Mailgun merges user-variables (metadata) into the webhook post data
interspersed with the actual event params. This can lead to ambiguity
interpreting post data.
To extract metadata from an event, Anymail had been attempting to avoid
that ambiguity by instead using X-Mailgun-Variables fields found in the
event's message-headers param. But message-headers isn't included in
some tracking events (opened, clicked, unsubscribed), resulting in
empty metadata for those events. (#76)
Also, conflicting metadata keys could confuse Anymail's Mailgun event
parsing, leading to unexpected values in the normalized event. (#77)
This commit:
* Cleans up Anymail's tracking webhook to be explicit about which
multi-value params it uses, avoiding conflicts with metadata keys.
Fixes#77.
* Extracts metadata from post params for opened, clicked and
unsubscribed events. All unknown event params are assumed to be
metadata. Fixes#76.
* Documents a few metadata key names where it's impossible (or likely
to be unreliable) for Anymail to extract metadata from the post data.
For reference, the order of params in the Mailgun's post data *appears*
to be (from live testing):
* For the timestamp, token and signature params, any user-variable with
the same name appears *before* the corresponding event data.
* For all other params, any user-variable with the same name as a
Mailgun event param appears *after* the Mailgun data.
Compatibility with Python 2.7 versions older than 2.7.7
* Use Django's constant_time_compare method
* Include sparkpost in test requirements
* Don't use non-public `EnvironmentVarGuard` in tests
Fixes#41