A Django messaging library that features:
- Class-based declaration and registry approach, like Django Admin
- Supports multiple transmission methods (Email, SMS, Slack, etc) per message
- Browser-based previewing of messages
- Maintains a history of messaging sending attempts and can view these messages
- Disabling notifications per user
We try to make herald support all versions of django that django supports + all versions in between.
For python, herald supports all versions of python that the above versions of django support.
So as of herald v0.3 we support django 3.2 and 4.x+, and python 3.6, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, and 3.10.
pip install django-herald
- Add
herald
anddjango.contrib.sites
toINSTALLED_APPS
. - Add herald's URLS:
from django.conf import settings
from django.conf.urls import url, include
urlpatterns = []
if settings.DEBUG:
urlpatterns = [
url(r'^herald/', include('herald.urls')),
] + urlpatterns
- Create a
notifications.py
file in any django app. This is where your notification classes will live. Add a class like this:
from herald import registry
from herald.base import EmailNotification
class WelcomeEmail(EmailNotification): # extend from EmailNotification for emails
template_name = 'welcome_email' # name of template, without extension
subject = 'Welcome' # subject of email
def __init__(self, user): # optionally customize the initialization
self.context = {'user': user} # set context for the template rendering
self.to_emails = [user.email] # set list of emails to send to
@staticmethod
def get_demo_args(): # define a static method to return list of args needed to initialize class for testing
from users.models import User
return [User.objects.order_by('?')[0]]
registry.register(WelcomeEmail) # finally, register your notification class
# Alternatively, a class decorator can be used to register the notification:
@registry.register_decorator()
class WelcomeEmail(EmailNotification):
...
-
Create templates for rendering the email using this file structure:
templates/ herald/ text/ welcome_email.txt html/ welcome_email.html
-
Test how your email looks by navigating to
/herald/
. -
Send your email wherever you need in your code:
WelcomeEmail(user).send()
-
View the sent emails in django admin and even be able to resend it.
The following options can be set on the email notification class. For Example:
class WelcomeEmail(EmailNotification):
cc = ['test@example.com']
from_email
: (str
, default:settings.DEFAULT_FROM_EMAIL
) email address of sendersubject
: (str
, default: ) email subjectto_emails
: (List[str]
, default:None
) list of email strings to send tobcc
: (List[str]
, default:None
) list of email strings to send as bcccc
: (List[str]
, default:None
) list of email strings to send as ccheaders
: (dict
, default:None
) extra headers to be passed along to theEmailMultiAlternatives
objectreply_to
: (List[str]
, default:None
) list of email strings to send as the Reply-To emailsattachments
: (list
) list of attachments. See "Email Attachments" below for more info
Herald can automatically delete old notifications whenever a new notification is sent.
To enable this, set the HERALD_NOTIFICATION_RETENTION_TIME
setting to a timedelta instance.
For example:
HERALD_NOTIFICATION_RETENTION_TIME = timedelta(weeks=8)
Will delete all notifications older than 8 weeks every time a new notification is sent.
The delnotifs
command is useful for purging the notification history.
The default usage will delete everything from sent during today:
python manage.py delnotifs
However, you can also pass arguments for start
or end
dates. end
is up to, but not including that date.
- if only
end
is specified, delete anything sent before the end date. - if only
start
is specified, delete anything sent since the start date. - if both
start
andend
are specified, delete anything sent in between, not including the end date.
python manage.py delnotifs --start='2016-01-01' --end='2016-01-10'
If you are sending slightly different emails to a large number of people, it might take quite a while to process. By default, Django will process this all synchronously. For asynchronous support, we recommend django-celery-email. It is very straightfoward to setup and integrate: https://github.com/pmclanahan/django-celery-email
Django has built-in support for sending password reset emails. If you would like to send those emails using herald, you can use the notification class in herald.contrib.auth.
First, add herald.contrib.auth
to INSTALLED_APPS
(in addition to herald
).
Second, use the HeraldPasswordResetForm
in place of django's built in PasswordResetForm
. This step is entirely dependant on your project structure, but it essentially just involves changing the form class on the password reset view in some way:
# you may simply just need to override the password reset url like so:
url(r'^password_reset/$', password_reset, name='password_reset', {'password_reset_form': HeraldPasswordResetForm}),
# of if you are using something like django-authtools:
url(r'^password_reset/$', PasswordResetView.as_view(form_class=HeraldPasswordResetForm), name='password_reset'),
# or you may have a customized version of the password reset view:
class MyPasswordResetView(FormView):
form_class = HeraldPasswordResetForm # change the form class here
# or, you may have a custom password reset form already. In that case, you will want to extend from the HeraldPasswordResetForm:
class MyPasswordResetForm(HeraldPasswordResetForm):
...
