mirror of https://github.com/zulip/zulip.git
150 lines
7.9 KiB
Markdown
150 lines
7.9 KiB
Markdown
# Email
|
||
|
||
This page has developer documentation on the Zulip email system. If you're
|
||
trying to configure your server to send email, you might be looking for our
|
||
guide to [sending outgoing email](../production/email.md). If you're trying to
|
||
configure an email integration to receive incoming email (e.g. so that users
|
||
can reply to missed message emails via email), you might be interested in
|
||
our instructions for
|
||
[setting up an email integration](https://zulipchat.com/integrations/doc/email).
|
||
|
||
On to the documentation. Zulip's email system is fairly straightforward,
|
||
with only a few things you need to know to get started.
|
||
|
||
* All email templates are in `templates/zerver/emails/`. Each email has three
|
||
template files: `<template_prefix>.subject.txt`, `<template_prefix>.txt`, and
|
||
`<template_prefix>.source.html`. Email templates, along with all other templates
|
||
in the `templates/` directory, are Jinja2 templates.
|
||
* Most of the CSS and HTML layout for emails is in `email_base.html`. Note
|
||
that email has to ship with all of its CSS and HTML, so nothing in
|
||
`static/` is useful for an email. If you're adding new CSS or HTML for an
|
||
email, there's a decent chance it should go in `email_base.html`.
|
||
* All email is eventually sent by `zerver.lib.send_email.send_email`. There
|
||
are several other functions in `zerver.lib.send_email`, but all of them
|
||
eventually call the `send_email` function. The most interesting one is
|
||
`send_future_email`. The `ScheduledEmail` entries are eventually processed
|
||
by a supervisor job that runs `zerver/management/commands/deliver_email.py`.
|
||
* Always use `user_profile.delivery_email`, not `user_profile.email`,
|
||
when passing data into the `send_email` library. The
|
||
`user_profile.email` field may not always be valid.
|
||
* A good way to find a bunch of example email pathways is to `git grep` for
|
||
`zerver/emails` in the `zerver/` directory.
|
||
|
||
One slightly complicated decision you may have to make when adding an email
|
||
is figuring out how to schedule it. There are 3 ways to schedule email.
|
||
* Send it immediately, in the current Django process, e.g. by calling
|
||
`send_email` directly. An example of this is the `confirm_registration`
|
||
email.
|
||
* Add it to a queue. An example is the `invitation` email.
|
||
* Send it (approximately) at a specified time in the future, using
|
||
`send_future_email`. An example is the `followup_day2` email.
|
||
|
||
Email takes about a quarter second per email to process and send. Generally
|
||
speaking, if you're sending just one email, doing it in the current process
|
||
is fine. If you're sending emails in a loop, you probably want to send it
|
||
from a queue. Documentation on our queueing system is available
|
||
[here](../subsystems/queuing.md).
|
||
|
||
## Development and testing
|
||
|
||
All the emails sent in the development environment can be accessed by
|
||
visiting `/emails` in the browser. The way that this works is that
|
||
we've set the email backend (aka what happens when you call the email
|
||
`.send()` method in Django) in the development environment to be our
|
||
our custom backend, `EmailLogBackEnd`. It does the following:
|
||
|
||
* Logs any sent emails to `var/log/email_content.log`. This log is
|
||
displayed by the `/emails` endpoint
|
||
(e.g. http://zulip.zulipdev.com:9991/emails).
|
||
* Print a friendly message on console advertising `/emails` to make
|
||
this nice and discoverable.
|
||
|
||
You can also forward all the emails sent in the development environment
|
||
to an email id of your choice by clicking on **Forward emails to a mail
|
||
account** in `/emails` page. This feature can be used for testing how
|
||
emails gets rendered by different email clients. Before enabling this
|
||
you have to first configure the following SMTP settings.
|
||
|
||
* The hostname `EMAIL_HOST` in `zproject/dev_settings.py`
|
||
* The username `EMAIL_HOST_USER` in `zproject/dev_settings.py`.
|
||
* The password `email_password` in `zproject/dev-secrets.conf`.
