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package Catalyst::View::Email::Template;

use warnings;
use strict;

use Class::C3;
use Carp;
use Scalar::Util qw/ blessed /;

use Email::MIME::Creator;

use base qw/ Catalyst::View::Email /;

our $VERSION = '0.10';

=head1 NAME

Catalyst::View::Email::Template - Send Templated Email from Catalyst

=head1 SYNOPSIS

Sends templated mail, based upon your default view. It captures the output
of the rendering path, slurps in based on mime-types and assembles a multi-part
email using L<Email::MIME::Creator> and sends it out.

=head1 CONFIGURATION

WARNING: since version 0.10 the configuration options slightly changed!

Use the helper to create your view:
    
    $ script/myapp_create.pl view Email::Template Email::Template

For basic configuration look at L<Catalyst::View::Email/CONFIGURATION>.

In your app configuration (example in L<YAML>):

    View::Email::Template:
        # Optional prefix to look somewhere under the existing configured
        # template  paths.
        # Default: none
        template_prefix: email
        # Define the defaults for the mail
        default:
            # Defines the default view used to render the templates.
            # If none is specified neither here nor in the stash
            # Catalysts default view is used.
            # Warning: if you don't tell Catalyst explicit which of your views should
            # be its default one, C::V::Email::Template may choose the wrong one!
            view: TT

=head1 SENDING EMAIL

Sending email works just like for L<Catalyst::View::Email> but by specifying 
the template instead of the body and forwarding to your Email::Template view:

    sub controller : Private {
        my ( $self, $c ) = @_;

        $c->stash->{email} = {
            to          => 'jshirley@gmail.com',
            cc          => 'abraxxa@cpan.org',
            bcc         => [ qw/hidden@secret.com hidden2@foobar.com/ ],
            from        => 'no-reply@foobar.com',
            subject     => 'I am a Catalyst generated email',
            template    => 'test.tt',
        };
        
        $c->forward( $c->view('Email::Template') );
    }

Alternatively if you want more control over your templates you can use the following idiom
to override the defaults:

    templates => [
        {
            template        => 'email/test.html.tt',
            content_type    => 'text/html',
            charset         => 'utf-8',
            view            => 'TT', 
        },
        {
            template        => 'email/test.plain.mason',
            content_type    => 'text/plain',
            charset         => 'utf-8',
            view            => 'Mason', 
        }
    ]


=head1 HANDLING ERRORS

See L<Catalyst::View::Email/HANDLING ERRORS>.

=cut

# here the defaults of Catalyst::View::Email are extended by the additional
# ones Template.pm needs.

__PACKAGE__->config(
    template_prefix => '',
);


# This view hitches into your default view and will call the render function
# on the templates provided.  This means that you have a layer of abstraction
# and you aren't required to modify your templates based on your desired engine
# (Template Toolkit or Mason, for example).  As long as the view adequately
# supports ->render, all things are good.  Mason, and others, are not good.

#
# The path here is to check configuration for the template root, and then
# proceed to call render on the subsequent templates and stuff each one
# into an Email::MIME container.  The mime-type will be stupidly guessed with
# the subdir on the template.
#

# Set it up so if you have multiple parts, they're alternatives.
# This is on the top-level message, not the individual parts.
#multipart/alternative

sub _validate_view {
    my ($self, $view) = @_;
    
    croak "C::V::Email::Template's configured view '$view' isn't an object!"
        unless (blessed($view));

    croak "C::V::Email::Template's configured view '$view' isn't an Catalyst::View!"
        unless ($view->isa('Catalyst::View'));

    croak "C::V::Email::Template's configured view '$view' doesn't have a render method!"
        unless ($view->can('render'));
}

=head1 METHODS

=over 4

=item generate_part

Generates a MIME part to include in the email. Since the email is template based
every template piece is a separate part that is included in the email.