# alternatively, you could even just send the notification wherever you wish, seperate from the form:
PasswordResetEmail(some_user).send()
Third, you may want to customize the templates for the email. By default, herald will use the registration/password_reset_email.html
that is provided by django for both the html and text versions of the email. But you can simply override herald/html/password_reset.html
and/or herald/text/password_reset.txt
to suit your needs.
If you want to disable certain notifications per user, add a record to the UserNotification table and add notifications to the disabled_notifications many to many table.
For example:
user = User.objects.get(id=user.id)
notification = Notification.objects.get(notification_class=MyNotification.get_class_path())
# disable the notification
user.usernotification.disabled_notifications.add(notification)
By default, notifications can be disabled. You can put can_disable = False in your notification class and the system will populate the database with this default. Your Notification class can also override the verbose_name by setting it in your inherited Notification class. Like this:
class MyNotification(EmailNotification):
can_disable = False
verbose_name = "My Required Notification"
To send attachments, assign a list of attachments to the attachments attribute of your EmailNotification instance, or override the get_attachments() method.
Each attachment in the list can be one of the following:
- A tuple which consists of the filename, the raw attachment data, and the mimetype. It is up to you to get the attachment data. Like this:
raw_data = get_pdf_data()
email.attachments = [
('Report.pdf', raw_data, 'application/pdf'),
('report.txt', 'text version of report', 'text/plain')
]
email.send()
-
A MIMEBase object. See the documentation for attachments under EmailMessage Objects/attachments in the Django documentation.
-
A django
File
object.
Sometimes you want to embed an image directly into the email content. Do that by using a MIMEImage assigning a content id header to a MIMEImage, like this:
email = WelcomeEmail(user)
im = get_thumbnail(image_file.name, '600x600', quality=95)
my_image = MIMEImage(im.read()) # MIMEImage inherits from MIMEBase
my_image.add_header('Content-ID', '<{}>'.format(image_file.name))
You can refer to these images in your html email templates using the Content ID (cid) like this:
<img src="cid:{{image_file.name}}" />
You would of course need to add the "image_file" to your template context in the example above. You can also accomplish this using file operations. In this example we overrode the get_attachments method of an EmailNotification.
class MyNotification(EmailNotification):
context = {'hello': 'world'}
template_name = 'welcome_email'
to_emails = ['somebody@example.com']
subject = "My email test"
def get_attachments(self):
fp = open('python.jpeg', 'rb')
img = MIMEImage(fp.read())
img.add_header('Content-ID', '<{}>'.format('python.jpeg'))
return [
img,
]
And in your template you would refer to it like this, and you would not need to add anything to the context:
<img src="cid:python.jpeg" />
Django Herald can auto convert your HTML emails to plain text. Any email without a plain text version will be auto converted if you enable this feature.
# Install html2text
pip install django-herald[html2text]
In your settings.py file:
HERALD_HTML2TEXT_ENABLED = True
You can customize the output of HTML2Text by setting a configuration dictionary. See HTML2Text Configuration for options
HERALD_HTML2TEXT_CONFIG = {
# Key / value configuration of html2text
'ignore_images': True # Ignores images in conversion
}
HERALD_RAISE_MISSING_TEMPLATES = True
By default, Herald will raise an exception if a template is missing when true (default).
# Install twilio
pip install django-herald[twilio]
You can retrieve these values on Twilio Console. Once you have retrieve the necessary ids, you can place those to your settings.py
.
For reference, Twilio has some great tutorials for python. Twilio Python Tutorial
# Twilio configurations
# values taken from `twilio console`
TWILIO_ACCOUNT_SID = "your_account_sid"
TWILIO_AUTH_TOKEN = "your_auth_token"
TWILIO_DEFAULT_FROM_NUMBER = "+1234567890"
You can also attach any MIMEBase objects as regular attachments, but you must add a content-disposition header, or they will be inaccessible:
my_image.add_header('Content-Disposition', 'attachment; filename="python.jpg"')
Attachments can cause your database to become quite large, so you should be sure to run the management commands to purge the database of old messages.
python runtests.py