Amazon-SES
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lib/Amazon/SES.pm view on Meta::CPAN
# ABSTRACT: Interfaces with AWS's SES service.
class Amazon::SES {
use strict;
use warnings;
use Carp ('croak');
use MIME::Base64;
use Time::Piece;
use HTTP::Headers;
use LWP::UserAgent;
use AWS::Signature4;
use Amazon::SES::Response;
use VM::EC2::Security::CredentialCache;
use HTTP::Request::Common;
use Kavorka qw( multi method );
has 'ua' => (is => 'ro', default => sub { return LWP::UserAgent->new() } );
has 'use_iam_role' => ( is => 'ro', default => 0 );
has 'access_key' => ( is => 'ro' );
has 'secret_key' => ( is => 'ro' );
has 'region' => ( is => 'ro', default => 'us-east-1' );
has 'response' => ( is => 'rw' );
method call(Str $action, HashRef $args? = {}) {
$args->{AWSAccessKeyId} = $self->access_key;
$args->{Action} = $action;
my $request = POST("https://email." . $self->region . ".amazonaws.com", $args);
if ($self->{use_iam_role}) {
my $creds = VM::EC2::Security::CredentialCache->get();
defined($creds) || die("Unable to retrieve IAM role credentials");
$self->{access_key} = $creds->accessKeyId;
$self->{secret_key} = $creds->secretAccessKey;
$request->header('x-amz-security-token' => $creds->sessionToken);
}
# Add the signature.
my $signer = AWS::Signature4->new(-access_key => $self->access_key,
-secret_key => $self->secret_key);
$signer->sign($request);
my $response = $self->ua->request($request);
return Amazon::SES::Response->new(response => $response,
action => $action );
}
multi method send(MIME::Entity $message) {
$self->send_mime($message);
}
multi method send(Str :$from,
Str :$body?,
Str :$body_html?,
Str :$to,
Str :$subject?,
Str :$charset = "UTF-8",
Str :$return_path?,
) {
$to = [$to] unless ref($to);
defined($body) || defined($body_html) || die("No body specified");
my %call_args = (
'Message.Subject.Data' => $subject,
'Message.Subject.Charset' => $charset,
'Source' => $from
);
if (defined($body)) {
$call_args{'Message.Body.Text.Data'} = $body;
$call_args{'Message.Body.Text.Charset'} = $charset;
}
if (defined($body_html)) {
$call_args{'Message.Body.Html.Data'} = $body_html;
$call_args{'Message.Body.Html.Charset'} = $charset;
}
if (defined($return_path)) {
$call_args{'ReturnPath'} = $return_path;
}
my $i = 1;
map {
$call_args{'Destination.ToAddresses.member.' . $i++} = $_;
} @$to;
$self->call( 'SendEmail', \%call_args );
}
method verify_email(Str $email) {
return $self->call( 'VerifyEmailIdentity', { EmailAddress => $email } );
}
method delete_domain(Str $identity) {
return $self->call( 'DeleteIdentity', { Identity => $identity } );
}
method delete_email(Str $identity) {
return $self->call( 'DeleteIdentity', { Identity => $identity } );
}
method delete_identity(Str $identity) {
return $self->call( 'DeleteIdentity', { Identity => $identity } );
}
method list_emails(Int :$limit?,
Int :$offset?) {
my %call_args = ( IdentityType => 'EmailAddress' );
defined($limit) && ($call_args{MaxItems} = $limit);
defined($offset) && ($call_args{NextToken} = $offset);
my $r = $self->call( 'ListIdentities', \%call_args );
}
method list_domains(Int :$limit?,
Int :$offset?) {
my %call_args = ( IdentityType => 'Domain' );
defined($limit) && ($call_args{MaxItems} = $limit);
defined($offset) && ($call_args{NextToken} = $offset);
my $r = $self->call( 'ListIdentities', \%call_args );
}
method get_quota() {
return $self->call('GetSendQuota');
}
method get_statistics() {
return $self->call('GetSendStatistics');
}
method send_mime(Str|MIME::Entity $message) {
my $src = $message;
lib/Amazon/SES.pm view on Meta::CPAN
I attempted to make the method names as Perlish as possible, as opposed to direct copy/paste from the API reference. This way I felt you didn't have to be familiar with the full API reference in order to use the basic features of the service.
