A simple project that handles sending e-mails through SMTP from a template storage system, using SQS messages, meant to be run on an AWS Lambda.
To fix the basics of code format, you can run go fmt
.
For a bit more advanced code style checks, you can run golint $(go list ./... | grep -v /vendor/)
. You'll have to run go get -u golang.org/x/lint/golint
before.
There is two types of storage connectors:
- AttachmentCopier
- TemplateFetcher
You can create connectors that implements one or both of these interfaces.
We made the choice to make two interfaces because you may want to put your templates in one type of storage, and your attachments from another without the need to implement large interfaces.
At the moment, only the S3 Bucket connector is available but feel free to implement any other storage connector and make a pull request.
You need to have both HTML and plain text versions of a template, and store them using templatename.html.template
and templatename.txt.template
naming system.
You then only have to pass the template name in the SQS message, and it will get both versions.
The templates are in the basic Go HTML Template and Go TEXT Template formats, and therefor you must use the {{.myVar}}
notation, the var_name being the key of your data in the template_context
json object.
You have to configure the SMTP server connection details and the S3 template bucket using environment variables.
You can customise their names in the config
structure, in main.go
, specifically if you implement a new storage connector.
When deployed, this lambda has to subscribe to an SQS queue that will transport the messages containing the informations about the mails to send.
Here is an example of message body to send:
{
"from_address": "test-lambda@forsam.education",
"from_name": "Example Name",
"reply_to": "reply-to@forsam.education",
"to_address": "cto@forsam.education",
"subject": "This is my subject",
"template_name": "template-example",
"template_context": {
"myVar": "value"
},
"bcc": ["sneaky@yourmanager.com"],
"cc": ["not-so-sneaky@example.com"],
"attachments": [
"invoice.pdf",
"test.txt"
]
}