1. 개요
우리에 이전 기사 , 우리가 쓰기에 스프링을 사용하여 텍스트 이메일을 보내는 방법을 보았다.
그러나 Spring 템플릿 엔진 을 사용 하여 동적 콘텐츠로 멋진 HTML 이메일을 작성할 수도 있습니다 .
In this tutorial, we're going to learn how to do it using the most famous of them: Thymeleaf and FreeMarker.
2. Spring HTML Emails
Let's start from the Spring Email tutorial.
First, we'll add a method to the EmailServiceImpl class to send emails with an HTML body:
private void sendHtmlMessage(String to, String subject, String htmlBody) throws MessagingException {
MimeMessage message = emailSender.createMimeMessage();
MimeMessageHelper helper = new MimeMessageHelper(message, true, "UTF-8");
helper.setTo(to);
helper.setSubject(subject);
helper.setText(htmlBody, true);
emailSender.send(message);
}
We're using MimeMessageHelper to populate the message. The important part is the true value passed to the setText method: it specifies the HTML content type.
Let's see now how to build this htmlBody using Thymeleaf and FreeMarker templates.
3. Thymeleaf Configuration
Let's start with the configuration. We can isolate this in a class called EmailConfiguration.
First, we should provide a template resolver to locate the template files directory.
3.1. Templates as Classpath Resources
Template files can be shipped within the JAR file, which is the simplest way to maintain cohesion between templates and their input data.
To locate templates from the JAR, we use the ClassLoaderTemplateResolver. Our templates are in the main/resources/mail-templates directory, so we set the Prefix attribute relative to the resource directory:
@Bean
public ITemplateResolver thymeleafTemplateResolver() {
ClassLoaderTemplateResolver templateResolver = new ClassLoaderTemplateResolver();
templateResolver.setPrefix("mail-templates/");
templateResolver.setSuffix(".html");
templateResolver.setTemplateMode("HTML");
templateResolver.setCharacterEncoding("UTF-8");
return templateResolver;
}
3.2. Templates From External Directory
In other cases, we may want to modify templates without having to rebuild and deploy. To achieve this, we can put the templates on the filesystem instead.
It might be useful to configure this path in application.properties so that we can modify it for each deployment. This property can be accessed using the @Value annotation:
@Value("${spring.mail.templates.path}")
private String mailTemplatesPath;
We then pass this value to a FileTemplateResolver, in place of the ClassLoaderTemplateResolver in our thymeleafTemplateResolver method:
FileTemplateResolver templateResolver = new FileTemplateResolver();
templateResolver.setPrefix(mailTemplatesPath);
3.3. Configure the Thymeleaf Engine
The final step is to create the factory method for the Thymeleaf engine. We'll need to tell the engine which TemplateResolver we've chosen, which we can inject via a parameter to the bean factory method:
@Bean
public SpringTemplateEngine thymeleafTemplateEngine(ITemplateResolver templateResolver) {
SpringTemplateEngine templateEngine = new SpringTemplateEngine();
templateEngine.setTemplateResolver(templateResolver);
templateEngine.setTemplateEngineMessageSource(emailMessageSource());
return templateEngine;
}
Here, the resolver we created earlier is injected automatically by Spring into the template engine factory method.
4. FreeMarker Configuration
In the same fashion as Thymeleaf, in the EmailConfiguration class, we'll configure the template resolver for FreeMarker templates (.ftl):
And this time, the location of the templates will be configured in the FreeMarkerConfigurer bean.
4.1. Templates in the Classpath
Here, we have the same options as for Thymeleaf. Let's configure templates as classpath resources:
@Bean
public FreeMarkerConfigurer freemarkerClassLoaderConfig() {
Configuration configuration = new Configuration(Configuration.VERSION_2_3_27);
TemplateLoader templateLoader = new ClassTemplateLoader(this.getClass(), "/mail-templates");
configuration.setTemplateLoader(templateLoader);
FreeMarkerConfigurer freeMarkerConfigurer = new FreeMarkerConfigurer();
freeMarkerConfigurer.setConfiguration(configuration);
return freeMarkerConfigurer;
}
4.2. Templates on the File System
To configure templates from another path in the filesystem, we'll need to replace the TemplateLoader instance:
TemplateLoader templateLoader = new FileTemplateLoader(new File(mailTemplatesPath));
5. Localization with Thymeleaf and FreeMarker
In order to manage translations with Thymeleaf, we can specify a MessageSource instance to the engine:
@Bean
public ResourceBundleMessageSource emailMessageSource() {
ResourceBundleMessageSource messageSource = new ResourceBundleMessageSource();
messageSource.setBasename("mailMessages");
return messageSource;
}
@Bean
public SpringTemplateEngine thymeleafTemplateEngine() {
...
templateEngine.setTemplateEngineMessageSource(emailMessageSource());
...
