#!/usr/bin/env bash set -euo pipefail # this is run with .. as working directory. # note: outgoing hook events are in ../queue/hooks.go, ../mox-/config.go, ../queue.go and ../webapi/gendoc.sh. keep in sync. # todo: find some proper way to generate the curl commands and responses automatically... cat < calls a method. The form can be either "application/x-www-form-urlencoded" or "multipart/form-data". Form field "request" must contain the request parameters, encoded as JSON. HTTP basic authentication is required for calling methods, with an email address as user name. Use a login address configured for "unique SMTP MAIL FROM" addresses ("FromIDLoginAddresses" in the account configuration), and configure an interval to "keep retired messages delivered from the queue". This allows incoming DSNs to be matched to the original outgoing messages, and enables automatic suppression list management. HTTP response status 200 OK indicates a successful method call, status 400 indicates an error. The response body of an error is a JSON object with a human-readable "Message" field, and a "Code" field for programmatic handling (common codes: "user" or user-induced errors, "server" for server-caused errors). Most successful calls return a JSON object, but some return data (e.g. a raw message or an attachment of a message). See [Methods] for the methods and and [Client] for their documentation. The first element of their return values indicate their JSON object type or io.ReadCloser for non-JSON data. The request and response types are converted from/to JSON. Optional and missing/empty fields/values are converted into Go zero values: zero for numbers, empty strings, empty lists and empty objects. New fields may be added in response objects in future versions, parsers should ignore unrecognized fields. An HTTP GET to a method URL serves an HTML page showing example request/response JSON objects in a form and a button to call the method. # Webhooks Webhooks for outgoing delivery events and incoming deliveries are configured per account. A webhook is delivered by an HTTP POST with headers "X-Mox-Webhook-ID" (unique ID of webhook) and "X-Mox-Webhook-Attempt" (number of delivery attempts, starting at 1), and a JSON body with the webhook data. Failing webhook deliveries are retried with backoff, each time doubling the interval between attempts, at 1m, 2m, 4m, 7.5m, 15m and unwards, until the last attempt after a 16h wait period. See [webhook.Outgoing] for the fields in a webhook for outgoing deliveries, and in particular [webhook.OutgoingEvent] for the types of events. Only the latest event for the delivery of a particular outgoing message will be delivered, any webhooks for that message still in the queue (after failure to deliver) are retired as superseded when a new event occurs. Webhooks for incoming deliveries are configured separately from outgoing deliveries. Incoming DSNs for previously sent messages do not cause a webhook to the webhook URL for incoming messages, only to the webhook URL for outgoing delivery events. The incoming webhook JSON payload contains the message envelope (parsed To, Cc, Bcc, Subject and more headers), the MIME structure, and the contents of the first text and HTML parts. See [webhook.Incoming] for the fields in the JSON object. The full message and individual parts, including attachments, can be retrieved using the webapi. # Transactional email When sending transactional emails, potentially to many recipients, it is important to process delivery failure notifications. If messages are rejected, or email addresses no longer exist, you should stop sending email to those addresses. If you try to keep sending, the receiving mail servers may consider that spammy behaviour and blocklist your mail server. Automatic suppression list management already prevents most repeated sending attempts. The webhooks make it easy to receive failure notifications. To keep spam complaints about your messages to a minimum, include links to unsubscribe from future messages without requiring further actions from the user, such as logins. Include an