Email hook for Sails JS, using Mailjet. This was built based on a fork of sails-hook-email.
Note: This requires Sails v0.10.6+.
npm install sails-hook-mailjet-mjml
sails.hooks['mailjet-mjml'].send(template, data, options, cb)
Parameter | Type | Details |
---|---|---|
template | ((string)) | Relative path from templateDir (see "Configuration" below) to a folder containing email templates. |
data | ((object)) | Data to use to replace template tokens |
options | ((object)) | Email sending options (see Mailjet) |
cb | ((function)) | Callback to be run after the email sends (or if an error occurs). |
By default, configuration lives in sails.config['mailjet-mjml']
. The configuration key (mailjet-mjml
) can be changed by setting sails.config.hooks['sails-hook-mailjet-mjml'].configKey
.
Parameter | Type | Details |
---|---|---|
apiKey | ((string)) | Your Mailjet API Key |
secretKey | ((string)) | Your Mailjet Secret Key |
templateDir | ((string)) | Path to view templates relative to sails.config.appPath (defaults to views/mailjetTemplates ) |
Templates are generated using your configured Sails View Engine, allowing for multiple template engines and layouts. If Sails Views are disabled, will fallback to EJS templates. To define a new email template, create a new folder with the template name inside your mailjetTemplates
directory, and add an html.ejs file inside the folder (substituting .ejs for your template engine). You may also add an optional text.ejs
file; if none is provided, we will attempt to create a text version of the email based on the html version.
Given the following html.ejs file contained in the folder views/mailjetTemplates/testEmail:
<p>Dear <%=recipientName%>,</p>
<br/>
<p><em>Thank you</em> for being a friend.</p>
<p>Love,<br/><%=senderName%></p>
executing the following command:
sails.hooks['mailjet-mjml'].send(
"testEmail",
{
recipientName: "Joe",
senderName: "Sue"
},
{
fromEmail: "somebody@example.com",
fromName: "John Doe",
subject: "Hello World",
recipients : [
{
"Email": "other@example.com"
}
]
},
function(err) {console.log(err || "It worked!");}
)
will result in the following email being sent to joe@example.com
Dear Joe,
Thank you for being a friend.
Love,
Sue
with an error being printed to the console if one occurred, otherwise "It worked!".