27 KiB
Mailjet JS
Overview
Welcome to the Mailjet official JavaScript SDK built with webpack
, babel
& es5
.
This can be used in node or in the browser.
Check out all the resources and JS code examples in the official Mailjet Documentation.
NOTE:
If used in the browser, at the moment a proxy is required to communicate with the Mailjet API due to CORS limitations.
Also, do not publish your private api key in frontend code.
Table of contents
- Documentation
- Development
Documentation
Compatibility
This library officially supports the following Node.JS
versions:
- >=
v12.x
Install
Install the SDK use the following code:
npm install node-mailjet
Setup Client
Authentication
The Mailjet Email API
uses your public
and secret
keys for authentication.
export MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC='your API key'
export MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE='your API secret'
export MJ_API_TOKEN='your API token'
Note:
For theSMS API
the authorization is based on a Bearer token.
See information about it in the SMS API section of the readme.
Basic setup
Next, require the module and initialize your Mailjet client:
const Mailjet = require('node-mailjet');
For EMAIL API
and SEND API
:
const mailjet = new Mailjet({
apiKey: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC || 'your-api-key',
apiSecret: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE || 'your-api-secret'
});
For SMS API
:
const mailjet = new Mailjet({
apiToken: process.env.MJ_API_TOKEN || 'your-api-token'
});
API Setup
For EMAIL API
and SEND API
you can use static method apiConnect
:
const mailjet = Mailjet.apiConnect(
process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC,
process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE,
{
config: {},
options: {}
}
);
SMS Setup
For SMS API
you can use static method smsConnect
:
const mailjet = Mailjet.smsConnect(
process.env.MJ_API_TOKEN,
{
config: {},
options: {}
}
);
Make your first call
Here's an example on how to send an email:
const Mailjet = require('node-mailjet');
const mailjet = Mailjet.apiConnect(
process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC,
process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE,
);
const request = mailjet
.post('send', { version: 'v3.1' })
.request({
Messages: [
{
From: {
Email: "pilot@mailjet.com",
Name: "Mailjet Pilot"
},
To: [
{
Email: "passenger1@mailjet.com",
Name: "passenger 1"
}
],
Subject: "Your email flight plan!",
TextPart: "Dear passenger 1, welcome to Mailjet! May the delivery force be with you!",
HTMLPart: "<h3>Dear passenger 1, welcome to <a href=\"https://www.mailjet.com/\">Mailjet</a>!</h3><br />May the delivery force be with you!"
}
]
})
request
.then((result) => {
console.log(result.body)
})
.catch((err) => {
console.log(err.statusCode)
})
Configuration
To instantiate the library you can use the following constructor:
const mailjet = new Mailjet({
apiKey: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC,
apiSecret: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE,
config: CONFIG,
options: OPTIONS
});
const request = mailjet
.METHOD(RESOURCE, CONFIG)
.request(DATA, PARAMS, PERFORM_API_CALL)
METHOD
: the method you want to use for this call (one of:post
,put
,get
,delete
)RESOURCE
: the API endpoint you want to callOPTIONS
: associative array describing the connection options (see Options bellow for full list)CONFIG
: associative array describing the connection config (see Config bellow for full list)DATA
: is the data to be sent as the request body (only forpost
,put
,delete
methods)PARAMS
: are the URL parameters to be sent with the requestPERFORM_API_CALL
: is the Boolean parameter that determine need make local or real request
Options
options
have this structure:
headers
- associative array describing additional header fields which you can pass to the requesttimeout
- specifies the number of milliseconds before the request times outproxy
- defines the hostname, port, and protocol of the proxy server to redirect all requests (Node only option)maxBodyLength
- defines the max size of the http request content in bytes allowed (Node only option)maxContentLength
- defines the max size of the http response content in bytes allowed (Node only option)
You can pass options
on init client
and this options
will use for each request
:
const mailjet = new Mailjet({
apiKey: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC,
apiSecret: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE,
options: {
timeout: 1000,
maxBodyLength: 1500,
maxContentLength: 100,
headers: {
'X-API-Key': 'foobar',
},
proxy: {
protocol: 'http',
host: 'www.test-proxy.com',
port: 3100,
}
}
});
For more detailed information visit this doc.
