Treat Mailgun metadata like all other ESPs: simple
key-value dict, where values are strings. If you want
to store JSON in metadata, you should serialize and
deserialize it yourself.
* Add smtp-id in unique_args (metadata), to ensure
it shows up in click and open events.
* Add SENDGRID_GENERATE_MESSAGE_ID setting,
default True, to control auto-Message-ID behavior.
* Document it.
* Match other ESP test strategies for
test_mandrill_backend and
test_mandrill_integration
* Extract test_mandrill_session_sharing into
SessionSharingTestCasesMixin for all
requests-based ESP backends
* Move leftover Djrill feature tests into
test_mandrill_djrill features (until they are
handled as part of esp_extra or in normalized
ESP template/merge features)
Closes#7
Simplify install to just `pip install django-anymail`.
(Rather than `... django-anymail[mailgun]`
All of the ESPs so far require requests, so just move
that into the base requirements. (Chances are your
Django app already needs requests for some other
reason, anyway.)
Truly unique ESP dependencies (e.g., boto for
AWS-SES) could still use the setup extra features
mechanism.
* Add filename param to attach_inline_image
* Add attach_inline_image_file function
(parallels EmailMessage.attach and attach_file)
* Use `Content-Disposition: inline` to decide
whether an attachment should be handled inline
(whether or not it's an image, and whether or not
it has a Content-ID)
* Stop conflating filename and Content-ID, for
ESPs that allow both. (Solves problem where
Google Inbox was displaying inline images
as attachments when sent through SendGrid.)
Interpret dates and naive datetimes as Django's
current_timezone (rather than UTC like Djrill did).
This should be more likely to behave as expected
when running with a non-UTC TIME_ZONE setting.
(Prep for installing backends as package extras)
* Extract AnymailRequestsBackend and RequestsPayload
to base_requests.py
* Don't define/require requests exceptions when requests
not available
For MANDRILL_API_KEY (e.g.,), look for these settings:
* ANYMAIL = { 'MANDRILL_API_KEY': '...' }
* ANYMAIL_MANDRILL_API_KEY = "..."
* MANDRILL_API_KEY = "..."
(the "bare" third version is used only for settings that
might be reasonably shared with other apps, like api keys)
Webhook tests define a local signal receiver function,
so connect it using the `weak=False` option to set
a good example.
(This isn't technically needed in the tests: the test receivers
are only connected while their definitions are still in scope,
so they couldn't possibly be garbage collected. But it doesn't
hurt, and it's good practice in case the test code gets copied.)
Also update the webhook docs to have a direct link to
Django's "listening to signals" info.