Notification Architecture Overview
This document gives an overview of the notification architecture and how it works.
Introduction
Medusa provides a Notification API to mainly handle sending and resending notifications when an event occurs. For example, sending an email to the customer when they place an order.
The Notification architecture is made up of two main components: the Notification Provider and the Notification. Simply put, the Notification Provider handles the sending and resending of a Notification.
Notification Provider
A Notification Provider is a provider that handles sending and resending of notifications. You can either create and integrate your own provider or install a Notification Provider through a third-party plugin.
An example of a notification provider is SendGrid. When an order is placed, the SendGrid plugin sends an email to the customer.
How Notification Provider is Created
A Notification Provider is essentially a Medusa Service with a unique identifier, and it extends the NotificationService
provided by the medusa-interfaces
package. It can be created as part of a Plugin, or it can be created just as a Service file in your Medusa backend.
As a developer, you mainly work with the Notification Provider when integrating a third-party service that handles notifications in Medusa.
When you run your Medusa backend, the Notification Provider is registered in your backend. If it's a new Notification Provider, it will be inserted into the notification_provider
table in your database.
NotificationProvider Entity Overview
The NotificationProvider
entity only has 2 attributes: id
and is_installed
.
id
is the value of the static property identifier
defined inside the notification Service class.
is_installed
indicates whether the Notification Provider is installed or not. When you install a Notification Provider, the value of this attribute is true
.
If you installed a Notification provider and then removed the Service files or plugin that registered the Notification Provider, the Notification Provider remains in your database, but the value of the is_installed
field changes to false
.
Notification
A notification is a form of an alert sent to the customers or users to inform them of an action that has occurred. For example, if an order is placed, the notification, in this case, can be an email that confirms their order and lists the order details.
Notifications can take on other forms such as an SMS or a Slack message.
How Notification is Created
Notifications are created in the NotificationService
class in Medusa’s core after the Notification has been handled by the Notification Provider.
The data and additional details that the Notification Provider returns to the NotificationService
is used to fill some of the attributes of the Notification in the database.
A Notification also represents a resent notification. So, when a notification is resent, a new one is created that references the original Notification as a parent. This Notification is also created by the NotificationService
class.
Notification Entity Overview
The two most important properties in the Notification
entity are the to
and data
properties.
The to
property is a string that represents the receiver of the Notification. For example, if the Notification was sent to an email address, the to
property holds the email address the Notification was sent to.
The to
property can alternatively be a phone number or a chat username. It depends on the Notification Provider and how it sends the Notification.
The data
property is an object that holds all the data necessary to send the Notification. For example, in the case of an order confirmation Notification, it can hold data related to the order.
The data
property is useful when a notification is resent later. The same data
can be used to resend the notification.
In the case of resent notifications, the resent notification has a parent_id
set to the ID of the original Notification. The value of the parent_id
property in the original Notification is null
.
The Notification
entity has some properties that determine the context of this Notification. This includes the event_name
property which is the event that triggered the sending of this notification.
Additionally, the resource_type
property is used to determine what resource this event is associated with. For example, if the event_name
is order.placed
, the resource_type
is order
.
You can also access the specific resource using the resource_id
property, which is the ID of the resource. So, in case of the order.placed
event, the resource_id
is the ID of the order that was created.
The Notification
entity also includes properties related to the receiver of the Notification. In case the receiver is a customer, the customer_id
property is used to identify which customer.
Automating Flows with Notifications
With Medusa you can create notifications as a reaction to a wide spectrum of events, allowing you to automate communication and processes.
An example of a flow that can be implemented using Medusa's Notification API is automated return flows:
- A customer requests a return by sending a
POST
request to the/store/returns
endpoint. - The Notification Provider listens to the
order.return_requested
event and sends an email to the customer with a return invoice and return label generated by the Fulfillment Provider. - The customer returns the items triggering the
return.received
event. - The Notification Provider listens to the
return.received
event and sends an email to the customer with confirmation that their items have been received and that a refund has been issued.
Custom Development
Developers can create custom notification providers in the Medusa backend, a plugin, or in a module.
Learn how to create a notification provider in Medusa.