Mailgun, SparkPost: support multiple from_email addresses

[RFC-5322 allows](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5322#section-3.6.2)
multiple addresses in the From header.

Django's SMTP backend supports this, as a single comma-separated
string (*not* a list of strings like the recipient params):

    from_email='one@example.com, two@example.com'
    to=['one@example.com', 'two@example.com']

Both Mailgun and SparkPost support multiple From addresses
(and Postmark accepts them, though truncates to the first one
on their end). For compatibility with Django -- and because
Anymail attempts to support all ESP features -- Anymail now
allows multiple From addresses, too, for ESPs that support it.

Note: as a practical matter, deliverability with multiple
From addresses is pretty bad. (Google outright rejects them.)

This change also reworks Anymail's internal ParsedEmail object,
and approach to parsing addresses, for better consistency with
Django's SMTP backend and improved error messaging.

In particular, Django (and now Anymail) allows multiple email
addresses in a single recipient string:

    to=['one@example.com', 'two@example.com, three@example.com']
    len(to) == 2  # but there will be three recipients

Fixes #60
This commit is contained in:
medmunds
2017-04-19 12:43:33 -07:00
parent 3c2c0b3a9d
commit 6b6793016e
13 changed files with 302 additions and 95 deletions

View File

@@ -129,8 +129,10 @@ class SparkPostPayload(BasePayload):
return self.params
def set_from_email(self, email):
self.params['from_email'] = email.address
def set_from_email_list(self, emails):
# SparkPost supports multiple From email addresses,
# as a single comma-separated string
self.params['from_email'] = ", ".join([email.address for email in emails])
def set_to(self, emails):
if emails: