README ¶
This helper is a stand alone module to help get you started consuming and processing Inbound Parse data.
Table of Contents
- Quick Start for Local Testing with Sample Data
- Quick Start for Local Testing with Real Data
- Deploy to Heroku
- Code Walkthrough
- Testing the Source Code
- Contributing
Quick Start for Local Testing with Sample Data
git clone https://github.com/sendgrid/sendgrid-go.git
cd sendgrid-go
Run the Inbound Parse listener in your terminal:
cd helpers/inbound/
go run inbound.go
In another terminal, run the test data sender:
cd [path to sendgrid-go/helpers/inbound]
go run inbound.go ./sample_data/default_data.txt http://127.0.0.1:8000/inbound
More sample data can be found here.
View the results in the first terminal.
Quick Start for Local Testing with Real Data
Setup your MX records. Depending on your domain name host, you may need to wait up to 48 hours for the settings to propagate.
Run the Inbound Parse listener in your terminal:
git clone https://github.com/sendgrid/sendgrid-go.git
go run inbound.go
In another terminal, use ngrok to allow external access to your machine:
ngrok http 8000
Update your Twilio SendGrid Incoming Parse settings: Settings Page | Docs
- For the HOSTNAME field, use the domain that you changed the MX records (e.g. inbound.yourdomain.com)
- For the URL field, use the URL generated by ngrok + /inbound, e.g http://XXXXXXX.ngrok.io/inbound
Next, send an email to [anything]@inbound.yourdomain.com, then look at the terminal where you started the Inbound Parse listener.
Deploy to Heroku
Get a Heroku account.
Setup your MX records. Depending on your domain name host, you may need to wait up to 48 hours for the settings to propagate.
Update your Twilio SendGrid Incoming Parse settings: Settings Page | Docs
- For the HOSTNAME field, use the domain that you changed the MX records (e.g. inbound.yourdomain.com)
- For the URL field, use the URL generated by Heroku + /inbound, e.g https://[name-of-your-app].herokuapp.com/inbound
Next, send an email to [anything]@inbound.yourdomain.com, then look at your Heroku logs: https://dashboard.heroku.com/apps/[name-of-your-app]/logs
While you are waiting for your MX records to propagate, you can test by using the test data sender:
git clone https://github.com/sendgrid/sendgrid-go.git
cd sendgrid-go
go build
./sendgrid-go ./helpers/inbound/sample_data/default_data.txt https://[name-of-your-app].herokuapp.com/inbound
To make changes: clone, modify and push the changes. Heroku CLI is required.
For example:
git clone [repo url]
git checkout heroku-deployment
heroku git:remote -a [name-of-your-app]
---make changes---
git add -A
git commit -m "updated configuration"
git push heroku heroku-deployment:master
Code Walkthrough
inbound.go
This module runs a net/http server, that by default (you can change those settings here, listens for POSTs on http://localhost:8000. When the server receives the POST, it parses and prints the key/value data.
conf.json
This file contains application environment variables (located in conf.json).
inbound.go & /sample_data
This module, in conjunction with the sample data, is also used to send sample test data. It is useful for testing and development, particularly while you wait for your MX records to propagate.
Testing the Source Code
Tests are located in the helpers/inbound
folder:
Learn about testing this code here.
Contributing
If you would like to contribute to this project, please see our contributing guide. Thanks!
Documentation ¶
There is no documentation for this package.