npm i mailgun-mate -g
Or:
git clone [email protected]:binarymist/mailgun-mate.git && cd mailgun-mate && npm install
Before running, you'll need to setup a little configuration. See the Configuration section below.
First, you need to have a free mailgun account, a domain setup there, and at least one mail list to start controlling.
This project uses convict. The configuration file(s) are in ./config/
. You will need to provide one according to the NODE_ENV
environment variable you are running mailgun-mate
with. First find where mailgun-mate
is installed to with whereis mailgun-mate
. This command will show where the bin file is, from there, you just need to ascend the directories until you find a lib/node_modules/mailgun-mate/config/
directory. From there, you can copy the config.example.json
file and rename it to config.[your-environment].json
(your-environment
should be development
, production
, or what ever you set NODE_ENV
to).
Decide on a directory that you will put your text files containing HTML
(although just text is also fine), and assign that directory path to your config file's emailBodyFileDir
property.
In your HTML
mailout files, you can add an unsubscribe link
Mailgun provides the ability for you to have them insert an unsubscribe
link into all emails sent from your your domain. This link allows the email receiver to unsubscribe from the specific list that the email was sent from.
In many cases you wont want an unsubscribe
link, like when sending immediately or scheduling a small batch of custom mailouts from a large list of say business contacts, as these are usually fairly personal.
The only option I've found that works on a email by email basis is inserting the following:
<a href="%unsubscribe_url%">unsubscribe from domain</a> <!--This link unsubscribes the member from the entire domain.-->
Clicking on that will unsubscribe the list member from the entire domain, which is usually not what you may want, especially if you have many lists.
Before sending any batch, I like to make sure I have o:testmode
set to true
, and I'm targeting a test emailList
. Both of these can be set in the config file(s), but are also overrideable at the command line.
you can change these once you're confident your configuration, command line args, email teamplate, and recipient variables are correct.
I usually use a first name (fname
in my case), then build up your email teamplate using a %recipient.fname%
wich mailgun will substitute for the fname
property you set in the list members recipient variables. The following is an example of how I setup the mailgun recipient variables.
{
"fname": "Bob",
"mailgunMateScheduledSends": [
[
"a.html",
"2018-06-16_17:00:00"
],
[
"b.html",
"2018-06-16_17:10:00"
]
],
"name": "Bob Builder",
"org": "Bob Builder Holdings",
"role": "Carpenter"
}
The mailgunMateScheduledSends
is what mailgun-mate adds for you. Each time you schedule an email, a new array containing the email-body-file
and the schedule-time
will be added to the mailgunMateScheduledSends
array. Mailgun-mate knows where to find theemail-body-file
due to the emailBodyFileDir
that you need to set in the configuration file.
The name
property is printed beside the email address in mailgun-mate
. org
and role
will be used to sort in the future.
Usage: mailgun-mate [command(s)] [option(s)]
Options:
-a, --about Show about screen.
-v, --version Show version number.
-h, --help Show help.
Commands:
schedule-delivery Launch scheduled mail delivery, max of three days in advance.
Options:
-l, --email-list <email-list> The mailgun email list you would like to use.
-b, --email-body-file <email-body-file> File containing the html for the body of the email. Relative to the emailBodyFileDir directory you set in the configuration.
-f, --from <sent-from-for-replies> The value that the receiver will see that your emails appear to be sent from, in the form of "Kim <[email protected]>"
-s, --subject <subject-for-email>' The subject for the email
-t, --schedule-time <time-to-schedule-email-send-for> The time that all emails will be sent (in RFC 2822 time).
-tm, --test-mode Whether or not to send in test mode "o:testmode". defaultValue set in config file.
Options:
-h, --help Show help.
Commands:
schedule-delivery list List members in order based on latest or oldest mailgunMateScheduledSends datetimes.
Options:
-h, --help Show help.
-l, --email-list <email-list> The mailgun email list you would like to use. A required string argument, if none is present on command line, value from config file is used.
-o, --order [des|asc(default)] The order you would like the items displayed in.
Before authenticating with mailgun, mailgun-mate
checks the ${os.homedir()}/.mailgun/key
for your private key, if present, it will attempt authentication, if not present, it will prompt for your key at the terminal. Currently there is no validation on your private key file ownership or permissions, but they should be set at least as restrictive as SSH private keys.
If you just want to download the source and run it... Assuming you have npm installed, from within your mailgun-mate
source directory, run the following:
npm run -- start
From within your mailgun-mate
source directory, run the following and open your chrome dev tools:
node --inspect-brk ./bin/mailgun-mate [command(s)] [option(s)]
Or
npm run debug
If you need to pass arguments:
npm run debug -- [command(s)] [option(s)]
Please open an issue to discus the proposed change before submitting a pull request.
If you have any questions around the installation, configuration or running of mailgun-mate, please submit an issue.
Copyright Kim Carter and other contributors, Licensed under MIT.