For ESPs that have incorporated new owners
in their branding, identify the new owner
in the docs:
- Mailgun -> Sinch Mailgun
- Postmark -> ActiveCampaign Postmark
- SendGrid -> Twilio SendGrid
- SparkPost -> Bird ???
(Bird's rebranding of SparkPost seems to still
be a work in progress at this point. In fact,
Bird's rebranding of itself from MessageBird
seems incomplete.)
There are no current plans to rename ESP
backends, as the new owners seem to be mostly
keeping the original ESP names and domains for
API endpoints, docs, etc.
(Similarly, I'm not updating project keywords.)
SparkPost's API no longer allows this, and now returns
a confusing error message about return_path.
(Not treating as a breaking change in Anymail, because
the breaking change was in the SparkPost API. This just
improves the error message in the unlikely event anyone
is trying to use this feature.)
Closes#212
Switch from the (now unmaintained) python-sparkpost
client library to a requests-based backend that calls
SparkPost's Transmissions API directly.
Also adds support for text/x-amp-html alternative parts
(which are supported by the SparkPost API, but weren't
by the client library).
Closes#203
In docs install examples, show double quotes around
package specifiers that include square brackets, to
prevent them from being interpreted as shell globs.
(Helps with installation on Windows and zsh, e.g.)
Closes#188
New EmailMessage attribute `envelope_sender` controls ESP's sender,
sending domain, or return path where supported:
* Mailgun: overrides SENDER_DOMAIN on individual message
(domain portion only)
* Mailjet: becomes `Sender` API param
* Mandrill: becomes `return_path_domain` API param
(domain portion only)
* SparkPost: becomes `return_path` API param
* Other ESPs: not believed to be supported
Also support undocumented Django SMTP backend behavior, where envelope
sender is given by `message.from_email` when
`message.extra_headers["From"]` is set. Fixes#91.
This fixes a low severity security issue affecting Anymail v0.2--v1.3.
Django error reporting includes the value of your Anymail
WEBHOOK_AUTHORIZATION setting. In a properly-configured deployment,
this should not be cause for concern. But if you have somehow exposed
your Django error reports (e.g., by mis-deploying with DEBUG=True or by
sending error reports through insecure channels), anyone who gains
access to those reports could discover your webhook shared secret. An
attacker could use this to post fabricated or malicious Anymail
tracking/inbound events to your app, if you are using those Anymail
features.
The fix renames Anymail's webhook shared secret setting so that
Django's error reporting mechanism will [sanitize][0] it.
If you are using Anymail's event tracking and/or inbound webhooks, you
should upgrade to this release and change "WEBHOOK_AUTHORIZATION" to
"WEBHOOK_SECRET" in the ANYMAIL section of your settings.py. You may
also want to [rotate the shared secret][1] value, particularly if you
have ever exposed your Django error reports to untrusted individuals.
If you are only using Anymail's EmailBackends for sending email and
have not set up Anymail's webhooks, this issue does not affect you.
The old WEBHOOK_AUTHORIZATION setting is still allowed in this release,
but will issue a system-check warning when running most Django
management commands. It will be removed completely in a near-future
release, as a breaking change.
Thanks to Charlie DeTar (@yourcelf) for responsibly reporting this
security issue through private channels.
[0]: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/stable/ref/settings/#debug
[1]: https://anymail.readthedocs.io/en/1.4/tips/securing_webhooks/#use-a-shared-authorization-secret
* **Future breaking change:**
Rename all Anymail backends to just `EmailBackend`,
matching Django's naming convention.
(E.g., switch to "anymail.backends.mailgun.EmailBackend"
rather than "anymail.backends.mailgun.MailgunBackend".)
The old names still work, but will issue a DeprecationWarning
and will be removed in some future release.
(Apologies for this change; the old naming convention was
a holdover from Djrill, and I wanted consistency with
other Django EmailBackends before hitting 1.0.)
Fixes#49.
When using a stored template, SparkPost disallows
subject, text, and html. Django's EmailMessage default
empty strings are enough to provoke "Both content
object and template_id are specified" from SparkPost,
so remove them (if empty) when using stored templates.
Update docs and tests; add integration test for template_id.
Fixes#24