|
||
|
||
See [this](../production/email.html#free-outgoing-email-services)
|
||
section for instructions on obtaining SMTP details.
|
||
|
||
**Note: The base_image_uri of the images in forwarded emails would be replaced
|
||
with `https://chat.zulip.org/static/images/emails` inorder for the email clients
|
||
to render the images. See `zproject/email_backends.py` for more details.**
|
||
|
||
While running the backend test suite, we use
|
||
`django.core.mail.backends.locmem.EmailBackend` as the email
|
||
backend. The `locmem` backend stores messages in a special attribute
|
||
of the django.core.mail module, "outbox". The outbox attribute is
|
||
created when the first message is sent. It’s a list with an
|
||
EmailMessage instance for each message that would be sent.
|
||
|
||
Other notes:
|
||
* After changing any HTML email or `email_base.html`, you need to run
|
||
`scripts/setup/inline_email_css.py` for the changes to be reflected in the dev
|
||
environment. The script generates files like
|
||
`templates/zerver/emails/compiled/<template_prefix>.html`.
|
||
## Email templates
|
||
|
||
Zulip's email templates live under `templates/zerver/emails`. Email
|
||
templates are a messy problem, because on the one hand, you want nice,
|
||
readable markup and styling, but on the other, email clients have very
|
||
limited CSS support and generally require us to inject any CSS we're
|
||
using in the emails into the email as inline styles. And then you
|
||
also need both plain-text and HTML emails. We solve these problems
|
||
using a combination of the
|
||
[premailer](https://github.com/peterbe/premailer) library and having
|
||
two copies of each email (plain-text and HTML).
|
||
|
||
So for each email, there are two source templates: the `.txt` version
|
||
(for plain-text format) as well as a `.source.html` template. The
|
||
`.txt` version is used directly; while the `.source.html` template is
|
||
processed by `scripts/setup/inline_email_css.py` (generating a `.html` template
|
||
under `templates/zerver/emails/compiled`); that tool (powered by
|
||
`premailer`) injects the CSS we use for styling our emails
|
||
(`templates/zerver/emails/email.css`) into the templates inline.
|
||
|
||
What this means is that when you're editing emails, **you need to run
|
||
`scripts/setup/inline_email_css.py`** after making changes to see the changes
|
||
take effect. Our tooling automatically runs this as part of
|
||
`tools/provision` and production deployments; but you should bump
|
||
`PROVISION_VERSION` when making changes to emails that change test
|
||
behavior, or other developers will get test failures until they
|
||
provision.
|
||
|
||
While this model is great for the markup side, it isn't ideal for
|
||
[translations](../translating/translating.md). The Django
|
||
translation system works with exact strings, and having different new
|
||
markup can require translators to re-translate strings, which can
|
||
result in problems like needing 2 copies of each string (one for
|
||
plain-text, one for HTML) and/or needing to re-translate a bunch of
|
||
strings after making a CSS tweak. Re-translating these strings is
|
||
relatively easy in Transifex, but annoying.
|
||
|
||
So when writing email templates, we try to translate individual
|
||
sentences that are shared between the plain-text and HTML content
|
||
rather than larger blocks that might contain markup; this allows
|
||
translators to not have to deal with multiple versions of each string
|
||
in our emails.
|
||
|
||
One can test whether you did the translating part right by running
|
||
`scripts/setup/inline_email_css.py && manage.py makemessages` and then searching
|
||
for the strings in `locale/en/LC_MESSAGES/django.po`; if there
|
||
are multiple copies or they contain CSS colors, you did it wrong.
|
||
|
||
A final note for translating emails is that strings that are sent to
|
||
user accounts (where we know the user's language) are higher-priority
|
||
to translate than things sent to an email address (where we don't).
|
||
E.g. for password reset emails, it makes sense for the code path for
|
||
people with an actual account can be tagged for translation, while the
|
||
code path for the "you don't have an account email" might not be,
|
||
since we might not know what language to use in the second case.
|
||
|
||
Future work in this space could be to actually generate the plain-text
|
||
versions of emails from the `.source.html` markup, so that we don't
|
||
need to maintain two copies of each email's text.
|