AWS::SES is a Ruby library for Amazon’s Simple Email Service’s REST API (aws.amazon.com/ses).
To get started you need to require ‘aws/ses’:
% irb -rubygems irb(main):001:0> require 'aws/ses' # => true
Before you can do anything, you must establish a connection using Base.new. A basic connection would look something like this:
ses = AWS::SES::Base.new( :access_key_id => 'abc', :secret_access_key => '123' )
The minimum connection options that you must specify are your access key id and your secret access key.
Adds functionality for send_email and send_raw_email Use the following to send an e-mail:
ses = AWS::SES::Base.new( ... connection info ... ) ses.send_email :to => ['[email protected]', '[email protected]'], :source => '"Steve Smith" <[email protected]>', :subject => 'Subject Line' :text_body => 'Internal text body'
By default, the email “from” display address is whatever is before the @. To change the display from, use the format:
"Steve Smith" <[email protected]>
You can also send Mail objects using send_raw_email:
m = Mail.new( :to => ..., :from => ... ) ses.send_raw_email(m)
send_raw_email will also take a hash and pass it through Mail.new automatically as well.
AWS::SES::Addresses provides for:
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Listing verified e-mail addresses
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Adding new e-mail addresses to verify
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Deleting verified e-mail addresses
You can access these methods as follows:
ses = AWS::SES::Base.new( ... connection info ... ) # Get a list of verified addresses ses.addresses.list.result # Add a new e-mail address to verify ses.addresses.verify('[email protected]') # Delete an e-mail address ses.addresses.delete('[email protected]')
Adds functionality for the statistics and info send quota data that Amazon SES makes available
You can access these methods as follows:
ses = AWS::SES::Base.new( ... connection info ... )
response = ses.quota # How many e-mails you've sent in the last 24 hours response.sent_last_24_hours # How many e-mails you're allowed to send in 24 hours response.max_24_hour_send # How many e-mails you can send per second response.max_send_rate
The result is a list of data points, representing the last two weeks of sending activity. Each data point in the list contains statistics for a 15-minute interval. GetSendStatisticsResponse#data_points is an array where each element is a hash with give string keys:
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Bounces
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DeliveryAttempts
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Rejects
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Complaints
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Timestamp
response = ses.statistics response.data_points # =>
[{"Bounces"=>"0", "Timestamp"=>"2011-01-26T16:30:00Z", "DeliveryAttempts"=>"1", "Rejects"=>"0", "Complaints"=>"0"}, {"Bounces"=>"0", "Timestamp"=>"2011-02-09T14:45:00Z", "DeliveryAttempts"=>"3", "Rejects"=>"0", "Complaints"=>"0"}, {"Bounces"=>"0", "Timestamp"=>"2011-01-31T15:30:00Z", "DeliveryAttempts"=>"3", "Rejects"=>"0", "Complaints"=>"0"}, {"Bounces"=>"0", "Timestamp"=>"2011-01-31T16:00:00Z", "DeliveryAttempts"=>"3", "Rejects"=>"0", "Complaints"=>"0"}]
This gem is compatible with Rails >= 3.0.0 and Rails 2.3.x
To use, first add the gem to your Gemfile:
gem "aws-ses", "~> 0.4.1", :require => 'aws/ses'
Then, add your Amazon credentials and extend ActionMailer in ‘config/initializers/amazon_ses.rb`:
ActionMailer::Base.add_delivery_method :ses, AWS::SES::Base, :access_key_id => 'abc', :secret_access_key => '123'
Then set the delivery method in ‘config/environments/*rb` as appropriate:
config.action_mailer.delivery_method = :ses
Then set the delivery method in ‘config/environments/*rb` as appropriate:
config.after_initialize do ActionMailer::Base.delivery_method = :amazon_ses ActionMailer::Base.custom_amazon_ses_mailer = AWS::SES::Base.new(:secret_access_key => 'abc', :access_key_id => '123') end
If you get this error:
net/http.rb:677: [BUG] Segmentation fault
It means that you are not running with SSL enabled in ruby. Re-compile ruby with ssl support or add this option to your environment:
RUBYOPT="-r openssl"
If you are receiving this message and you HAVE verified the [source] please check to be sure you are not in sandbox mode!
"Email address is not verified.MessageRejected (AWS::Error)"
If you have not been granted production access, you will have to verify all recipients as well.
docs.amazonwebservices.com/ses/2010-12-01/DeveloperGuide/index.html?InitialSetup.Customer.html
Available at: github.com/drewblas/aws-ses
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Check out the latest master to make sure the feature hasn’t been implemented or the bug hasn’t been fixed yet
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Check out the issue tracker to make sure someone already hasn’t requested it and/or contributed it
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Fork the project
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Start a feature/bugfix branch
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Commit and push until you are happy with your contribution
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Make sure to add tests for it. This is important so I don’t break it in a future version unintentionally.
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Please try not to mess with the Rakefile, version, or history. If you want to have your own version, or is otherwise necessary, that is fine, but please isolate to its own commit so I can cherry-pick around it.
Copyright © 2011 Drew Blas. See LICENSE for further details.
Special thanks to Marcel Molina Jr. for his creation of AWS::S3 which I used portions of to get things working.
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croaky
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nathanbertram
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sshaw
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teeparham (documentation)