This is an opinionated API add-on to Spatie's Mailcoach app.
It provides a limited set of endpoints for managing Mailcoach over an API. It also provides some UI for managing your API clients for auth, and webhook management.
To use this package you should first purchase and install Mailcoach from Spatie into a new or existing Laravel app. Alternatively you can install the Mailcoach standalone app.
Once that's done you can install this package alongside Mailcoach.
You can install the package via composer:
composer require leeovery/mailcoach-api
Publish migrations...
php artisan vendor:publish --tag=mailcoach-api-migrations
... & migrate.
php artisan migrate
Add the following line to your RouteServiceProvider map
method:
$apiPrefix = 'api';
$webPrefix = '';
Route::mailcoachApi($apiPrefix, $webPrefix);
The params passed in are the defaults so if you're happy with those then feel free to leave them out. On the other hand, you need to change the prefix, you can do so by changing what you pass into the macro.
php artisan vendor:publish --tag=mailcoach-api-views
php artisan vendor:publish --tag=mailcoach-api-config
In the config file that's published you can edit the middleware for both the web routes and the api routes.
You can also setup the webhook secret in this file. I recommend using an env var to set this up and keep it secret as it ensures your webhook endpoint(s) stay secure.
Setup Laravel Passport for machine-to-machine auth, as per the Passport instructions:
php artisan passport:client --client
If you should now be able to see the new menu options in Mailcoach, namely API Clients
& Webhooks
.
To allow access using the API you will need to create yourself a new API Client. Once that's done you will then have a ClientID (which is an int) and a Client Secret. Both of these will be required to authenticate with the API.
To get actual access to the API from your client you will need to obtain an access_token. To do this, from the client app you will need to do a POST request to [your-api-url]/api/oauth/token with the following post body:
grant_type:client_credentials
client_id:{your-client-id}
client_secret:{your-client-secret}
This should be obtained prior to each API session / request, as they don't last forever.
To get an idea you can run the following in your terminal to get the access_token
:
curl -I -H ‘Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded’ -X POST ‘{your-api-url}/api/oauth/token' -d ‘grant_type=client_credentials&client_id={your-client-id}&client_secret={your-client-secret}’
This API makes a few assumptions which are important to understand.
The main one is that it considers a subscriber of a certain email, no matter which list they are on, to be the same person. Mailcoach has the concept that each Subscriber
belongs to one EmailLst
. A person can subscribe to multiple lists, but that will result in multiple Subscriber
records being created for them.
This package introduces a Contact
entity, which will group Subscriber
records, based on the email, and will keep the email, names, and other meta info consolidated across all their Subscriber
records.
Consider the user [email protected]
is subscribed to 2 lists, and unsubscrbed from 1...
A GET
request to /contact/[email protected]
would result in the following response data:
{
"data": {
"email": "[email protected]",
"first_name": "Lee",
"last_name": "Overy",
"extra_attributes": {
"full_name": "Lee Overy"
},
"subscribed_to": [
{
"list_id": 1,
"subscription_id": 1,
"subscribed_at": "2020-02-09T12:31:40.000000Z"
},
{
"list_id": 2,
"subscription_id": 2,
"subscribed_at": "2020-02-09T12:31:40.000000Z"
}
],
"unsubscribed_from": [
{
"list_id": 3,
"subscription_id": 3,
"subscribed_at": "2020-02-09T12:31:40.000000Z",
"unsubscribed_at": "2020-02-09T12:31:57.000000Z"
}
]
}
}
The important thing to take away from this, is that if you want to keep Subscriber
records of the same email address independent across EmailLists
, you might need to fork this package and make some changes. Or do a PR and let's chat :)
This package provides a limited number of endpoints, which you can easily see by running php artisan route:list
from the app dir in your terminal.
But in a nutshell it provides:
- Get all lists.
- Get a list by list primary ID.
- Get a contact
- Create a contact and subscribe to one or more lists
- FormRequest rules for reference:
[
'email' => 'required|email:rfc,dns',
'list_ids' => 'required|array',
'list_ids.*' => ['required', 'integer', new Exists(EmailList::class, 'id')],
'attributes' => 'nullable|array',
'attributes.*' => 'string',
]
- Update a contacts name and/or email
- Add / remove extra meta info
- Add / remove from 1 or more lists
- Unsubscribe from all
- Resubscribe to all
- FormRequest rules for reference:
[
'email' => 'sometimes|email:rfc,dns',
'unsubscribe_from_list_ids' => 'sometimes|array',
'unsubscribe_from_list_ids.*' => ['sometimes', 'integer', new Exists(EmailList::class, 'id')],
'resubscribe_to_list_ids' => 'sometimes|array',
'resubscribe_to_list_ids.*' => ['sometimes', 'integer', new Exists(EmailList::class, 'id')],
'attributes' => 'sometimes|nullable|array',
'attributes.*' => 'sometimes|nullable|string',
'unsubscribe_all' => 'sometimes|accepted|must_be_different:resubscribe_all',
'resubscribe_all' => 'sometimes|accepted|must_be_different:unsubscribe_all',
];
- Create a new campaign with html content (recommend using a Mailable and calling
render
to produce the html) - Can schedule to send in the future
- Omitting scheduled date will result in the campaign sending immdiately
- FormRequest rules for reference:
[
'name' => ['required', 'alpha_dash', new Unique(Campaign::class, 'name')],
'subject' => 'required|string',
'content' => 'required|string',
'list_id' => ['required', 'integer', new Exists(EmailList::class, 'id')],
'from_email' => 'sometimes|email:rfc,dns',
'from_name' => 'sometimes|string',
'scheduled_at' => 'sometimes|nullable|date_format:Y-m-d H:i',
];
We use the awesome Laravel Webhook Server for provide webhook support.
If you want to change some of the defaults, you can publish teh config file from that package and tweak away. This package simply uses the defaults so anything you change will take effect.
To receive the webhooks this package dispatches you should use the matching client package: Laravel Webhook Client.
Easiest way to get familiar with this is to check webhook the UI. Go ahead and create a new Webhook and you will see how it works.
Essentially, any time a Mailcoach event occurs, we will intercept it, check if any webhooks are configured for that event, and if so, go ahead and fire them.
This way your client app can be notified when a subscriber unsubscribes, or marks an email you send as spam etc.
On the whole, anything triggered via the API wont result in a webhook being fired. The exception to this is sending a campaign via the API - that will trigger events and therefore webhooks. However, updating contacts usually won't - unless I missed something. To be safe, it would be wise to code an awareness for the potential of feedback loops when using the API and webhooks.
If you're unsure of how this will work for you, the best thing to do is check the code.
composer test
Please see CHANGELOG for more information what has changed recently.
Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.
If you discover any security related issues, please email [email protected] instead of using the issue tracker.
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.
This package was generated using the Laravel Package Boilerplate.