HTTP-based Email Provider
Introduction
The following guide is written for next-auth
(NextAuth.js), but it should work for any of the Auth.js framework libraries (@auth/*
) as well.
There is a built-in Email provider with which you could connect to the SMTP server of your choice to send "magic link" emails for sign-in purposes. However, the Email provider can also be used with HTTP-based email services, like AWS SES, Postmark, Sendgrid, etc. In this guide, we are going to explain how to use our Email magic link provider with any of the more modern HTTP-based Email APIs.
For this example, we will be using SendGrid, but any email service providing an HTTP API or JS client library will work. We will also refer to the Prisma Adapter. A database adapter is a requirement for the Email provider.
Setup
First, if you do not have a project using Auth.js, clone and set up a basic Auth.js project like the one provided in our example repo.
- Install the Prisma Adapter
- Generate an API key from your cloud Email provider of choice and add it to your
.env.*
file. For example, mine is going to be calledSENDGRID_API
- Add the following configuration to your configuration file:
import NextAuth, { NextAuthOptions } from "next-auth"
import { PrismaAdapter } from "@auth/prisma-adapter"
import { PrismaClient } from "@prisma/client"
const prisma = new PrismaClient()
export const authOptions: NextAuthOptions = {
adapter: PrismaAdapter(prisma),
providers: [
{
id: 'sendgrid',
type: 'email',
async sendVerificationRequest({identifier: email, url}) {
}
}
],
}
Next, all that's left to do is call the HTTP endpoint from our cloud email provider and pass it the required metadata like the to
address, the email body
, and any other fields we may need to include.
As mentioned earlier, we're going to be using SendGrid in this example, so the appropriate endpoint is https://api.sendgrid.com/v3/mail/send
(more info). Therefore, we're going to pull out some of the important information from the params
argument and use it in a fetch()
call to the previously mentioned SendGrid API.
import NextAuth, { NextAuthOptions } from "next-auth"
import { PrismaAdapter } from "@auth/prisma-adapter"
import { PrismaClient } from "@prisma/client"
const prisma = new PrismaClient()
export const authOptions: NextAuthOptions = {
adapter: PrismaAdapter(prisma),
providers: [
{
id: 'sendgrid',
type: 'email',
async sendVerificationRequest({identifier: email, url}) {
// Call the cloud Email provider API for sending emails
// See https://docs.sendgrid.com/api-reference/mail-send/mail-send
const response = await fetch("https://api.sendgrid.com/v3/mail/send", {
// The body format will vary depending on provider, please see their documentation
// for further details.
body: JSON.stringify({
personalizations: [{ to: [{ email }] }],
from: { email: "noreply@company.com" },
subject: "Sign in to Your page",
content: [
{
type: "text/plain",
value: `Please click here to authenticate - ${url}`,
},
],
}),
headers: {
// Authentication will also vary from provider to provider, please see their docs.
Authorization: `Bearer ${process.env.SENDGRID_API}`,
"Content-Type": "application/json",
},
method: "POST",
})
if (!response.ok) {
const { errors } = await response.json()
throw new Error(JSON.stringify(errors))
}
},
}
],
}
And that's all we need to do to send Emails via an HTTP API! Note here that the example is only using text/plain
as the body type. You'll probably want to change that to text/html
and pass in a nice-looking HTML email. See, for example, our html
function in the Auth.js docs.
To sign in via this custom provider, you would refer to it by the id
in when you are calling the sign-in method, for example: signIn('sendgrid', { email: 'user@company.com' })
.