=cut

sub generate_part {
    my ($self, $c, $attrs) = @_;

    my $template_prefix         = $self->{template_prefix};
    my $default_view            = $self->{default}->{view};
    my $default_content_type    = $self->{default}->{content_type};
    my $default_charset         = $self->{default}->{charset};

    my $view;
    # use the view specified for the email part
    if (exists $attrs->{view} && defined $attrs->{view} && $attrs->{view} ne '') {
        $view = $c->view($attrs->{view});
        $c->log->debug("C::V::Email::Template uses specified view $view for rendering.") if $c->debug;
    }
    # if none specified use the configured default view
    elsif ($default_view) {
        $view = $c->view($default_view);
        $c->log->debug("C::V::Email::Template uses default view $view for rendering.") if $c->debug;;
    }
    # else fallback to Catalysts default view
    else {
        $view = $c->view;
        $c->log->debug("C::V::Email::Template uses Catalysts default view $view for rendering.") if $c->debug;;
    }

    # validate the per template view
    $self->_validate_view($view);
    
    # prefix with template_prefix if configured
    my $template = $template_prefix ne '' ? join('/', $template_prefix, $attrs->{template}) : $attrs->{template};
   
    # setup the attributes (merge with defaults)
    my $e_m_attrs = $self->setup_attributes($c, $attrs);

    # render the email part
    my $output = $view->render( $c, $template, { 
        content_type    => $e_m_attrs->{content_type},
        stash_key       => $self->{stash_key},
        %{$c->stash},
    });
    
    if ( ref $output ) {
        croak $output->can('as_string') ? $output->as_string : $output;
    }

    return Email::MIME->create(
        attributes => $e_m_attrs,
        body       => $output,
    );
}

=item process

The process method is called when the view is dispatched to. This creates the
multipart message and then sends the message contents off to
L<Catalyst::View::Email> for processing, which in turn hands off to
L<Email::Send>.

=cut

sub process {
    my ( $self, $c ) = @_;

    # don't validate template_prefix

    # the default view is validated if used

    # the content type should be validated by Email::MIME::Creator
    
    my $stash_key = $self->{stash_key};

    croak "No template specified for rendering"
        unless $c->stash->{$stash_key}->{template}
            or $c->stash->{$stash_key}->{templates};
    
    # this array holds the Email::MIME objects
    # in case of the simple api only one
    my @parts = (); 

    # now find out if the single or multipart api was used
    # prefer the multipart one
    
    # multipart api
    if ($c->stash->{$stash_key}->{templates}
        && ref $c->stash->{$stash_key}->{templates} eq 'ARRAY'
        && ref $c->stash->{$stash_key}->{templates}[0] eq 'HASH') {
        # loop through all parts of the mail
        foreach my $part (@{$c->stash->{$stash_key}->{templates}}) {
            push @parts, $self->generate_part($c, {
                view            => $part->{view},
                template        => $part->{template},
                content_type    => $part->{content_type},
                charset         => $part->{charset},
            });
        }
    }
    # single part api
    elsif($c->stash->{$stash_key}->{template}) {
        push @parts, $self->generate_part($c, {
            template    => $c->stash->{$stash_key}->{template},
        });
    }
    
    delete $c->stash->{$stash_key}->{body};
    $c->stash->{$stash_key}->{parts} ||= [];
    push @{$c->stash->{$stash_key}->{parts}}, @parts;

    # Let C::V::Email do the actual sending.  We just assemble the tasty bits.
    return $self->next::method($c);
}

=back

=head1 TODO

=head2 ATTACHMENTS

There needs to be a method to support attachments.  What I am thinking is
something along these lines:

    attachments => [
        # Set the body to a file handle object, specify content_type and
        # the file name. (name is what it is sent at, not the file)
        { body => $fh, name => "foo.pdf", content_type => "application/pdf" },
        # Or, specify a filename that is added, and hey, encoding!
        { filename => "foo.gif", name => "foo.gif", content_type => "application/pdf", encoding => "quoted-printable" },
        # Or, just a path to a file, and do some guesswork for the content type
        "/path/to/somefile.pdf",
    ]

=head1 SEE ALSO

=head2 L<Catalyst::View::Email> - Send plain boring emails with Catalyst

=head2 L<Catalyst::Manual> - The Catalyst Manual

=head2 L<Catalyst::Manual::Cookbook> - The Catalyst Cookbook

=head1 AUTHORS

J. Shirley <jshirley@gmail.com>

Simon Elliott <cpan@browsing.co.uk>

Alexander Hartmaier <abraxxa@cpan.org>

=head1 LICENSE

This library is free software, you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as Perl itself.

=cut

1;