I am using the Apartment gem for a multi tenant Rails 5.2 app. I'm not sure that this even matters for my question but just giving some context.
Is there a way to override the Rails logger and redirect every single log entry to a file based on the tenant (database) that is being used?
Thinking... is there a method I can monkeypatch in Logger that will change the file written to dynamically?
Example: I want every error message directed to a file for that day. So at the end of a week there will be 7 dynamically generated files for errors that occurred on each specific day.
Another example: Before you write any server log message check if it is before 1pm. If it is before 1pm write it to /log/before_1.log ... if it is after 1pm write it to /log/after_1.log
Silly examples... but I want that kind of dynamic control before any line of log is written.
Thank you!
Usually the logger is usually configured per server (or per environment really) while apartment sets tenants per request - which means that in practice its not really going to work that well.
You can set the logger at any point by assigning Rails.logger to a logger instance.
Rails.logger = Logger.new(Rails.root.join('log/foo.log'), File::APPEND)
# or for multiple loggers
Rails.logger.extend(Logger.new(Rails.root.join('log/foo.log'), File::APPEND))
However its not that simple - you can't just throw that into ApplicationController and think that everything is hunky-dory - it will be called way to late and most of the entries with important stuff like the request or any errors that pop up before the controller will end up in the default log.
What you could do is write a custom piece of middleware that switches out the log:
# app/middleware/tenant_logger.rb
class TenantLogger
def initialize app
#app = app
end
def call(env)
file_name = "#{Appartment::Tenant.current}.log"
Rails.logger = Logger.new(Rails.root.join('log', file_name), File::APPEND)
#app.call(env)
end
end
And mount it after the "elevator" in the middleware stack:
Rails.application.config.middleware.insert_after Apartment::Elevators::Subdomain, TenantLogger
However as this is pretty far down in the middleware stack you will still miss quite a lot of important info logged by the middleware such as Rails::Rack::Logger.
Using the tagged logger as suggested by the Rails guides with a single file is a much better solution.
I've read through the docs and still am unclear on how to actually use these templates in mandrill.
Currently I have a rails app with the standard Rails mailers (located in: App > views > welcome_mailer > welcome_email.html.erb) being sent through the Mandrill SMTP setup. This is working fine.
Now, I have a template in Mandrill ready to go, now what?
How do I actually use this template, do I need to adjust the code on my app to make a different call, or do I need to do something on the mandrill dashboard to tell it to use the new template instead of the rails version being sent now.
How do I actually use this template?
Thank you in advance.
You can use mandrill_mailer gem, inherit your mailer from MandrillMailer::TemplateMailer and then send it as usual InvitationMailer.invite(invitation).deliver.
Without any gems :
To use mandrill template you first need to create one in your mandrill account and then in your mailer add a correct header which tells the name of the template. Then mandrill will by magic automatically call that template.
Example:
# app/mailers
class CardMailer < ActionMailer::Base
default from: "admin#domain.ch"
def welcome(card)
mail to: card.responsable.email,
from: "\"Andrey\" <admin#domain.ch>",
subject: 'Welcome in my website'
headers['X-MC-MergeVars'] = "{\"TYPE\":\"#{card.card_type.name}\"}" # variables
headers['X-MC-Template'] = "welcome" # template
headers['X-MC-AutoText'] = 1 # generate text version
headers['X-MC-InlineCSS'] = "true" # inline css
end
end
In my case, it uses my "welcome" template. Just use the name of your mandrill template.
As you can see, there are many other headers available. See the full-list here.
Note : even if you don't use rails template any more, you still need one in your view.
Without editing any of my /app files, I'd like to edit either development.rb or an initializer where I set a whitelist of testers.
Then the emails are sent only to those people in the whitelist (not to spam other users mailbox).
I though of overriding deliver!, or the user.get_mail method but :
it's not in /config where it should be
it doesn't filter gem generated emailing (ie devise, mailboxer etc.)
You might want to check out Action mailer interceptors
And do something like this :
class BetaEmailInterceptor
def self.delivering_email(message)
message.perform_deliveries = false unless WHITELIST.include?(message.to.first)
end
end
And
ActionMailer::Base.register_interceptor(BetaEmailInterceptor)
This is a very naive implementation and will only work if the first recipient is whitelisted but you get the idea.
I'm creating a Mail object in a Rails app and want it to pick the mailer settings:
original = UserMailer.new_registration
original.deliver# Does the job
custom = Mail.new(original.to_s)
custom.deliver # Fails: OpenSSL::SSL::SSLError: hostname does not match the server certificate
Apparently the custom Mail object isn't picking up the Rails settings.
Looking at the code, we can pick up the config from the mailer the following way:
custom = ::Mail.new(raw_email)
key = Rails.application.config.action_mailer.delivery_method
delivery_method = ActionMailer::Base.delivery_methods.fetch(key)
delivery_settings = ActionMailer::Base.send("#{key}_settings")
custom.delivery_method(delivery_method, delivery_settings)
custom.deliver
To send custom mails using rails please read this.
http://mdushyanth.wordpress.com/2011/08/06/custom-mail-delivery-method-in-rails-3/
This might be a dumb question but when I'm putting together an HTML email in Rails, is there a particularly easy built-in way to preview the template it in the browser or do I need to write some sort of custom controller that pulls it in as its view?
