1. Create a Mailosaur account
If you already have an account, skip to step 2.
To create a new trial account, sign up here.
2. Create a sample project
Install Ruby
To see if you already have Ruby installed, open a terminal window and run this command:
ruby --version
If Ruby is installed, you’ll see a version number. If you see an error instead, then download Ruby and install it.
Create a new project
Run each of these commands to create a new folder for your Ruby project:
mkdir EmailTests
cd EmailTests
Install the Mailosaur Ruby library
Run this command to install the Mailosaur Ruby package:
gem install mailosaur
3. Send email to your Mailosaur server
Servers allow you to group tests, permissions, and other settings together. Each server has a Server ID, a domain name. You need these values to both send email to Mailosaur, and to set up automated testing.
You also need an API key to use. You can learn more about creating API keys here.
Retrieve your server’s attributes
- Go to the Servers page in the Mailosaur Dashboard.
- Click on the name of the server you want to test with.
- Click on the API tab.
- Make a note of the Server ID, domain name and API key.
Send an email to your server
If the domain name of your server above was:
example.mailosaur.net
Then you can send an email to it with these steps:
- Open up an email client and send an email to
anything@example.mailosaur.net
- Go to the Servers page in the Mailosaur Dashboard.
- Click on the name of the server you sent an email to.
- Confirm the email is there. Note that some services (like Gmail) may take 10-20 seconds to send a message through.
To learn more, read our guide on sending email to Mailosaur.
4. Find an email for automated testing
Now that you have a sample project, your server’s credentials, and an email to test, then you’re ready to continue.
Create a file named hello.rb
and type or paste in this code sample, replacing the template code with the values from step 3 above:
require 'mailosaur'
# Available in the API tab of a server
api_key = "YOUR_API_KEY"
server_id = "SERVER_ID"
server_domain = "SERVER_DOMAIN"
mailosaur = Mailosaur::MailosaurClient.new(api_key)
criteria = Mailosaur::Models::SearchCriteria.new()
criteria.sent_to = "anything@" + server_domain
email = mailosaur.messages.get(server_id, criteria)
print("Subject: " + email.subject)
This code connects to Mailosaur and looks for any email that has been sent to the address provided in the search criteria.
Save your changes and run the code:
ruby hello.rb
If everything is set up correctly, you should see the subject line of the last email you sent, printed to screen:
Subject: My example email
Troubleshooting
If you see an error, e.g. ‘No matching messages found in time’:
- Make sure you have set the sent to address correctly in your code.
- Ensure that you have sent an email to the sent to address (check this is visible in the Mailosaur Dashboard).
- Note that by default, the get method will only look for messages that were received by Mailosaur within the last hour. You can override this using the
received_after
option (see library reference below).
5. Narrowing your search results
Only find messages received after a certain time
By default, searchs include messages received in the last hour, but you can customise the search window with the received_after
option.
This example shows you how to only include emails received after your test started:
test_start = DateTime.now
# Perform the steps that send a message here
criteria = Mailosaur::Models::SearchCriteria.new()
criteria.sent_to = '...'
message = mailosaur.messages.get('SERVER_ID', criteria, received_after: test_start)
Search criteria
As you can see in the examples so far, you can search for the email address or phone number a message was sent to, but you can also search using this criteria too:
PARAMETER | DESCRIPTION |
---|---|
sent_from | The full email address from which the target message was sent. |
sent_to | The full email address to which the target message was sent. |
subject | Find emails where the subject line contains this text. |
body | Finds messages where the message body contains this text. |
6. Start writing tests
Now that you have a working project that fetches an email, you can use this to begin writing tests for various pieces of functionality.
Check out these guides on the most common test cases:
SMS Testing
You can test SMS messages in much the same way as email. Take a look at our guide on testing SMS messages for more information.
Library reference
The Ruby client library gives you access to several other methods.
Messages
Messages is the collective name given to the email and/or SMS messages that are sent into Mailosaur for testing. The message object contains everything you need to perform in-depth automated testing.
messages.get(server, criteria, options)
Waits for a message to be found. Returns as soon as a message matching the specified search criteria is found.