}
Then, we'd create resource bundles for each locale we support:
src/main/resources/mailMessages_xx_YY.properties
As FreeMarker proposes localization by duplicating the templates, we don't have to configure the message source there.
6. Thymeleaf Templates Content
Next, let's have a look at the template-thymeleaf.html file:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html xmlns:th="http://www.thymeleaf.org">
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
</head>
<body>
<p th:text="#{greetings(${recipientName})}"></p>
<p th:text="${text}"></p>
<p th:text="#{regards}"></p>
<p>
<em th:text="#{signature(${senderName})}"></em> <br />
</p>
</body>
</html>
As can be seen, we've used Thymeleaf notation, that is, ${…} for variables and #{…} for localized strings.
As the template engine is correctly configured, it's very simple to use it: We'll just create a Context object that contains template variables (passed as a Map here).
Then, we'll pass it to the process method along with the template name:
@Autowired
private SpringTemplateEngine thymeleafTemplateEngine;
@Override
public void sendMessageUsingThymeleafTemplate(
String to, String subject, Map<String, Object> templateModel)
throws MessagingException {
Context thymeleafContext = new Context();
thymeleafContext.setVariables(templateModel);
String htmlBody = thymeleafTemplateEngine.process("template-thymeleaf.html", thymeleafContext);
sendHtmlMessage(to, subject, htmlBody);
}
Now, let's see how to do the same thing with FreeMarker.
7. FreeMarker Templates Content
As can be seen, FreeMarker's syntax is more simple, but again it does not manage localized strings. So, here's the English version:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
</head>
<body>
<p>Hi ${recipientName}</p>
<p>${text}</p>
<p>Regards,</p>
<p>
<em>${senderName} at Baeldung</em> <br />
</p>
</body>
</html>
Then, we should use the FreeMarkerConfigurer class to get the template file, and finally, FreeMarkerTemplateUtils to inject data from our Map:
@Autowired
private FreeMarkerConfigurer freemarkerConfigurer;
@Override
public void sendMessageUsingFreemarkerTemplate(
String to, String subject, Map<String, Object> templateModel)
throws IOException, TemplateException, MessagingException {
Template freemarkerTemplate = freemarkerConfigurer.getConfiguration()
.getTemplate("template-freemarker.ftl");
String htmlBody = FreeMarkerTemplateUtils.processTemplateIntoString(freemarkerTemplate, templateModel);
sendHtmlMessage(to, subject, htmlBody);
}
To go further, we'll see how to add a logo to our email signature.
8. Emails With Embedded Images
Since it's very common to include images in an HTML email, we'll see how to do this using a CID attachment.
The first change concerns the sendHtmlMessage method. We have to set MimeMessageHelper as multi-part by passing true to the second argument of the constructor:
MimeMessageHelper helper = new MimeMessageHelper(message, true, "UTF-8");
Then, we have to get the image file as a resource. We can use the @Value annotation for this:
@Value("classpath:/mail-logo.png")
Resource resourceFile;
Notice that the mail-logo.png file is in the src/main/resources directory.
Back to the sendHtmlMessage method, we'll add resourceFile as an inline attachment, to be able to reference it with CID:
helper.addInline("attachment.png", resourceFile);
Finally, the image has to be referenced from both Thymeleaf and FreeMarker emails using CID notation:
<img src="cid:attachment.png" />
9. Conclusion
In this article, we've seen how to send Thymeleaf and FreeMarker emails, including rich HTML content.
To conclude, most of the work is related to Spring; therefore, the use of one or the other is quite similar for a simple need such as sending emails.
항상 그렇듯이 예제의 전체 소스 코드는 GitHub 에서 찾을 수 있습니다 .
- https://docs.spring.io/spring-framework/docs/current/reference/html
- https://www.baeldung.com/spring-email-templates
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