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Notifications and Messages
Messages get sent by children of the Hyrax::AbstractMessageService. Sending looks like this:
Hyrax::BatchCreateSuccessService.new(event[:user]).call
and new Message Service would look like this:
class TrtTermsImportJob < ApplicationJob
queue_as :default
def perform(source_filename:, user:)
begin
TrtTermsImportService.new(source_filename: source_filename).import
rescue => e
TrtTermsImportMessage.new(user: user, message: "Trt Import Failed #{e.message}").call
else
TrtTermsImportMessage.new(user: user, message: "Trt Import Succeeded").call
end
end
end
Hyrax uses a gem called mailboxer to send notifications within the application. You can also make it send these notifications by email. Information in this guide is drawn from Messaging with Rails and Mailboxer by Ilya Bodrov-Krukowski.
There is plenty of documentation for how to configure ActionMailer for various mail services. The Action Mailer Basics guide is a good place to start.
Given a file config/environments/development.rb
:
config.action_mailer.perform_deliveries = true
config.action_mailer.delivery_method = :smtp
config.action_mailer.smtp_settings = {
address: 'email-smtp.us-east-1.amazonaws.com',
port: '587',
user_name: 'MY_USER_NAME',
password: 'MY_PASSWORD',
enable_starttls_auto: true
}
And a file app/mailers/test_mailer.rb
:
class TestMailer < ApplicationMailer
def test_email
mail(
from: "you@yourdomain.com",
to: "you@yourdomain.com",
subject: "Test mail",
body: "Test mail body"
)
end
end
On a rails console, you should be able to run TestMailer.test_email.deliver
and see your email delivered.
Edit the initializer for mailboxer at config/initializers/mailboxer.rb
:
Mailboxer.setup do |config|
#Configures if you application uses or not email sending for Notifications and Messages
config.uses_emails = true
#Configures the default from for emails sent for Messages and Notifications
config.default_from = "My Application Name <whatever@yourdomain.com>"
#Configures the methods needed by mailboxer
config.email_method = :mailboxer_email
config.name_method = :display_name
[...]
end
Now that you can send email from your application, make sure your User model has the methods it needs to mailboxer-style email. In the initializer, note that we set name_method
to :display_name
. Devise User objects in Hyrax have a method called display_name that works well here. However, the Devise email
method won't work because the argument signature doesn't match what mailboxer is expected. Instead, edit app/models/user.rb
and add a mailboxer_email method
, like this:
# Mailboxer (the notification system) needs the User object to respond to this method
# in order to send emails
def mailboxer_email(_object)
email
end
That's it! Now when your Hyrax app sends notifications, it should send them by email as well as within the application.
If you get an error saying you don't have a hostname set, you might need to explicitly set your ActionMailer hostname. If you're only ever going to deploy this application to one production server, you could set it explicitly in config/environments/production.rb
:
config.action_mailer.default_url_options = { host: "yourhostname.domain.name" }
Or, if you're going to be deploying the same app to multiple servers and environments, you could reference an environment variable in config/application.rb
:
config.action_mailer.default_url_options = { host: ENV["ACTION_MAILER_HOST"] }
and set the ACTION_MAILER_HOST
environment variable on the servers where you're running your application. To do this in Ubuntu, add this to /etc/apache2/envvars
:
export ACTION_MAILER_HOST=yourhostname.domain.name
By default, Mailboxer sends emails with subject lines that start with "Mailboxer new message: ". If you want to remove that, or customize what it says, copy the locale from https://github.com/mailboxer/mailboxer/blob/master/config/locales/en.yml to your local config/locales/en.yml
file and customize it there.
By default, Hyrax notifications use relative links. However, when you're sending notifications by email, the user is no longer within the context of the application, so those relative links won't work anymore. Instead, you're going to want to use fully qualified URIs.
- Hyrax notifications use a method called
document_path
. You'll need to define a new method to use instead. Let's call itdocument_url
. You can add this method wherever it makes sense in your application.
def document_url
key = document.model_name.singular_route_key
Rails.application.routes.url_helpers.send(key + "_url", document.id)
end
- Generating those urls is going to require that you've set the
:host
option fordefault_url_options
. To do that, add a line like this at the end of yourapplication.rb
file:
Rails.application.routes.default_url_options[:host] = ENV["HYRAX_HOST"]
- In your notifications, replace all instances of
document_path
withdocument_url
In lib/hyrax/configuration.rb
, there is a method to set the poll interval for notification updates:
def notifications_update_poll_interval
@notifications_update_poll_interval ||= 30.seconds
end
You could set this to never (effectively).
The setting is referenced in the view partial app/views/hyrax/users/_notify_number.html.erb
also, providing another place you could set it.
data: { 'update-poll-url' => hyrax.user_notify_path,
'update-poll-interval' => 30 } do %>
'update-poll-interval' => Hyrax.config.notifications_update_poll_interval }