Request timeout
You are able to set a timeout for your request using the timeout
parameter.
The timeout
parameter describe the number of milliseconds before the request times out.
If the request takes longer than timeout
, the request will be aborted.
const mailjet = new Mailjet({
apiKey: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC,
apiSecret: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE,
options: {
timeout: 100
}
});
const request = mailjet
.post('send', { version: 'v3.1' })
Request headers
You are able to set an additional headers for your request using the headers
parameter.
const mailjet = new Mailjet({
apiKey: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC,
apiSecret: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE,
options: {
headers: {
Accept: 'application/json',
'API-Key': 'foobar',
'Content-Type': 'application/json'
}
}
});
const request = mailjet
.post('send', { version: 'v3.1' })
Request max body length
You are able to set the max allowed size of the http request content in bytes for your request using the maxBodyLength
parameter.
const mailjet = new Mailjet({
apiKey: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC,
apiSecret: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE,
options: {
maxBodyLength: 100
}
});
const request = mailjet
.post('send', { version: 'v3.1' })
NOTE:
This parameter worked only on theNodeJS
side
Response max content length
You are able to set the max allowed size of the http response content in bytes using the maxContentLength
parameter.
const mailjet = new Mailjet({
apiKey: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC,
apiSecret: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE,
options: {
maxContentLength: 50
}
});
const request = mailjet
.post('send', { version: 'v3.1' })
NOTE:
This parameter worked only on theNodeJS
side
Use proxy
The proxy
parameter allows you to define the hostname, port, auth, and protocol of the proxy server for send the API requests through it:
const mailjet = new Mailjet({
apiKey: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC,
apiSecret: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE,
options: {
proxy: {
protocol: 'https',
host: '127.0.0.1',
port: 8080,
auth: {
username: 'test',
password: 'password'
}
}
}
});
const request = mailjet
.post('send', { version: 'v3.1' })
NOTE:
This parameter worked only on theNodeJS
side
Config
config
have this structure:
host
- sets custom host URLversion
- sets required version of API for determinate endpoint (set ofv3
,v3.1
,v4
)output
- indicates the type of data that the server will respond with
You can pass config
on init client
and this config
will use for each request
:
const mailjet = new Mailjet({
apiKey: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC,
apiSecret: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE,
config: {
host: 'api.mailjet.com',
version: 'v3',
output: 'text',
}
});
And for each request
manually (this config
will have more precedence than passed in client
):
const request = mailjet
.post('send', {
host: 'api.mailjet.com',
version: 'v3.1',
output: 'json',
})
API Versioning
The Mailjet API is spread among three distinct versions:
v3
- TheEmail API
v3.1
- TheEmail Send API v3.1
, which is the latest version of ourSend API
v4
- TheSMS API
Since most Email API
endpoints are located under v3
, it sets as the default one and does not need to be specified when making your request.
For the others you need to specify the version using version
parameter.
For example, if using Send API
v3.1
:
const request = mailjet
.post('send', { version: 'v3.1' })
For additional information refer to our API Reference.
Host URL
The default base host name for the Mailjet API is api.mailjet.com
.
You can modify this host URL by setting a value for host
in your call:
const request = mailjet
.post('send', { version: 'v3.1', host: 'api.us.mailjet.com' })
If your account has been moved to Mailjet's
US
architecture, thehost
value you need to set isapi.us.mailjet.com
.
Response output
The default response output for the Mailjet API is json
.
You can modify this response output data by setting a value for output
in your call:
const request = mailjet
.post('send', { version: 'v3.1', output: 'arraybuffer' })
The output
parameter allowing you to specify the type of response data:
arraybuffer
document
json
(Default)text
stream
blob
(Browser only option)
Disable API call
By default, the API call parameter is always enabled.
