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Google App Engine

Receiving Email

Email messages sent to your app are implemented as HTTP requests. To process incoming email messages, you associate email addresses with script handlers in your app configuration, then include the handlers in your app's code. Incoming email generates HTTP requests, which are passed to the appropriate scripts.

Configuring Your App to Receive Email

When you create a new app, incoming email is disabled by default. To enable the incoming email service, you must modify your app.yaml file in two ways:

  1. Add an inbound_services section that enables the incoming email service.
  2. Add mappings that associate URL-mapped email addresses with script handlers.

To enable the incoming email service, add a short section to your app.yaml file, like the following:

inbound_services:
- mail

You can verify that you have enabled incoming email in your app by going to the Administration Console and checking the Application Settings section. Note that you can only check there to see if the incoming email service is enabled; you must change the app.yaml file to actually enable or disable the service. If you don't enable incoming email by including this section in your configuration file, incoming email is disabled, and email messages sent to the app are ignored.

Your app can receive email at addresses of the following form:

  string@appid.appspotmail.com

Email messages are sent to your app as HTTP POST requests using the following URL:

  /_ah/mail/address

where address is a full email address, including domain name. To handle incoming email in your app, you map email URLs to handlers in the app.yaml file:

- url: /_ah/mail/.+ 
  script: handle_incoming_email.py 
  login: admin

In this example, /_ah/mail/.+ matches all email addressed to the app.

If you prefer, you can set up multiple handlers for different email addresses, as in the following example:

- url: /_ah/mail/owner@.*your_app_id\.appspotmail\.com 
  script: handle_owner.py 
  login: admin
- url: /_ah/mail/support@.*your_app_id\.appspotmail\.com 
  script: handle_support.py 
  login: admin
- url: /_ah/mail/.+ 
  script: handle_catchall.py 
  login: admin

URLs of incoming email messages are matched to this list from first to last, so if an email message URL matches more than one pattern, the first matching handler will be the one executed. This allows you to include a "catchall" handler as the last mapping.

Handling Incoming Email

The Python SDK defines InboundMailHandler, a webapp class for handling incoming email. To use InboundMailHandler, you subclass it and override the receive() method. The receive() method is called with an argument of class InboundEmailMessage, another class defined by the Python SDK.

InboundMailHandler is in the google.appengine.ext.webapp.mail_handlers package. You can create an instance of InboundEmailMessage like this:

import logging, email
from google.appengine.ext import webapp 
from google.appengine.ext.webapp.mail_handlers import InboundMailHandler 
from google.appengine.ext.webapp.util import run_wsgi_app

class LogSenderHandler(InboundMailHandler):
    def receive(self, mail_message):
        logging.info("Received a message from: " + mail_message.sender)

InboundMailHandler contains a mapping() convenience method that returns a pair matching all incoming email addresses to the mail handler:

application = webapp.WSGIApplication([LogSenderHandler.mapping()], debug=True)

The InboundEmailMessage object contains the email message. Its bodies() method returns the message body, or possibly multiple message bodies. If you call bodies() without arguments, it returns an iterator that returns HTML bodies first, then plain text bodies. If you want just HTML or just plain text, you can pass an argument to bodies(), as follows:

    plaintext_bodies = message.bodies('text/plain')
    html_bodies = message.bodies('text/html')

    for content_type, body in html_bodies:
        decoded_html = body.decode()
        # ...

The InboundEmailMessage object includes attributes to access other message fields:

  • subject contains the message subject.
  • sender is the sender's address e.g. "Nobody <nobody@example.com>".
  • to is a comma-seperated list of the message's primary recipients e.g. "Joe <joe@example.com>, Bill <bill@example.com>".
  • cc contains a comma-seperated list of the cc recipients e.g. "Joe <joe@example.com>, Bill <bill@example.com>".
  • date returns the message date.
  • attachments is a list of file attachments, possibly empty. Each value in the list is a tuple of two elements: the filename and the file contents.
  • original is the complete message, including data not exposed by the other fields such as email headers, as a Python email.message.Message.

Once you set up your app to handle incoming email, you can use the development server console to simulate incoming email messages. You can access the development server by going to http://localhost:8080/_ah/admin/ (or if your app is running on a port other than 8080, use that value instead). In the development server, click Inbound Mail on the left side, fill out the form that appears, and click Send Email. To learn more, including how to get the development server running, see The Python Development Server.