If you are avid AWS developer there is a C<call()> method, which gives you access to all the documented Query actions of the AWS SES. In fact, that's what all the methods use to hide the complexity of the request/response. There are few examples of t...
All the methods (including C<call()>) returns an instance of L<Response|Amazon::SES::Response>. You should check if the the call is success by testing for C<is_success> attribute of the response. If you want to gain full access to the raw parsed cone...
=head2 new(access_key => $key, secret_key => $s_key)
=head2 new(access_key => $key, secret_key => $s_key, region => $region)
=head2 new(use_iam_role => 1)
Returns a Amazon::SES instance. C<access_key> and C<secret_key> arguments are optional if not specifying to C<use_iam_role>. C<region> is optional, and can be overriden in respective api calls. Must be a valid SES region: C<us-east-1>, C<us-west-2> o...
=head2 send( $msg )
=head2 send(%options)
Sends an email address and returns L<Response|Amazon::SES::Response> instance.
If the only argument is passed, it must be an instance of MIME::Entity. Example:
$msg = MIME::Entity->build(
from => '[your address]',
to => '[your recipient]',
subject => 'MIME msg from AWS SES',
data => "<h1>Hello world from AWS SES</h1>",
type => 'text/html'
);
$msg->attach(
Path => File::Spec->catfile( 't', 'image.gif' ),
Type => 'image/gif',
Encoding => 'base64'
);
$ses = Amazon::SES->new(....);
$r = $ses->send($msg);
unless ( $r->is_success ) {
die $r->error_message;
}
If you don't have MIME::Entity instance handy you may use the following arguments to have AWS SES build the message for you (bold entries are required): C<From>, B<To>, B<Subject>, B<Body>, C<Body_html>, C<ReturnPath>. To send e-mail to multiple emai...
If C<From> is missing it defaults to your default e-mail given to C<new()>. Remember: this must be a verified e-mail. Example:
$r = $ses->send(
from => '[your email address]',
to => '[destination email address]',
subject => 'Hello World'
body => 'Hello World'
);
unless ( $r->is_success ) {
die $r->error_message;
}
You may provide an alternate html content by passing C<body_html> header.
C<charset> of the e-mail is set to 'UTF-8'. As of this writing I didn't make any way to affect this.
Success calls also return a C<message_id>, which can be accessed using a shortcut C<$r->message_id> syntax. See L<Response class|Amazon::SES::Response>.
Sample successful response looks like this in JSON:
{
"MessageId": "00000141344ce1a8-0664c3c5-e9a0-4b47-aa2e-12b0bdf6070e-000000"
}
Sample error response looks like as:
{
"Error": {
"Code": "MessageRejected",
"Type": "Sender",
"Message": "Email address is not verified."
},
"xmlns": "http://ses.amazonaws.com/doc/2010-12-01/",
"RequestId":"0d04b41a-20dd-11e3-b01b-51d07c103915"
}
=head2 verify_email($email)
Verifies a given C<$email> with AWS SES. This results a verification e-mail be sent from AWS to the e-mail with a verification link, which must be clicked before this e-mail address appears in C<From> header. Returns a L<Response|Amazon::SES::Respons...
Sample successful response:
{} # right, it's empty.
=head2 list_emails()
Retrieves list e-mail addresses. Returns L<Response|Amazon::SES::Response> instance.
Sample response:
{
"Identities": ["example@example.com", "sample@example.com"]
}
=head2 list_domains()
Retrieves list of domains. Returns L<Response|Amazon::SES::Response> instance.
{
"Identities": ["example1.com", "example2.com"]
}
=head2 delete_email($email)
=head2 delete_domain($domain)
Deletes a given email or domain name from the SES. Once the identity is deleted you cannot use it in your C<From> headers. Returns L<Response|Amazon::SES::Response> instance.
Sample response:
{ } # empty
=head2 get_quota()
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