However, you may want to disable it during testing to prevent unnecessary calls to the Mailjet API.
This is done by passing the performAPICall
argument with value false
to .request(data, params, performAPICall)
method:
const request = mailjet
.post('send', { version: 'v3.1' })
.request({}, {}, false)
TypeScript
Current library based on TypeScript
and provide full cover for Mailjet types.
All types can be exported from main entrypoint 'node-mailjet'
:
import {
Contact,
SendEmailV3,
SendEmailV3_1,
Message,
Segmentation,
Template,
SendMessage,
Webhook
} from 'node-mailjet';
As well library has a generic method Request.request<TResult>(data, params, performAPICall)
that could use with these types.
Send Email example
import { Client, SendEmailV3_1, LibraryResponse } from 'node-mailjet';
const mailjet = new Client({
apiKey: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC,
apiSecret: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE
});
(async () => {
const data: SendEmailV3_1.Body = {
Messages: [
{
From: {
Email: 'pilot@test.com',
},
To: [
{
Email: 'passenger@test.com',
},
],
TemplateErrorReporting: {
Email: 'reporter@test.com',
Name: 'Reporter',
},
Subject: 'Your email flight plan!',
HTMLPart: '<h3>Dear passenger, welcome to Mailjet!</h3><br />May the delivery force be with you!',
TextPart: 'Dear passenger, welcome to Mailjet! May the delivery force be with you!',
},
],
};
const result: LibraryResponse<SendEmailV3_1.Response> = await mailjet
.post('send', { version: 'v3.1' })
.request(data);
const { Status } = result.body.Messages[0];
})();
And response
will have this shape:
{
response: Response;
body: {
Messages: Array<{
Status: string;
Errors: Array<Record<string, string>>;
CustomID: string;
...
}>;
}
}
Send Message Example
import * as Mailjet from 'node-mailjet'; // another possible importing option
const mailjet = new Mailjet.Client({
apiKey: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC,
apiSecret: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE
});
(async () => {
const body: Mailjet.SendMessage.Body = {
From: 'some@email.com',
To: 'some2@email.com',
Text: 'Test'
};
const result: Mailjet.LibraryResponse<Mailjet.SendMessage.Response> = await mailjet
.post('contact', { version: 'v3' })
.request(body);
const { Status } = result.body;
})();
And response
will have this shape:
{
response: Response;
body: {
From: string;
To: string;
Text: string;
MessageID: string | number;
SMSCount: number;
CreationTS: number;
SentTS: number;
Cost: {
Value: number;
Currency: string;
};
Status: {
Code: number;
Name: string;
Description: string;
};
}
}
Get Contact Example
import { Client, Contact, LibraryResponse } from 'node-mailjet'
const mailjet = new Client({
apiKey: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC,
apiSecret: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE
});
(async () => {
const queryData: Contact.GetContactQueryParams = {
IsExcludedFromCampaigns: false,
Campaign: 2234234,
};
const result: LibraryResponse<Contact.GetContactResponse> = await mailjet
.get('contact', { version: 'v3' })
.request({}, queryData);
const ContactID = result.body.Data[0].ID;
})();
And response
will have this shape:
{
response: Response;
body: {
Count: number;
Total: number;
Data: Array<{
ID: number;
IsExcludedFromCampaigns: boolean;
Name: string;
CreatedAt: string;
DeliveredCount: number;
Email: string;
...
}>;
}
}
Our external Typings
For earlier versions (3.*.*
and low) of library you can use @types/node-mailjet
dependency.
The types
are published in npm
and ready for use.
Here is the npm
page.
Feel free to request changes if there is something missing, or you just suggest an improvement.
The main repository is here.
And here is the file with our types.
Browser Demo
For demo to work, you'll need to install and run http-proxy
locally.
