Introduction ~~~~~~~~~~~~ How many times have you had to consume some sort of POP3, IMAP, or local mailbox for incoming content, or had to otherwise construct an application driven by e-mail? One too many times, I'm sure. This small Django application will allow you to specify mailboxes that you would like consumed for incoming content; the e-mail will be stored, and you can process it at will (or, if you're in a hurry, by subscribing to a signal). Installation ============ You can either install from pip:: pip install django-mailbox *or* checkout and install the source from the `bitbucket repository `_:: hg clone https://bitbucket.org/latestrevision/django-mailbox cd django-mailbox python setup.py install *or* checkout and install the source from the `github repository `_:: git clone https://github.com/latestrevision/django-mailbox.git cd django-mailbox python setup.py install Polling for mail in POP3/IMAP or a local mailbox ================================================ Django Mailbox supports polling both common internet mailboxes like POP3 and IMAP as well as local file-based mailboxes. .. table:: 'Protocol' Options ============ ============== =============================================================== Mailbox Type 'Protocol':// Notes ============ ============== =============================================================== POP3 ``pop3://`` Can also specify SSL with ``pop3+ssl://`` IMAP ``imap://`` Can also specify SSL with ``imap+ssl://`` Maildir ``maildir://`` Mbox ``mbox://`` Babyl ``babyl://`` MH ``mh://`` MMDF ``mmdf://`` Piped Mail *empty* See `Receiving mail directly from Exim4 or Postfix via a pipe`_ ============ ============== =============================================================== .. WARNING:: This will delete any messages it can find in the inbox you specify; do not use an e-mail inbox that you would like to share between applications. POP3 and IMAP Mailboxes ----------------------- Mailbox URIs are in the normal URI format:: protocol://username:password@domain Basic IMAP Example: ``imap://username:password@server`` Basic POP3 Example: ``pop3://username:password@server`` Most mailboxes these days are SSL-enabled; if yours is, add ``+ssl`` to your URI. Also, if your username or password include any non-ascii characters, they should be URL-encoded (for example, if your username includes an ``@``, it should be changed to ``%40`` in your URI). If you have an account named ``youremailaddress@gmail.com`` with a password of ``1234`` on GMail (which I happen to know uses the POP3 server of 'pop.gmail.com' and requires SSL), you would enter the following as your URI:: pop3+ssl://youremailaddress%40gmail.com:1234@pop.gmail.com Local File-based Mailboxes -------------------------- If you happen to want to consume a file-based mailbox like an Maildir, Mbox, Babyl, MH, or MMDF mailbox, you can use this too by entering the appropriate 'protocol' in the URI. If you had a maildir, for example, at ``/var/mail/``, you would enter a URI like:: maildir:///var/mail Note that there is an additional ``/`` in the above URI after the protocol; this is important. Getting incoming mail --------------------- In your code ............ Mailbox instances have a method named ``get_new_mail``; this method will gather new messages from the server. Using the Django Admin ...................... Check the box next to each of the mailboxes you'd like to fetch e-mail from, and select the 'Get new mail' option. Using a cron job ................ You can easily consume incoming mail by running the management command named ``getmail`` (optionally with an argument of the name of the mailbox you'd like to get the mail for).:: python manage.py getmail Receiving mail directly from Exim4 or Postfix via a pipe ======================================================== Django Mailbox's ``processincomingmessage`` management command accepts, via ``stdin``, incoming messages. You can configure Postfix or Exim4 to pipe incoming mail to this management command to import messages directly without polling. You need not configure mailbox settings when piping-in messages, mailbox entries will be automatically created matching the e-mail address to which incoming messages are sent. Receiving Mail from Exim4 ------------------------- To configure Exim4 to receive incoming mail, start by adding a new router configuration to your Exim4 configuration like:: django_mailbox: debug_print = 'R: django_mailbox for $localpart@$domain' driver = accept domains = +local_domains transport = send_to_django_mailbox local_parts = emailusernameone : emailusernametwo Make sure that the e-mail addresses you would like handled by Django Mailbox are not handled by another router; you may need to disable some existing routers. Change the contents of ``local_parts`` to match a colon-delimited list of usernames for which you would like to receive mail for. For example, if one of the e-mail addresses targeted at this machine is ``jane@example.com``, the contents of ``local_parts`` would be, simply ``jane``. Next, a new transport configuration to your Exim4 configuration:: send_to_django_mailbox: driver = pipe command = /path/to/your/environments/python /path/to/your/projects/manage.py processincomingmessage user = www-data group = www-data return_path_add delivery_date_add Like your router configuration, transport configuration should be altered to match your environment. First, modify the ``command`` setting such that it points at the proper python executable (if you're using a virtual environment, you'll want to direct that at the python executable in your virtual environment) and project ``manage.py`` script. Additionally, you'll need to set ``user`` and ``group`` such that they match a reasonable user and group (on Ubuntu, ``www-data`` suffices for both). Receiving mail from Postfix --------------------------- Although I have not personally tried using Postfix for this, Postfix is capable of delivering new mail to a script using ``pipe``. Please consult the `Postfix documentation for pipe here `_. You may want to consult the above Exim4 configuration for tips. Subscribing to the incoming mail signal ======================================= To subscribe to the incoming mail signal, following this lead:: from django_mailbox.signals import message_received from django.dispatch import receiver @receiver(message_received) def dance_jig(sender, message, **args): print "I just recieved a message titled %s from a mailbox named %s" % (message.subject, message.mailbox.name, ) Settings ======== You can disable mailbox information from being listed in the Django admin by adding a setting named ``DJANGO_MAILBOX_ADMIN_ENABLED`` indicating your preference toward whether or not the models appear in the admin (defaulting to ``True``).