rails/actionmailbox
Jonathan Hefner 3bbf21c343 Use verb form of "fallback"
"Fallback" is a noun, whereas "fall back" is a verb.
2024-01-07 17:27:23 -06:00
..
app Prepend `$` to example CLI commands [ci-skip] 2024-01-07 17:27:23 -06:00
bin Import Action Mailbox 2018-12-25 21:32:35 -05:00
config Remove 4 unroutable routes from ActionMailbox 2022-05-31 15:38:45 -05:00
db/migrate feat: use config pk type in Action Mailbox migration 2023-05-04 08:19:36 -07:00
lib Enable `Lint/RedundantSafeNavigation` rubocop cop 2023-09-27 14:55:07 +03:00
test Use verb form of "fallback" 2024-01-07 17:27:23 -06:00
.gitignore Ignore local .sqlite3 files that are created under storage directory 2022-12-27 11:35:26 +09:00
CHANGELOG.md Take AR affixes into account for Action Mailbox database models 2023-12-09 11:02:30 +01:00
MIT-LICENSE Remove Copyright years (#47467) 2023-02-23 11:38:16 +01:00
README.md 🔗 Remove RDoc auto-link from Rails module everywhere 2023-06-23 10:49:30 +09:00
Rakefile Add `rake test:isolated` for Action Mailbox 2023-01-16 14:38:17 +09:00
actionmailbox.gemspec Bump the required Ruby version to 3.1.0 2023-12-31 08:54:03 +01:00

README.md

Action Mailbox

Action Mailbox routes incoming emails to controller-like mailboxes for processing in \Rails. It ships with ingresses for Mailgun, Mandrill, Postmark, and SendGrid. You can also handle inbound mails directly via the built-in Exim, Postfix, and Qmail ingresses.

The inbound emails are turned into InboundEmail records using Active Record and feature lifecycle tracking, storage of the original email on cloud storage via Active Storage, and responsible data handling with on-by-default incineration.

These inbound emails are routed asynchronously using Active Job to one or several dedicated mailboxes, which are capable of interacting directly with the rest of your domain model.

You can read more about Action Mailbox in the Action Mailbox Basics guide.

License

Action Mailbox is released under the MIT License.