So let's start by creating our Mail plugin class, and if you remember, plugins go inside the Plugin folder of our module namespace. Mail plugins belong inside a Mail folder. So this is what a simple skeleton mail plugin class can look like:
namespace Drupal\hello_world\Plugin\Mail;
use Drupal\Core\Mail\MailFormatHelper;
use Drupal\Core\Mail\MailInterface;
use Drupal\Core\Plugin\ContainerFactoryPluginInterface;
use Symfony\Component\DependencyInjection\ContainerInterface;
/**
* Defines the Hello World mail backend.
*
* @Mail(
* id = "hello_world_mail",
* label = @Translation("Hello World mailer"),
* description = @Translation("Sends an email using an external API specific to our Hello World module.")
* )
*/
class HelloWorldMail implements MailInterface, ContainerFactoryPluginInterface {
/**
* {@inheritdoc}
*/
public static function create(ContainerInterface $container, array $configuration, $plugin_id, $plugin_definition) {
return new static();
}
/**
* {@inheritdoc}
*/
public function format(array $message) {
// Join the body array into one string.
$message['body'] = implode("\n\n", $message['body']);
// Convert any HTML to plain-text.
$message['body'] = MailFormatHelper::htmlToText($message['body']);
// Wrap the mail body for sending.
$message['body'] = MailFormatHelper::wrapMail($message['body']);
return $message;
}
/**
* {@inheritdoc}
*/
public function mail(array $message) {
// Use the external API to send the email based on the $message array
// constructed via the `hook_mail()` implementation.
}
}
As you can see, we have a relatively easy plugin annotation; no unusual arguments there. Then, you will note that we implemented the mandatory MailInterface, which comes with the two methods implemented in the class.
I mentioned the format() method earlier and said that it's responsible for doing certain processing before the message is ready to be sent. The previous implementation is a copy from the PhpMail plugin to exemplify just what kind of task would go there. However, you can do whatever you want in here, for example, allowing HTML tags. Imploding the body is something you will probably want to do anyway, as it is kind of expected that the mail body is constructed as an array by hook_mail().
The mail() method, on the other hand, is left empty. This is because it's up to you to use the external API to send the email. For this, you can use the $message array we encountered in the hook_mail() implementation.
Lastly, note that ContainerFactoryPluginInterface is another interface that our class implements. If you remember, that is what plugins need to implement in order for them to become container aware (for the dependencies to be injectable). Since this was only example code, it doesn't have any dependencies, so I did not include a constructor and left the create() method empty. Most likely, you will have to inject something, such as a PHP client library that works with your external API. So, it doesn't hurt to see this again.
That is pretty much it for our plugin class. Now, let's take a look at how we can use it because for the moment, our hello_world_log emails are still being sent with the default PHP mailer.