Some projects may want to sent emails over multiple SMTP relays or smarthosts.
Examples are sites running on multiple domains, e.g. info@example.com
and
info@example.org
. It may be possible to use the same SMTP credentials for
each sender address but if that isn't possible django-email-hosts may be a good
solution for the problem.
- Install:
pip install django-email-hosts
- Configure: Add the
EMAIL_HOSTS
setting - Use: Always explicitly use the SMTP connection returned by
email_hosts.backends.get_connection
The keys of the EMAIL_HOSTS
dictionary are defined by you and there's no
deeper meaning to them. The values are DSNs inspired by dj-email-url DSNs.
An example configuration (which is possibly nonsensical) looks like this:
EMAIL_HOSTS = {
"sendgrid": "submission://USER:PASSWORD@smtp.sendgrid.com?_default_from_email=info@example.com",
"mailgun": "submission://USER:PASSWORD@smtp.mailgun.com?_default_from_email=info@example.org",
}
This configuration creates two SMTP backends, one using sendgrid and one using
mailgun. The _default_from_email
is completely optional. If the email
message's from_email
isn't set (resp. is equal to the
DEFAULT_FROM_EMAIL
setting) it automatically defaults to the per-backend
value.
The get_connection
function expects a single key for the EMAIL_HOSTS
setting above. Sending a single email using an explicit connection may look as
follows, using the settings from above:
from django.core.mail import EmailMessage
from email_hosts.backends import get_connection
EmailMessage(
"Hello",
"World",
to=["recipient@example.com"],
connection=get_connection("sendgrid"),
).send()
get_connection
currently silently returns the default email backend if the
key doesn't exist in the EMAIL_HOSTS
dictionary.