ActionRecipient
This gem dynamically overwrites email recipients addresses sent with ActionMailer. With this gem, you no longer have to worry about your application delivering accidental emails to your real customer in non-production environments.
It is particularily helpful if you are using gmail account for your staging mail, as it can append original recipients information in the address. (See below for details)
although this gem has been developed and tested carefully, but there is no guarantee that this is 100% reliable. Please use this at your own risks, and test carefully before use.
Non-Actionmailer emails cannot be blocked nor redirected, as it works based on ActionMailer's interceptor mechanism.
Installation
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'action_recipient'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install action_recipient
Usage
Getting Started
Set up ActionRecipient as follows to prevent outgoing mails in your staging environment.
# config/initializers/action_recipient.rb
if Rails.env.staging? # effective only in staging environment
ActionRecipient.configure do |config|
config.format = 'your_address_to_redirect@your_domain.com' # address that the emails to be redirected
end
ActionMailer::Base.register_interceptor(ActionRecipient::Interceptor) # register it as interceptor
end
If your colleague (in staging environment) accidentally send an email to admin@your_client.com
, this gem overwrites its addresses as [email protected]
with help of ActionMailer's interceptor.
Whitelist
Let's say, you wish to trap any outgoing emails, with an exception, e.g. [email protected]
that has to be actually delivered without interception.
You can' whitelist' such email addresses as follows:
# config/initializers/action_recipient.rb
if Rails.env.staging?
ActionRecipient.configure do |config|
config.format = 'your_address_to_redirect+%[email protected]'
# specify whitelisted addresses as follows
config.whitelist.addresses = [
'[email protected]',
'[email protected]'
]
end
ActionMailer::Base.register_interceptor(ActionRecipient::Interceptor)
end
You can also whitelist all the emails that belong to perticular domain:
ActionRecipient.configure do |config|
config.whitelist.domains = [
'my-company.com'
]
end
Note: With a string matcher, you can whitelist only an address that has perfect match with it. If you prefer to whitelist all the addresses that belong to any subdomains under a specific domain, use regular expression instead.
ActionRecipient.configure do |config|
config.whitelist.domains = [
'my-company.com\z'
]
end
This way an address such as [email protected]
is whitelisted, thus can deliver an out-going emails without getting trapped.
Using Gmail
You might wish to keep original recipient addresses somehow, so that you can confirm where the email must have been delivered to unless it gets trapped.
This gem accepts a format where %s
are dynamically replaced with the original address, prefixed with type of destination field (to
, cc
, or bcc
).
# config/initializers/action_recipient.rb
if Rails.env.staging? # effective only in staging environment
ActionRecipient.configure do |config|
config.format = 'your_address_to_redirect+%[email protected]' # destination type and original address will be appended after your address
end
ActionMailer::Base.register_interceptor(ActionRecipient::Interceptor)
end
This feature is particularity useful if you use gmail - as it ignores any strings that follow after a plus (+) sign appended in your address.
Detailed Settings
- set your "safe address" to indicate ActionRecipient an address to redirect outgoing emails:
ActionRecipient.configure do |config|
config.format = 'your_address_to_rediredt+%[email protected]'
end
If you add %s in the format, it is automatically replaced with the original addresses after a few modifications. (see overwriting rules for deatils)
DO NOT FORGET to specify a format, otherwise your email addresses are not properly transformed, and your emails will not be successfully delivered.
- you could also set a collection of whitelisted addresses and/or domains:
ActionRecipient.configure do |config|
config.whitelist.addresses = [
'[email protected]'
'[email protected]',
]
config.whitelist.domains = [
'my-department.my-workplace.com',
/my-private-domain.com\z/
]
end
Whitelisted emails addresses are not overwritten, thus can be delivered as usual.
IMPORTANT:
"domains" are the last part of email addresses after @
, and matched with original email address literally on word-to-word basis.
So whitelisted domains such as bar.com
does NOT whitelist emails to subdomains like [email protected]
(therefore redirected).
If you wish to whitelist a domain including all the subdomains under it, use regular expressions as described earlier
- register ActionRecipient as the interceptor
ActionMailer::Base.register_interceptor(ActionRecipient::Interceptor)
And you are good to go!
Overwriting Rules
The original address is being transformed as follows:
@
is replaced with_at_
- any alphabetical/numeric charactors are preserved
- any dots
.
and underscores_
are preserved as well - any other charactors are replaced with hyphens
-
Development
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec
to run the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Contributing
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/fursich/action_recipient.
Acknoledgement
I'd like to thank @akeyhero who came up with the original idea about appending recipient information after plus leveraging gmail feature. Although the implementation work is done by myself seperately, this gem greatly benefited from his inspiring idea.
License
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.