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Django Post Office

Django Post Office is a simple app to send and manage your emails in Django. Some awesome features are:

  • Allows you to send email asynchronously
  • Supports HTML email
  • Supports database based email templates
  • Built in scheduling support
  • Works well with task queues like RQ or Celery
  • Uses multiprocessing to send a large number of emails in parallel

Dependencies

Installation

image

  • Install from PyPI (or you manually download from PyPI):

    pip install django-post_office
  • Add post_office to your INSTALLED_APPS in django's settings.py:
INSTALLED_APPS = (
    # other apps
    "post_office",
)
  • Run syncdb:

    python manage.py syncdb
  • Set post_office.EmailBackend as your EMAIL_BACKEND in django's settings.py:

    EMAIL_BACKEND = 'post_office.EmailBackend'

Quickstart

To get started, make sure you have Django's admin interface enabled. Create an EmailTemplate instance via /admin and you can start sending emails.

from post_office import mail

mail.send(
    ['recipient1@example.com'],
    'from@example.com',
    template='welcome_email', # Could be an EmailTemplate instance or name
    context={'foo': 'bar'},
)

The above command will put your email on the queue so you can use the command in your webapp without slowing down the request/response cycle too much. To actually send them out, run python manage.py send_queued_mail. You can schedule this management command to run regularly via cron:

* * * * * (/usr/bin/python manage.py send_queued_mail >> send_mail.log 2>&1)

Usage

mail.send()

mail.send is the most important function in this library, it takes these arguments:

Argument Required Description
recipients Yes list of recipient email addresses
sender No Defaults to settings.DEFAULT_FROM_EMAIL, display name is allowed (John <john@example.com>)
template No EmailTemplate instance or name
context No A dictionary used when email is being rendered
subject No Email subject (if template is not specified)
message No Email content (if template is not specified)
html_message No Email's HTML content (if template is not specified)
headers No A dictionary of extra headers to put on the message
scheduled_time No A date/datetime object indicating when the email should be sent
priority No high, medium, low or now (send immediately)

attachments

No

Email attachments - A dictionary where the keys are the wanted filenames, and the values are either files or file-like objects, or full path of the file.

Here are a few examples.

If you just want to send out emails without using database templates. You can call the send command without the template argument.

from post_office import mail

mail.send(
    ['recipient1@example.com'],
    'from@example.com',
    subject='Welcome!',
    message='Welcome home, {{ name }}!',
    html_message='Welcome home, <b>{{ name }}</b>!',
    headers={'Reply-to': 'reply@example.com'},
    scheduled_time=date(2014, 1, 1),
    context={'name': 'Alice'},
)

post_office is also task queue friendly. Passing now as priority into send_mail will deliver the email right away (instead of queuing it), regardless of how many emails you have in your queue:

from post_office import mail

mail.send(
    ['recipient1@example.com'],
    'from@example.com',
    template='welcome_email',
    context={'foo': 'bar'},
    priority='now',
)

This is useful if you already use something like django-rq to send emails asynchronously and only need to store email related activities and logs.

Sending an email with attachments:

from django.core.files.base import ContentFile
from post_office import mail

mail.send(
    ['recipient1@example.com'],
    'from@example.com',
    template='welcome_email',
    context={'foo': 'bar'},
    priority='now',
    attachments={
        'attachment1.doc', '/path/to/file/file1.doc',
        'attachment2.txt', ContentFile('file content'),
    }
)

Template Tags and Variables

post-office supports Django's template tags and variables when. For example, if you put "Hello, {{ name }}" in the subject line and pass in {'name': 'Alice'} as context, you will get "Hello, Alice" as subject:

from post_office.models import EmailTemplate
from post_office import mail

EmailTemplate.objects.create(
    name='morning_greeting',
    subject='Morning, {{ name|capfirst }}',
    content='Hi {{ name }}, how are you feeling today?',
    html_content='Hi <strong>{{ name }}</strong>, how are you feeling today?',
)

mail.send(
    ['recipient@example.com'],
    'from@example.com',
    template='morning_greeting',
    context={'name': 'alice'},
)

# This will create an email with the following content:
subject = 'Morning, Alice',
content = 'Hi alice, how are you feeling today?'
content = 'Hi <strong>alice</strong>, how are you feeling today?'

Custom Email Backends

By default, post_office uses django's SMTP EmailBackend. If you want to use a different backend, you can do so by changing POST_OFFICE_BACKEND.

