- Clone this repository
- Install the dependencies with
npm install - Use the command
npx wrangler secret put --env production TOKENto deploy a securely stored token to Cloudflare. With this command, you will be prompted to enter a random secret value, which will be used to authenticate your requests with the HTTPAuthorizationheader as described below. You can also set this encrypted value directly in your Cloudflare dashboard. - Deploy the worker with
npm run deploy
Or deploy directly to Cloudflare
SPF is a DNS record that helps prevent email spoofing. You will need to add an SPF record to your domain to allow MailChannels to send emails on your behalf.
-
Add a
TXTrecord to your domain with the following values:- Name: `@` - Value: `v=spf1 a mx include:relay.mailchannels.net ~all`
Note: If you're facing Domain Lockdown error, follow the below steps:
-
Create a
TXTrecord with the following values:- Name: `_mailchannels` - Value: `v=mc1 cfid=yourdomain.workers.dev` (the value of `cfid` will also be present in the error response)
This step is optional, but highly recommended. DKIM is a DNS record that helps prevent email spoofing. You may follow the steps listed in the MailChannels documentation to set up DKIM for your domain.
Once you have deployed this worker function to Cloudflare Workers, you can send emails by making a POST request to the worker on the /api/email endpoint with the following parameters:
- Note you need to pass an
Authorizationheader with the secure token you deployed. Like the following:Authorization: TOKEN
The Most basic request would look like this:
{
"to": "john@example.com",
"from": "me@example.com",
"subject": "Hello World",
"text": "Hello World"
}You can also send HTML emails by adding an html parameter to the request. This can be used in conjunction with the text parameter to send a multi-part email.
{
"to": "john@example.com",
"from": "me@example.com",
"subject": "Hello World",
"html": "<h1>Hello World</h1>"
}You can also specify a sender and recipient name by adding a name parameter to the request. This can be used for both the to and from parameters.
{
"to": { "email": "john@example.com", "name": "John Doe" },
"from": { "email": "me@example.com", "name": "Jane Doe" },
"subject": "Hello World",
"text": "Hello World"
}You may also send to multiple recipients by passing an array of emails, or an array of objects with email and name properties.
{
"to": [
"john@example.com",
"rose@example.com"
],
"from": "me@example.com",
"subject": "Hello World",
"text": "Hello World"
}or
{
"to": [
{ "email": "john@example.com", "name": "John Doe" },
{ "email": "rose@example.com", "name": "Rose Doe" }
],
"from": "me@example.com",
"subject": "Hello World",
"text": "Hello World"
}You can also send BCC and CC emails by passing an array of emails, an object with email and name properties, or an array of either, similar to the to parameter.
{
"to": "john@example.com",
"from": "me@example.com",
"subject": "Hello World",
"text": "Hello World",
"cc": [
"jim@example.com",
"rose@example.com"
],
"bcc": [
"gil@example.com"
]
}You can also specify a reply to email address by adding a replyTo parameter to the request. Again, you can use an email string, an object with email and name properties, or an array of either.
{
"to": "john@example.com",
"from": "me@example.com",
"replyTo": "support@example.com",
"subject": "Hello World",
"text": "Hello World"
}