This package adds full support for embedding inline images into your HTML emails through ActionMailer.
To perform a system wide installation:
gem install inline_attachment
To use inline_attachment in your project, add the following line to your project's config/environment.rb:
config.gem 'inline_attachment'
Use this to install as a plugin in a Ruby on Rails app:
$ script/plugin install git://github.com/smathy/inline_attachment.git
Use this if you prefer the idea of being able to easily switch between using edge or a tagged version:
$ git submodule add git://github.com/smathy/inline_attachment.git vendor/plugins/inline_attachment
I've rewritten most of Edmond's great work in this version. I now override
path_to_image instead of image_tag
because a big reason for all the Rails2
breakages was because image_tag
was basically reproduced in previous versions,
so broke when that method changed.
Now we override the very simple path_to_image, and most importantly we really just add our own stuff for ActionMailer templates, and resort to the existing code for everything else.
I've also integrated in with the new implicit multipart stuff. So now, there is so little code required!
class Notifier < ActionMailer::Base
def signup
recipients %q{"Testing IA" <[email protected]>}
from %q{"Mr Tester" <[email protected]>}
subject "Here's a funky test"
end
end
Oh yeah baby! Read it and weep! So how's this work? Well, you'll need your templates named properly - see the Multipart email section of the ActionMailer::Base docs.
Your username is: <%= @username %>
<html><head><title>Signup Notification</title></head><body>
<%= image_tag "logo.png" %>
<p>Your username is: <%=h @username %>
</body></html>
That's it! InlineAttachment will look for
#{RAILS_ROOT}/public/images/logo.png
and will do the right thing and embed it
inline into the HTML version of the email. ActionMailer will do the right thing
and offer the recipient both the text/plain
and text/html
parts as alternatives.
Note the filenames include the (unusual) major.minor MIME type, look above at the filenames closely.
Note, that you should still be able to use this in the 0.3.0 way if you have code that uses that. But there were a lot of alternatives, and the examples in here didn't show a crucial step of shuffling the parts around to be sure that the image parts came after the html.
You can also do the old manual method if you want.
- Jason King (JasonKing)
- Matt Griffin (betamatt) - file:// and chaining cleanup
- Logan Raarup (logandk) - pluginified
- Jeffrey Damick (jdamick) - bugfix