For example if you want to use django-ses:

POST_OFFICE_BACKEND = 'django_ses.SESBackend'

Caching

By default, post_office will cache EmailTemplate instances if Django's caching mechanism is configured. If for some reason you want to disable caching, you can set POST_OFFICE_CACHE to False in settings.py:

## All cache key will be prefixed by post_office:template:
## To turn OFF caching, you need to explicitly set POST_OFFICE_CACHE to False in settings
POST_OFFICE_CACHE = False

## Optional: to use a non default cache backend, add a "post_office" entry in CACHES
CACHES = {
    'post_office': {
        'BACKEND': 'django.core.cache.backends.memcached.PyLibMCCache',
        'LOCATION': '127.0.0.1:11211',
    }
}

send_many()

Starting from version 0.6.0, post-office includes mail.send_many() that's much more performant (generates less database queries) when sending a large number of emails. Since this function uses Django's bulk_create command, it's only usable on Django >= 1.4.

Behavior wise, mail.send_many() is almost identical to mail.send(), with the exception that it accepts a list of keyword arguments that you'd usually pass into mail.send():

from post_office import mail

first_email = {
    'sender': 'from@example.com',
    'recipients': ['alice@example.com'],
    'subject': 'Hi!',
    'message': 'Hi Alice!'
}
second_email = {
    'sender': 'from@example.com',
    'recipients': ['bob@example.com'],
    'subject': 'Hi!',
    'message': 'Hi Bob!'
}
kwargs_list = [first_email, second_email]

mail.send_many(kwargs_list)

Attachments are not supported with mail.send_many().

Management Commands

  • send_queued_mail - send queued emails, those aren't successfully sent will be marked as failed. If you have a lot of emails, you can pass in -`p` or--processes`` flag to use multiple processes.
  • cleanup_mail - delete all emails created before an X number of days (defaults to 90).

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

* * * * * (cd $PROJECT; python manage.py send_queued_mail --processes=1 >> $PROJECT/cron_mail.log 2>&1)
0 1 * * * (cd $PROJECT; python manage.py cleanup_mail --days=30 >> $PROJECT/cron_mail_cleanup.log 2>&1)

Logging

You can configure post-office's logging from Django's settings.py. For example:

LOGGING = {
    "version": 1,
    "disable_existing_loggers": False,
    "formatters": {
        "post_office": {
            "format": "[%(levelname)s]%(asctime)s PID %(process)d: %(message)s",
            "datefmt": "%d-%m-%Y %H:%M:%S",
        },
    },
    "handlers": {
        "post_office": {
            "level": "DEBUG",
            "class": "logging.StreamHandler",
            "formatter": "post_office"
        },
        # If you use sentry for logging
        'sentry': {
            'level': 'ERROR',
            'class': 'raven.contrib.django.handlers.SentryHandler',
        },
    },
    'loggers': {
    "post_office": {
        "handlers": ["post_office", "sentry"],
        "level": "INFO"
    },
}

Batch Size

If you may want to limit the number of emails sent in a batch (sometimes useful in a low memory environment), use the BATCH_SIZE argument to limit the number of queued emails fetched in one batch.

POST_OFFICE = {
    'BATCH_SIZE': 5000
}

Running Tests

To run post_office's test suite:

`which django-admin.py` test post_office --settings=post_office.test_settings --pythonpath=.

Changelog

Version 0.6.0

  • Support for Python 3!
  • Added mail.send_many() that's much more performant when sending a large number emails

Version 0.5.2

  • Added logging
  • Added BATCH_SIZE configuration option

Version 0.5.1

  • Fixes various multiprocessing bugs

Version 0.5.0

  • Email sending can now be parallelized using multiple processes (multiprocessing)
  • Email templates are now validated before save
  • Fixed a bug where custom headers aren't properly sent

Version 0.4.0

  • Added support for sending emails with custom headers (you'll need to run South when upgrading from earlier versions)
  • Added support for scheduled email sending
  • Backend now properly persist emails with HTML alternatives

Version 0.3.1

* IMPORTANT: mail.send now expects recipient email addresses as the first

argument. This change is to allow optional sender parameter which defaults to settings.DEFAULT_FROM_EMAIL

  • Fixed a bug where all emails sent from mail.send have medium priority

Version 0.3.0

  • IMPORTANT: added South migration. If you use South and had post-office installed before 0.3.0, you may need to manually resolve migration conflicts
  • Allow unicode messages to be displayed in /admin
  • Introduced a new mail.send function that provides a nicer API to send emails
  • created fields now use auto_now_add
  • last_updated fields now use auto_now

Version 0.2.1

  • Fixed typo in admin.py

Version 0.2

  • Allows sending emails via database backed templates

Version 0.1.5

  • Errors when opening connection in Email.dispatch method are now logged

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A Django app that allows you to send email asynchronously in Django. Supports HTML email, database backed templates and logging.

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