This is a long pending refactor. All the DB, query, CRUD, and related
logic scattered across HTTP handlers are now moved into a central
`core` package with clean, abstracted methods, decoupling HTTP
handlers from executing direct DB queries and other business logic.
eg: `core.CreateList()`, `core.GetLists()` etc.
- Remove obsolete subscriber methods.
- Move optin hook queries to core.
- Move campaign methods to `core`.
- Move all campaign methods to `core`.
- Move public page functions to `core`.
- Move all template functions to `core`.
- Move media and settings function to `core`.
- Move handler middleware functions to `core`.
- Move all bounce functions to `core`.
- Move all dashboard functions to `core`.
- Fix GetLists() not honouring type
- Fix unwrapped JSON responses.
- Clean up obsolete pre-core util function.
- Replace SQL array null check with cardinality check.
- Fix missing validations in `core` queries.
- Remove superfluous deps on internal `subimporter`.
- Add dashboard functions to `core`.
- Fix broken domain ban check.
- Fix broken subscriber check middleware.
- Remove redundant error handling.
- Remove obsolete functions.
- Remove obsolete structs.
- Remove obsolete queries and DB functions.
- Document the `core` package.
The `rate` field `/api/campaigns/running/stats` returned was computed
based on the total time spent from the start of the campaign to the
current time. This meant that for large campaigns, if there were
pauses or slowdowns in between, the rate would be skewed heavily
making it useless to figure out the current send rate.
This commit introduces a realtime running rate counter in the campaign
manager that returns accurate (running) send rates for the last minute.
The `rate` field in the API now shows the live running rate and a
new `net_rate` field shows the rate from the beginning of the campaign.
- Add new `headers[]` column to the campain table.
- Add new headers box to the campaign UI that takes a JSON array of
custom headers like the headers on the SMTP settings UI.
- Headers are added to e-mails and messenger postback webhooks.
- Add cypress tests.
Closes#514.
- echo is now on v4 with major changes including a few breaking changes
- bind() behaviour is now strict. JSON / form etc. unmarshalling of
request data need appropriate `json`, `form` tags. Missing tags for
the public subscription page is added in this commit.
- This also closes#602.
If `<!doctype html>` is not found in static/email-templates/base.html,
all system e-mail templates are assumed to be plaintext and go out
as content-type: plaintext e-mails. With this, all HTML tags can
be stripped out of the system e-mail templates (while maintaining
Go template tags and logic) to have plaintext system e-mail templates.
Closes#546
E-mails in the domain blocklist are disallowed on the admin UI, public
subscription forms, API, and in the bulk importer.
- Add blocklist setting that takes a list of multi-line domains on the
Settings -> Privacy UI.
- Refactor e-mail validation in subimporter to add blocklist checking
centrally.
- Add Cypress testr testing domain blocklist behaviour on admin
and non-admin views.
Closes#336.
- Blocklist or unsubscribe subscribers based on a bounce threshold
- Add /bounces UI for viewing bounces and in the subscriber view
- Add settings UI for managing bounce settings
- Add support for scanning POP3 bounce mailboxes
- Add a generic webhook for posting custom bounces at /webhooks/bounce
- Add SES bounce webhook support at /webhooks/services/ses
- Add Sendgrid bounce webhook support at /webhooks/services/sendgrid
Campaign messages are handled by `manager` whereas test messages
were being pushed directly into a messenger skipping some campaign
related routines such as the addition of list unsub headers.
This commit exposes a new function `manager.PushCampaignMessage()`
that accepts arbitrary campaign messages that then pass through
the standard campaign message workers, thus getting the missing unsub
headers. This closes#360.
In addition, this removes the superfluous `CampaignMessage.Render()`
function which had to be mandatorily called always and makes it
implicit in `manager.NewCampaignMessage()`.
Previously, converting between formats simply copied over raw content.
This update does actual conversion between different formats. While
lossy, this seems to a good enough approximation for even reasonbly
rich HTML content. Closes#348.
- richtext, html => plain
Strips HTML and converts content to plain text.
- richtext, html => markdown
Uses turndown (JS) lib to convert HTML to Markdown.
- plain => richtext, html
Converts line breaks in plain text to HTML breaks.
- richtext => html
"Beautifies" the HTML generated by the WYSIWYG editor unlike the
earlier behaviour of dumping one long line of HTML.
- markdown => richtext, html
Makes an API call to the backend to use the Goldmark lib to convert
Markdown to HTML.
Use a dummy subscriber instead of fetching a random one from the
DB. In addition, replace the preview campaign UUID with a dummy
one to prevent clicks and views being registered against the
campaign when previewing.
This commit removes the Go html2text lib that would automatically
convert all HTML messages to plaintext and add them as the alt
text body to outgoing e-mails. This lib also had memory leak
issues with certain kinds of HTML templates.
A new UI field for optionally adding an alt plaintext body to
a campaign is added. On enabling, it converts the HTML message in
the campaign editor into plaintext (using the textversionjs lib).
This introduces breaking changes in the campaigns table schema,
model, and template compilation.
Lists, campaigns, and subscribers tables now support server-side
sorting from the UI. This significantly changes the internal
queries from prepared to string interpolated to support dynamic
sort params.
This is a major feature that builds upon the `Messenger` interface
that has been in listmonk since its inception (with SMTP as the only
messenger). This commit introduces a new Messenger implementation, an
HTTP "postback", that can post campaign messages as a standard JSON
payload to arbitrary HTTP servers. These servers can in turn push them
to FCM, SMS, or any or any such upstream, enabling listmonk to be a
generic campaign messenger for any type of communication, not just
e-mails.
Postback HTTP endpoints can be defined in settings and they can be
selected on campaigns.