Install it with:
npm install -g http-proxy
Then run the following command from the mailjet-apiv3-nodejs
directory:
http-server -p 4001 --proxy="https://api.mailjet.com"
Demo should be up and running at http://0.0.0.0:4001/examples/
App examples
List of basic applications that was built in different environments:
- Browser - Basic app that using
RequireJS
and provide page where you can make some requests - Node - Basic app that contain simple scripts with some requests
- Sendmail -
ExpressJS
based app that allows to retrieve list of contacts and send email to some person - ReactJS -
ReactJS
based app that provides page where you can make some requests - Firebase -
Firebase
based app that providesFirebase Functions
for sending hello world email and sending email based on dynamic query string data
NOTE: For
browser
side examples at the moment a proxy is required to communicate with the Mailjet API due to CORS limitations.
Request examples
Basic API
POST
Request
Use the post
method of the Mailjet client:
const request = mailjet
.post($RESOURCE, $CONFIG)
.id($ID)
.request($DATA, $PARAMS, $PERFORM_API_CALL)
.request
parameter $DATA
will contain the body of the POST
request.
You need to define .id
if you want to perform an action on a specific object and need to identify it.
Simple POST
request
Create a new contact:
const Mailjet = require('node-mailjet')
const mailjet = new Mailjet({
apiKey: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC,
apiSecret: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE
});
const request = mailjet
.post('contact')
.request({
Email: "passenger@mailjet.com",
IsExcludedFromCampaigns: true,
Name: "New Contact"
})
request
.then((result) => {
console.log(result.body)
})
.catch((err) => {
console.log(err.statusCode)
})
Using actions
Manage the subscription status of a contact to multiple lists:
const { Client } = require('node-mailjet') // another importing option using destructuring
const mailjet = new Client({
apiKey: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC,
apiSecret: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE
});
const request = mailjet
.post('contact')
.id($contactID)
.action('managecontactslists')
.request({
ContactsLists: [
{
ListID: $listID,
Action: "addnoforce"
}
]
})
request
.then((result) => {
console.log(result.body)
})
.catch((err) => {
console.log(err.statusCode)
})
GET
Request
Use the get
method of the Mailjet client:
const request = mailjet
.get($RESOURCE, $CONFIG)
.id($ID)
.request($DATA, $PARAMS, $PERFORM_API_CALL)
.request
parameter $PARAMS
will contain any query parameters applied to the request.
You need to define .id
if you want to retrieve a specific object.
Retrieve all objects
Retrieve all contacts:
const Mailjet = require('node-mailjet')
const mailjet = new Mailjet({
apiKey: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC,
apiSecret: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE
});
const request = mailjet
.get('contact')
.request()
request
.then((result) => {
console.log(result.body)
})
.catch((err) => {
console.log(err.statusCode)
})
Use filtering
Retrieve all contacts that are not in the campaign exclusion list:
const Mailjet = require('node-mailjet')
const mailjet = new Mailjet({
apiKey: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC,
apiSecret: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE
});
const request = mailjet
.get('contact')
.request({}, { IsExcludedFromCampaigns: false })
request
.then((result) => {
console.log(result.body)
})
.catch((err) => {
console.log(err.statusCode)
})
Retrieve a single object
Retrieve a specific contact by ID
:
const Mailjet = require('node-mailjet')
const mailjet = new Mailjet({
apiKey: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC,
apiSecret: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE
});
const request = mailjet
.get('contact')
.id($contactID)
.request()
request
.then((result) => {
console.log(result.body)
})
.catch((err) => {
console.log(err.statusCode)
})
PUT
Request
Use the put
method of the Mailjet client:
const request = mailjet
.put($RESOURCE, $CONFIG)
.id($ID)
.request($DATA, $PARAMS, $PERFORM_API_CALL)
You need to define .id
to specify the object that you need to edit.
.request
parameter $DATA
will contain the body of the PUT
request.
