3.4 KiB
Mailtrain
Mailtrain is a self hosted newsletter application built on Node.js (v5+) and MySQL (v5.5+ or MariaDB).
Development
Current development branch is v1.1 beta. The version in the master branch is tagged as v1.0.0.
Features
Mailtrain supports subscriber list management, list segmentation, custom fields, email templates, large CSV list import files, etc.
Subscribe to Mailtrain Newsletter here (uses Mailtrain obviously)
Cons
- Alpha-grade software. Might or might not work as expected
- Awful code base, needs refactoring
- No tests
- No documentation
Requirements
- Nodejs v5+
- MySQL v5.5 or MariaDB
- Redis (optional, used for session storage only)
Installation
- Download and unpack Mailtrain sources
- Run
npm install
in the Mailtrain folder to install required dependencies - Copy config/default.toml as
config/production.toml
and update MySQL settings in it - Import SQL tables by running
mysql -u MYSQL_USER -p MYSQL_DB < setup/mailtrain.sql
- Run the server
NODE_ENV=production npm start
- Open http://localhost:3000/
- Authenticate as
admin
:test
- Navigate to http://localhost:3000/settings and update service configuration
- Navigate to http://localhost:3000/users/account and update user information and password
Using environment variables
Some servers expose custom port and hostname options through environment variables. To support these, create a new configuration file config/local.js
:
module.exports = {
www: {
port: process.env.OPENSHIFT_NODEJS_PORT,
host: process.env.OPENSHIFT_NODEJS_IP
}
};
Mailtrain uses node-config for configuration management and thus the config files are loaded in the following order:
- default.toml
- {NODE_ENV}.toml (eg. development.toml or production.toml)
- local.js
Running behind Nginx proxy
Edit mailtrain.nginx (update server_name
directive) and copy it to /etc/nginx/sites-enabled
Running as an Upstart service in Ubuntu 14.04
Edit mailtrain.conf (update application folder) and copy it to /etc/init
Bounce handling
Mailtrain uses webhooks integration to detect bounces and spam complaints. Currently supported webhooks are:
- AWS SES – create a SNS topic for complaints and bounces and use
http://domain/webhooks/aws
as the subscriber URL for these topics - SparkPost – use
http://domain/webhooks/sparkpost
as the webhook URL for bounces and complaints - SendGrid – use
http://domain/webhooks/sendgrid
as the webhook URL for bounces and complaints - Mailgun – use
http://domain/webhooks/mailgun
as the webhook URL for bounces and complaints
Additionally Mailtrain (v1.1+) is able to use VERP-based bounce handling. This would require to have a compatible SMTP relay (the services mentioned above strip out or block VERP addresses in the SMTP envelope) and you also need to set up special MX DNS name that points to your Mailtrain installation server.
License
GPL-V3.0