the request has finished. This should take two parameters:err
, which will hold either an HTTP error code, or an error string on failure; androutes
, which will be a list of routes on success. Routes returned through this callback will be objects with three fields:pattern
,destination
, andid
.
getRoutes(function(err, routes) {
if (err) console.log('Error:', err);
for (var i=0; i<routes.length; i++) {
console.log('Route');
console.log(' Pattern:', routes[i].pattern);
console.log(' Destination:', routes[i].destination);
console.log(' Id:', routes[i].id);
}
});
- Mailboxes