Action Mailer now has a built in way of previewing emails in Rails 4.1. For example, check this out:
# located in test/mailers/previews/notifier_mailer_preview.rb
class NotifierPreview < ActionMailer::Preview
# Accessible from http://localhost:3000/rails/mailers/notifier/welcome
def welcome
Notifier.welcome(User.first)
end
end
Daniel's answer is a good start, but if your email templates contain any dynamic data, it won't work. E.g. suppose your email is an order receipt and within it you print out #order.total_price - using the previous method the #order variable will be nil.
Here's a little recipe I use:
First, since this email preview functionality is definitely for internal use only, I set up some generic routes in the admin namespace:
#routes.rb
MySite::Application.routes.draw do
namespace :admin do
match 'mailer(/:action(/:id(.:format)))' => 'mailer#:action'
end
end
Next, I create the controller. In this controller, I create one method per email template. Since most emails contain dynamic data, we need to populate whatever member variables the template expects.
This could be done with fixtures, but I typically prefer to just grab some pseudo-random real data. Remember - this is NOT a unit test - this is purely a development aid. It doesn't need to produce the same result every single time - in fact - it's probably better if it doesn't!
#app/controllers/admin/mailer_controller.rb
class Admin::MailerController < Admin::ApplicationController
def preview_welcome()
#user = User.last
render :file => 'mailer/welcome.html.erb', :layout => 'mailer'
end
end
Note that when we render the template, we use layout=>:mailer. This embeds the body of your email inside the HTML email layout that you've created instead of inside your typical web application layout (e.g. application.html.erb).
And that's pretty much it. Now I can visit http://example.com/admin/mailer/preview_welcome to preview change to my welcome email template.
37Signals also has their own mail testing gem called mail_view. It's pretty fantastic.
The easiest setup I've seen is MailCatcher. Setup took 2 minutes, and it works for new mailers out of the box.
I use email_preview. Give it a try.
Easiest solution in rails 6: just remember one url:
http://localhost:3000/rails/mailers
I'm surprised no one's mentioned letter_opener. It's a gem that will render and open emails as a browser page whenever an email is delivered in dev.
I recently wrote a gem named Maily to preview, edit (template file) and deliver the application emails via a browser. It also provides a friendly way to hook data, a flexible authorization system and a minimalist UI.
I have planned to add new features in the near future, like:
Multiple hooks per email
Parametrize emails via UI (arguments of mailer method)
Play with translations keys (list, highlight, ...)
I hope it can help you.
rails generates a mail preview if you use rails g mailer CustomMailer.
You will get a file CustomMailerPreview inside spec/mailers/previews folder.
Here you can write your method that will call the mailer and it'll generate a preview.
For ex -
class CustomMailerPreview < ActionMailer::Preview
def contact_us_mail_preview
CustomMailer.my_mail(user: User.first)
end
end
Preview all emails at http://localhost:3000/rails/mailers/custom_mailer
You can use Rails Email Preview
REP is a rails engine to preview and test send emails, with I18n support, easy premailer integration, and optional CMS editing with comfortable_mexican_sofa.
There is no way to preview it directly out of the Mailer.
But as you wrote, you can write a controller, which looks something like this.
class EmailPreviewsControllers < ActionController::Base
def show
render "#{params[:mailer]}_mailer/#{params[:method]}"
end
end
But I think, that's not the best way to test emails, if they look correctly.
Rails Email Preview helps us to quickly view the email in web browser in development mode.
1) Add “gem ‘rails_email_preview’, ‘~> 0.2.29’ “ to gem file and bundle install.
2) Run “rails g rails_email_preview:install” this creates initializer in config folder and add routes.
3) Run “rails g rails_email_preview:update_previews” this crates mailer_previews folder in app directory.
Generator will add a stub to each of your emails, then u populate the stub with mock data.
Ex:
class UserMailerPreview
def invitation
UserMailer.invitation mock_user(‘Alice’), mock_user(‘Bob’)
end
def welcome
UserMailer.welcome mock_user
end
private
def mock_user(name = ‘Bill Gates’)
fake_id User.new(name: name, email: “user#{rand 100}#test.com”)
end
def fake_id(obj)
obj.define_singleton_method(:id) { 123 + rand(100) }
obj
end
end
4) Parameters in search query will be available as an instance variable to preview class. Ex: if we have a URL like
“/emails/user_mailer_preview-welcome?user_id=1” #user_id is defined in welcome method of UserMailerPreview it helps us to send mail to specific user.
class UserMailerPreview
def welcome
user = #user_id ? User.find(#user_id) : mock_user
UserMailer.welcome(user)
end
end
5) To access REP url’s like this
rails_email_preview.rep_root_url
rails_email_preview.rep_emails_url
rails_email_preview.rep_email_url(‘user_mailer-welcome’)
6) We can send emails via REP, this will use environment mailer settings. Uncomment this line in the initializer to disable sending mail in test environment.
config.enable_send_email = false
Source : RailsCarma Blog : Previewing Emails in Rails Applications With the Mail_View Gem
I prefer mails_viewer gem. This gem is quite useful as it save the HTML template into tmp folder.