unsubscribe link in the footer, and include List-* message headers, such as List-Id, List-Unsubscribe and List-Unsubscribe-Post. # Webapi examples Below are examples for making webapi calls to a locally running "mox localserve" with its default credentials. Send a basic message: \$ curl --user mox@localhost:moxmoxmox \\ --data request='{"To": [{"Address": "mox@localhost"}], "Text": "hi ☺"}' \\ http://localhost:1080/webapi/v0/Send { "MessageID": "", "Submissions": [ { "Address": "mox@localhost", "QueueMsgID": 10010, "FromID": "ZfV16EATHwKEufrSMo055Q" } ] } Send a message with files both from form upload and base64 included in JSON: \$ curl --user mox@localhost:moxmoxmox \\ --form request='{"To": [{"Address": "mox@localhost"}], "Subject": "hello", "Text": "hi ☺", "HTML": "", "AttachedFiles": [{"Name": "img.png", "ContentType": "image/png", "Data": "bWFkZSB5b3UgbG9vayE="}]}' \\ --form 'inlinefile=@hi.png;headers="Content-ID: "' \\ --form attachedfile=@mox.png \\ http://localhost:1080/webapi/v0/Send { "MessageID": "", "Submissions": [ { "Address": "mox@localhost", "QueueMsgID": 10011, "FromID": "yWiUQ6mvJND8FRPSmc9y5A" } ] } Get a message in parsed form: \$ curl --user mox@localhost:moxmoxmox --data request='{"MsgID": 424}' http://localhost:1080/webapi/v0/MessageGet { "Message": { "From": [ { "Name": "mox", "Address": "mox@localhost" } ], "To": [ { "Name": "", "Address": "mox@localhost" } ], "CC": [], "BCC": [], "ReplyTo": [], "MessageID": "<84vCeme_yZXyDzjWDeYBpg@localhost>", "References": [], "Date": "2024-04-04T14:29:42+02:00", "Subject": "hello", "Text": "hi \u263a\n", "HTML": "" }, "Structure": { "ContentType": "multipart/mixed", "ContentTypeParams": { "boundary": "0ee72dc30dbab2ca6f7a363844a10a9f6111fc6dd31b8ff0b261478c2c48" }, "ContentID": "", "DecodedSize": 0, "Parts": [ { "ContentType": "multipart/related", "ContentTypeParams": { "boundary": "b5ed0977ee2b628040f394c3f374012458379a4f3fcda5036371d761c81d" }, "ContentID": "", "DecodedSize": 0, "Parts": [ { "ContentType": "multipart/alternative", "ContentTypeParams": { "boundary": "3759771adede7bd191ef37f2aa0e49ff67369f4000c320f198a875e96487" }, "ContentID": "", "DecodedSize": 0, "Parts": [ { "ContentType": "text/plain", "ContentTypeParams": { "charset": "utf-8" }, "ContentID": "", "DecodedSize": 8, "Parts": [] }, { "ContentType": "text/html", "ContentTypeParams": { "charset": "us-ascii" }, "ContentID": "", "DecodedSize": 22, "Parts": [] } ] }, { "ContentType": "image/png", "ContentTypeParams": {}, "ContentID": "", "DecodedSize": 19375, "Parts": [] } ] }, { "ContentType": "image/png", "ContentTypeParams": {}, "ContentID": "", "DecodedSize": 14, "Parts": [] }, { "ContentType": "image/png", "ContentTypeParams": {}, "ContentID": "", "DecodedSize": 7766, "Parts": [] } ] }, "Meta": { "Size": 38946, "DSN": false, "Flags": [ "\$notjunk", "\\seen" ], "MailFrom": "mox@localhost", "RcptTo": "mox@localhost", "MailFromValidated": false, "MsgFrom": "mox@localhost", "MsgFromValidated": false, "DKIMVerifiedDomains": [], "RemoteIP": "", "MailboxName": "Inbox" } } Errors (with a 400 bad request HTTP status response) include a human-readable message and a code for programmatic use: \$ curl --user mox@localhost:moxmoxmox --data request='{"MsgID": 999}' http://localhost:1080/webapi/v0/MessageGet { "Code": "notFound", "Message": "message not found" } Get a raw, unparsed message, as bytes: \$ curl --user mox@localhost:moxmoxmox --data request='{"MsgID": 123}' http://localhost:1080/webapi/v0/MessageRawGet [message as bytes in raw form] Mark a message as read and set flag "custom": \$ curl --user mox@localhost:moxmoxmox --data request='{"MsgID": 424, "Flags": ["\\\\Seen", "custom"]}' http://localhost:1080/webapi/v0/MessageFlagsAdd {} # Webhook examples A webhook is delivered by an HTTP POST, wich headers X-Mox-Webhook-ID and X-Mox-Webhook-Attempt and a JSON body with the data. To simulate a webhook call for incoming messages, use: curl -H 'X-Mox-Webhook-ID: 123' -H 'X-Mox-Webhook-Attempt: 1' --json '{...}' http://localhost/yourapp EOF for ex in $(./mox example | grep webhook); do ./mox example $ex echo done cat <