Incoming! receives a Rack::Request and hands you a Mail::Message, much
like ActionMailer::Base.receive does with a raw email. We currently
support the following services:
- SendGrid
 - Mailgun
 - Postmark
 - CloudMailin
 - Mandrill
 - Any mail server capable of routing messages to a system command
 
Brought to you by ⚡ Honeybadger.io, painless Rails exception tracking.
- 
Add Incoming! to your Gemfile and run
bundle install:gem "incoming"
 - 
Create a new class to receive emails (see examples below)
 - 
Implement an HTTP endpoint to receive HTTP post hooks, and pass the request to your receiver. (see examples below)
 
class EmailReceiver < Incoming::Strategies::SendGrid
  def receive(mail)
    %(Got message from #{mail.to.first} with subject "#{mail.subject}")
  end
end
req = Rack::Request.new(env)
result = EmailReceiver.receive(req) # => Got message from [email protected] with subject "hello world"class EmailReceiver < Incoming::Strategies::Mailgun
  setup api_key: "asdf"
  def receive(mail)
    %(Got message from #{mail.to.first} with subject "#{mail.subject}")
  end
end
req = Rack::Request.new(env)
result = EmailReceiver.receive(req) # => Got message from [email protected] with subject "hello world"class EmailReceiver < Incoming::Strategies::Postmark
  def receive(mail)
    %(Got message from #{mail.to.first} with subject "#{mail.subject}")
  end
end
req = Rack::Request.new(env)
result = EmailReceiver.receive(req) # => Got message from [email protected] with subject "hello world"Use the Raw Format when setting up your address target.
class EmailReceiver < Incoming::Strategies::CloudMailin
  def receive(mail)
    %(Got message from #{mail.to.first} with subject "#{mail.subject}")
  end
end
req = Rack::Request.new(env)
result = EmailReceiver.receive(req) # => Got message from [email protected] with subject "hello world"Mandrill is capable of sending multiple events in a single webhook, so
the Mandrill strategy works a bit differently than the others. Namely,
the .receive method returns an Array of return values from your
#receive method for each inbound event in the payload. Otherwise, the
implementation is the same:
class EmailReceiver < Incoming::Strategies::Mandrill
  def receive(mail)
    %(Got message from #{mail.to.first} with subject "#{mail.subject}")
  end
end
req = Rack::Request.new(env)
result = EmailReceiver.receive(req) # => Got message from [email protected] with subject "hello world"class EmailReceiver < Incoming::Strategies::HTTPPost
  setup secret: "6d7e5337a0cd69f52c3fcf9f5af438b1"
  def receive(mail)
    %(Got message from #{mail.to.first} with subject "#{mail.subject}")
  end
end
req = Rack::Request.new(env)
result = EmailReceiver.receive(req) # => Got message from [email protected] with subject "hello world"# /etc/postfix/virtual
@example.com http_post
# /etc/mail/aliases
http_post: "|http_post -s 6d7e5337a0cd69f52c3fcf9f5af438b1 http://www.example.com/emails"
class EmailReceiver < Incoming::Strategies::HTTPPost
  setup secret: "6d7e5337a0cd69f52c3fcf9f5af438b1"
  def receive(mail)
    %(Got message from #{mail.to.first} with subject "#{mail.subject}")
  end
end
req = Rack::Request.new(env)
result = EmailReceiver.receive(req) # => Got message from [email protected] with subject "hello world"To setup a global incoming email alias:
# /var/qmail/alias/.qmail-whoever - mails to whoever@ will be delivered to this alias.
|http_post -s 6d7e5337a0cd69f52c3fcf9f5af438b1 http://www.example.com/emails
Domain-specific incoming aliases can be set as follows:
#/var/qmail/control/virtualdomains
example.com:example
#~example/.qmail-whoever
|http_post -s 6d7e5337a0cd69f52c3fcf9f5af438b1 http://www.example.com/emails
Now mails to [email protected] will be posted to the corresponding URL above. To post all mails for example.com, just add the above line to ~example/.qmail-default.
# app/controllers/emails_controller.rb
class EmailsController < ActionController::Base
  def create
    if EmailReceiver.receive(request)
      render json: { status: "ok" }
    else
      render json: { status: "rejected" }, status: 403
    end
  end
end# config/routes.rb
Rails.application.routes.draw do
  post "/emails" => "emails#create"
end# spec/controllers/emails_controller_spec.rb
require "spec_helper"
describe EmailsController, "#create" do
  it "responds with success when request is valid" do
    allow(EmailReceiver).to receive(:receive).and_return(true)
    post :create
    expect(response.success?).to eq(true)
    expect(response.body).to eq(%({"status":"ok"}))
  end
  it "responds with 403 when request is invalid" do
    allow(EmailReceiver).to receive(:receive).and_return(false)
    post :create
    expect(response.status).to eq(403)
    expect(response.body).to eq(%({"status":"rejected"}))
  end
end- Provide authentication for all strategies where possible (currently only Mailgun requests are authenticated.)
 
- Fork it.
 - Create a topic branch 
git checkout -b my_branch - Commit your changes 
git commit -am "Boom" - Push to your branch 
git push origin my_branch - Send a pull request
 
Incoming! is free software, and may be redistributed under the terms specified in the MIT-LICENSE file.