A PUT
request in the Mailjet API will work as a PATCH
request - the update will affect only the specified properties.
The other properties of an existing resource will neither be modified, nor deleted.
It also means that all non-mandatory properties can be omitted from your payload.
Update the contact properties for a contact:
const Mailjet = require('node-mailjet')
const mailjet = new Mailjet({
apiKey: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC,
apiSecret: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE
});
const request = mailjet
.put('contactdata')
.id($contactID)
.request({
Data: [
{
first_name: "John",
last_name: "Smith"
}
]
})
request
.then((result) => {
console.log(result.body)
})
.catch((err) => {
console.log(err.statusCode)
})
DELETE
Request
Use the delete
method of the Mailjet client:
const request = mailjet
.delete($RESOURCE, $CONFIG)
.id($ID)
.request($DATA, $PARAMS, $PERFORM_API_CALL)
You need to define .id
to specify the object you want to delete.
.request
parameter $DATA
should be empty.
Upon a successful DELETE
request the response will not include a response body, but only a 204 No Content
response code.
Delete an email template:
const Mailjet = require('node-mailjet')
const mailjet = new Mailjet({
apiKey: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC,
apiSecret: process.env.MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE
});
const request = mailjet
.delete('template')
.id($templateID)
.request()
request
.then((result) => {
console.log(result.body)
})
.catch((err) => {
console.log(err.statusCode)
})
SMS API
Token authentication
Authentication for the SMS API
endpoints is done using a Bearer token
.
The Bearer token
is generated in the SMS section of your Mailjet account.
const Mailjet = require('node-mailjet');
const mailjet = Mailjet.smsConnect(process.env.MJ_API_TOKEN);
Example request
Here's an example SMS API
request:
const Mailjet = require('node-mailjet');
const mailjet = Mailjet.smsConnect(process.env.MJ_API_TOKEN, {
config: {
version: 'v4'
}
});
const request = mailjet
.post('sms-send')
.request({
Text: "Have a nice SMS flight with Mailjet !",
To: "+33600000000",
From: "MJPilot"
})
request
.then((result) => {
console.log(result.body)
})
.catch((err) => {
console.log(err.statusCode)
})
Development
Mailjet loves developers. You can be part of this project!
This SDK is a great introduction to the open source world, check out the code!
Feel free to ask anything, and contribute:
- Fork the project.
- Create a new branch.
- Implement your feature or bug fix.
- Add documentation to it.
- Commit, push, open a pull request and voila.
If you have suggestions on how to improve the guides, please submit an issue in our Official API Documentation repo.
Requirements
- Requires
Node.JS
>= 4.x
Init package with:
npm run init
Where the init
script contain all essential init steps:
npm install
- install all dependenciesnpm run ts:patch
- patchTS
compiler for correct buildingTypeScript
declaration filesnpm run pkg:prepare
-husky
install forgit hooks
Build
Build for release purposes (include minimizing):
npm run build
Build for dev purposes (without minimizing):
npm run build:dev && npm run build:prepublish
Build for watching and hot-reload:
npm run build:watch
Tests
Execute all tests:
npm run test
Watch tests with:
npm run test:watch
Receive coverage of tests with:
npm run cover
To test new functionality locally using npm link
please use npm script npm run pkg:link
.
This is needed for correct exporting d.ts
files.
Merging changes
Before PR merge check that commits info will be correctly added to the CHANGELOG.md
file:
npm run release:dry
As well that allow to see that package version was correct increased for SemVer
convention.
And then run:
npm run release
IMPORTANT: if package version was increased incorrect you should manually use this scripts:
npm run release:patch
npm run release:minor
npm run release:major
CI process isn't working currently, so please manually run
npm run test
Release Process
Releases occur after feature
branches have been tested and merged into master
.
First, checkout master
and pull
the latest commits.
git checkout master
git pull
Next, run npm run release
.
After that, cd ./dist
and then run npm login
and npm publish
to publish changes on npm.