Mailjet API Client.
Check out all the resources and all the PHP code examples on the official documentation: Maijlet Documentation
PHP >= 5.4
composer require mailjet/mailjet-apiv3-php
Without composer:
Clone or Download this repository that already contains all the dependencies and the vendor/autoload.php
file. If you encounter any issue, please post it here and not on the mirror repository.
grab and save your Mailjet API credentials.
It will create some variables available in your code, via the getenv
function:
export MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC='your api key'
export MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE='your api secret'
Initialize your Mailjet Client:
<?php
use \Mailjet\Resources;
// getenv will allow us to get the MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC/PRIVATE variables we created before
$apikey = getenv('MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC');
$apisecret = getenv('MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE');
// or
$apikey = 'my api key';
$apisecret = 'my api secrret';
$mj = new \Mailjet\Client($apikey, $apisecret);
?>
It's as easy as 1, 2, 3 !
<?php
require 'vendor/autoload.php';
use \Mailjet\Resources;
// use your saved credentials
$mj = new \Mailjet\Client(getenv('MJ_APIKEY_PUBLIC'), getenv('MJ_APIKEY_PRIVATE'));
// Resources are all located in the Resources class
$response = $mj->get(Resources::$Contact);
/*
Read the response
*/
if ($response->success())
var_dump($response->getData());
else
var_dump($response->getStatus());
The Mailjet API provides a set of general filters that can be applied to a GET request for each resource. In addition to these general filters, each API resource has its own filters that can be used when performing the GET
<?php
$filters = ['Limit' => '150'];
$response = $mj->get(Resources::$Contact, ['filters' => $filters]);
<?php
$body = [
'FromEmail' => "[email protected]",
'FromName' => "Mailjet Pilot",
'Subject' => "Your email flight plan!",
'Text-part' => "Dear passenger, welcome to Mailjet! May the delivery force be with you!",
'Html-part' => "<h3>Dear passenger, welcome to Mailjet!</h3><br />May the delivery force be with you!",
'Recipients' => [['Email' => "[email protected]"]]
];
$response = $mj->post(Resources::$Email, ['body' => $body]);
To send your first newsletter, you need to have at least one active sender address in the Sender domains & addresses section.
<?php
$body = [
'Recipients' => [
[
'Email' => "[email protected]",
'Name' => "Mailjet"
]
]
];
$response = $mj->post(Resources::$NewsletterTest, ['id' => $id, 'body' => $body]);
?>
The Event API offer a real-time notification through http request on any events related to the messages you sent. The main supported events are open, click, bounce, spam, blocked, unsub and sent. This event notification works for transactional and marketing emails.
The endpoint is an URL our server will call for each event (it can lead to a lot of hits !). You can use the API to setup a new endpoint using the /eventcallbackurl resource. Alternatively, you can configure this in your account preferences, in the Event Tracking section.
<?php
$body = [
'EventType' => "open",
'Url' => "https://mydomain.com/event_handler"
];
$response = $mj->post(Resources::$Eventcallbackurl, ['body' => $body]);
The Mailjet API offers resources to extracts information for every messages you send. You can also filter through the message statistics to view specific metrics for your messages.
<?php
$response = $mj->get(Resources::$Message, ['id' => $id]);
The Parse API allows you to have inbound emails parsed and their content delivered to a webhook of your choice. In order to begin receiving emails to your webhook, create a new instance of the Parse API via a POST request on the /parseroute resource.
<?php
$body = [
'Url' => 'https://www.mydomain.com/mj_parse.php'
];
$response = $mj->post(Resources::$Parseroute, ['body' => $body]);
- Fork the project.
- Create a topic branch.
- Implement your feature or bug fix.
- Add documentation for your feature or bug fix.
- Add specs for your feature or bug fix.
- Commit and push your changes.
- Submit a pull request. Please do not include changes to the gemspec, or version file.