Recommended: This is the most efficient method of looking up a message, therefore we recommend using it whenever possible.
criteria = Mailosaur::Models::SearchCriteria.new()
criteria.sent_to = "someone@SERVER_ID.mailosaur.net"
message = mailosaur.messages.get("SERVER_ID", criteria)
To learn about Server IDs, and what to replace SERVER_ID
with, see sending email to Mailosaur.
Criteria
PARAMETER | DESCRIPTION |
---|---|
sent_from | The full email address from which the target message was sent. |
sent_to | The full email address to which the target message was sent. |
subject | The subject line of the target email. |
body | Search for part of the message body. |
match | If set to ALL (default), then only results that match all specified criteria will be returned. If set to ANY , results that match any of the specified criteria will be returned. |
Options
PARAMETER | DESCRIPTION |
---|---|
timeout | Specify how long to wait for a matching result (in milliseconds, default value is 10 seconds). |
received_after | Limits results to only messages received after this date/time (default 1 hour ago). |
criteria = Mailosaur::Models::SearchCriteria.new()
criteria.sent_to = "someone@SERVER_ID.mailosaur.net"
ten_minutes_ago = DateTime.now - (10 / 1440.0)
# Search all messages received in the last 10 minutes
message = mailosaur.messages.get("SERVER_ID", criteria, received_after: ten_minutes_ago)
messages.list(server, options)
Returns a list of your messages in summary form. The summaries are returned sorted by received date, with the most recently-received messages appearing first.
Message summaries The method returns a message summary, rather than the full message object. This means that several properties, like the message body, are not included. To get this data, you’ll need to call
get_by_id
. Alternatively, we recommend using theget
method, which is a far more efficient approach.
# List the most recent messages
result = mailosaur.messages.list("SERVER_ID")
# Get the most recent message (the first one in the list)
message = result.items[0]
print('Subject: ' + message.subject)
Options
- received_after Allows you to customise how far back to look for messages.
- page Used alongside
itemsPerPage
to paginate through results. This is zero-based, meaning0
is the first page of results. - items_per_page A limit on the number of results to be returned. This can be set between 1 to 1000, with the default being 50.
ten_minutes_ago = DateTime.now - (10 / 1440.0)
# List all results received in the last 10 minutes.
# Limit results to the first 10 matches only.
result = mailosaur.messages.list("SERVER_ID", page: 0, items_per_page: 10, received_after: ten_minutes_ago)
messages.search(server, criteria, options)
Returns a list of messages matching the specified search criteria, in summary form. The messages are returned sorted by received date, with the most recently-received messages appearing first.
Message summaries The method returns a message summary, rather than the full message object. This means that several properties, like the message body, are not included. To get this data, you’ll need to call
get_by_id
. Alternatively, we recommend using theget
method, which is a far more efficient approach.
criteria = Mailosaur::Models::SearchCriteria.new()
criteria.sent_to = "someone@SERVER_ID.mailosaur.net"
result = mailosaur.messages.search("SERVER_ID", criteria)
# Get the most recent match
message = result.items[0]
print('Subject: ' + message.subject)
Criteria
PARAMETER | DESCRIPTION |
---|---|
sent_from | The full email address from which the target message was sent. |
sent_to | The full email address to which the target message was sent. |
subject | The subject line of the target email. |
body | Search for part of the message body. |
match | If set to ALL (default), then only results that match all specified criteria will be returned. If set to ANY , results that match any of the specified criteria will be returned. |
Options
PARAMETER | DESCRIPTION |
---|---|
timeout | If provided, determines how long to wait for a matching result (provided in milliseconds). |
error_on_timeout | When set to false , an error will not be throw if timeout is reached (default: true ). |
received_after | Allows you to customise how far back to look for messages. |
page | Used alongside itemsPerPage to paginate through results. This is zero-based, meaning 0 is the first page of results. |
items_per_page | A limit on the number of results to be returned. This can be set between 1 to 1000, with the default being 50. |
criteria = Mailosaur::Models::SearchCriteria.new()
criteria.sent_to = "someone@SERVER_ID.mailosaur.net"
# Search for all messages sent to someone@SERVER_ID.mailosaur.net,
# received in the last 2 hours. Limit results to the first 10 matches only.
two_hours_ago = DateTime.now - (2 / 24.0)
result = mailosaur.messages.search("SERVER_ID", criteria, page: 0, items_per_page: 10, received_after: two_hours_ago)
messages.get_by_id(id)
Retrieves the detail for a single email message. Must be used in conjunction with either ```list``` or ```search``` in order to get the unique identifier for the required message. We always recommend using the ```get``` method instead.
