Emilio

With Emilio you can parse external emails sent to your application using the IMAP protocol.

Usage

Once configured, you can do:

Emilio::Checker.check_emails

To issue an IMAP connection to your server and fetch the new emails to be parsed.

Configuration

You must setup Emilio in order to provide your IMAP server settings and your credentials, among other optional stuff:

Emilio.configure do |config|
  config.host = "imap.gmail.com"
  config.port = 993
  config.username = "[email protected]"
  config.password = "password"

  config.add_label = "processed"
  config.mailbox = "Inbox"
  config.scheduler = :delayed_job
  config.run_every = 10.minutes

  config.parser = :my_parser
end

This is recommended to be inside an initializer, something like config/initializers/emilio.rb will do the job. The first configuration options are very self explanatory, host and account credentials.

  • add_label is an optional label which you already must have in your GMail account, that will be applied to each processed email. I'm talking here about labels but this will apply to folders in other non-gmail providers too.

  • mailbox is the name of the mailbox you want to parse emails from. By default it's "Inbox", but it can be personalized to anything if you want to choose which specific emails have to be parsed. This can be acomplished simply by adding filters in your email account that moves the selected emails into the parsing folder. In GMail this can be a label name too.

  • scheduler is the name of the scheduler you want to use to perform recurring email checkings. By now Emilio ships with a :delayed_job integration but more can be added in the future.

  • run_every is the amount of time between recurring checks, if you're using a scheduler.

  • parser is the class name of your parser, and it's a requirment. More in the next paragraph...

Your parser class

In order to do things with the emails your application receive, you must setup a class to do the parsing stuff, something like:

class MyParser < Emilio::Receiver
  def parse
    # Find a reference in the subject or sender
    reference = find_a_reference_in(@subject, @sender)

    # Do stuff
    Message.create! :text => @body, :author => @sender
  end
end

Your class must inherit from Emilio::Receiver and implement a parse method, or if you like to do things the hard way you could also use a regular ActionMailer class:

class MyParser < ActionMailer::Base
  def receive(email)
    # email is a TMail object
  end
end

The Emilio::Receiver class will make things a little easier for you, providing the following instance variables you can use in parse:

  • @email: The TMail object representing the original email.
  • @html: true or false.
  • @attachments: Simply a shortcut to @email.attachments
  • @sender: The sender of the email, same as @email.from
  • @body: The body of the email correctly encoded as UTF-8.
  • @subject: Subject encoded as UTF-8.

As you can see Emilio::Receiver doesn't make a lot of work, but it solves some encoding issues.

Schedulers

The schedulers are meant to cover the necessity of a recurring email checking system. You can run Emilio::Checker.check_emails to do the job, but you probably want to run it every 5 minutes or so, to keep you app up to date.

If you want you can run your own solution, maybe with a Cron entry (the awesome gem Whenever makes a great job dealing with cron) but I've found that loading the entire application stack every 5 minutes in my VPS shared host with 512 of RAM is overkilling.

This is why I've come up with this solution taking advantage of the also excellent DelayedJob, using jobs that make the checking some time in the future (making use of the :run_at option) and then re-enqueuing themselves.

While by now there is only delayed_job integration, the schedulers arquitecture is flexible enough to allow an easy implementation of another solutions like Resque, etc...