result = mailosaur.messages.list("SERVER_ID")
message_id = result.items[0].id
message = mailosaur.messages.get_by_id(message_id)
print('Subject: ' + message.subject)
messages.delete(id)
Permanently deletes a message. Also deletes any attachments related to the message. This operation cannot be undone.
mailosaur.messages.delete(message_id)
messages.delete_all(server)
Permanently deletes all messages held by the specified server. Also deletes any attachments related to each message. This operation cannot be undone.
mailosaur.messages.delete_all("SERVER_ID")
messages.create(server, options)
Creates a new message that can be sent to a verified email address. This is useful in scenarios where you want an email to trigger a workflow in your product.
options = Mailosaur::Models::MessageCreateOptions.new()
options.to = 'verified-address@example.com'
options.send = true
options.subject = 'Request'
options.text = 'Please can you give us a call back?'
mailosaur.messages.create('SERVER_ID', options)
Options
- to The email address to which the email will be sent. Must be a verified email address.
- send If true, email will be sent upon creation.
- subject The email subject line.
- text The plain text body of the email.
- html The HTML body of the email.
messages.forward(messageId, options)
Forwards the specified email to a verified email address.
options = Mailosaur::Models::MessageForwardOptions.new()
options.to = 'verified-address@example.com'
options.text = 'FYI'
mailosaur.messages.forward('MESSAGE_ID', options)
Options
- to The email address to which the email will be sent. Must be a verified email address.
- text Any additional HTML content to forward the email with.
- html Any additional plain text content to forward the email with.
messages.reply(messageId, options)
Sends a reply to the specified email. This is useful for when simulating a user replying to one of your emails.
options = Mailosaur::Models::MessageReplyOptions.new()
options.text = 'FYI'
mailosaur.messages.reply('MESSAGE_ID', options)
Options
- text Any additional plain text content to include in the reply.
- html Any additional HTML content to include in the reply.
Servers
Servers contain all the configuration and set up for.
servers.list()
Returns a list of your virtual servers. Servers are returned sorted in alphabetical order.
result = mailosaur.servers.list()
print('You have a server called: ' + result.items[0].name)
servers.create(server)
Creates a new virtual server. Only the name
property is required to create a new server via the API.
create_options = Mailosaur::Models::ServerCreateOptions.new()
create_options.name = "My email tests"
mailosaur.servers.create(create_options)
servers.get(id)
Retrieves the detail for a single server. Simply supply the unique identifier for the required server.
server = mailosaur.servers.get("SERVER_ID")
servers.get_password(id)
Retrieves the password, for use with SMTP and POP3, for a single server. Simply supply the unique identifier for the required server.
password = mailosaur.servers.get_password("SERVER_ID")
servers.update(id, server)
Updates a single server.
retrieved_server = mailosaur.servers.get("SERVER_ID")
retrieved_server.name = "Updated server name"
mailosaur.servers.update(retrieved_server.id, retrieved_server)
servers.delete(id)
Permanently deletes a server. Also deletes all messages and associated attachments within the server. This operation cannot be undone.
mailosaur.servers.delete("SERVER_ID")
servers.generate_email_address(id)
Utility method to help you generate a random email address for a given server.
email_address = mailosaur.servers.generate_email_address("SERVER_ID")
print(email_address) # "bgwqj@SERVER_ID.mailosaur.net"
To learn about Server IDs, and what to replace SERVER_ID
with, see sending email to Mailosaur.
Files
files.get_email(message_id)
Downloads an EML file representing the specified email. Simply supply the unique identifier for the required email.
files.get_attachment(attachment_id)
Downloads a single attachment. Simply supply the unique identifier for the required attachment.
Analysis
analysis.spam(message_id)
Perform spam testing on the specified email.
Usage
usage.limits()
Retrieve account usage limits. Details the current limits and usage for your account. This endpoint requires authentication with an account-level API key.
usage.transactions()
Retrieves the last 31 days of transactional usage. This endpoint requires authentication with an account-level API key.