Gmail offers private and secure email by Google at no cost, for business and consumer accounts.
Emit new event for each attachment in a message received. This source is capped at 100 max new messages per run.
Emit new event when an email matching the search criteria is received. This source is capped at 100 max new messages per run.
Emit new event for each new email sent. (Maximum of 100 events emited per execution)
Write custom Node.js code and use any of the 400k+ npm packages available. Refer to the Pipedream Node docs to learn more.
Create a draft from your Google Workspace email account. See the documentation
Download an attachment by attachmentId to the /tmp directory. See the documentation
By connecting your personal Gmail account to Pipedream, you'll be able to incorporate email into whatever you're building with any of the thousands of apps that are available on Pipedream.
import { axios } from "@pipedream/platform"
export default defineComponent({
props: {
gmail: {
type: "app",
app: "gmail",
}
},
async run({steps, $}) {
return await axios($, {
url: `https://www.googleapis.com/oauth2/v1/userinfo`,
headers: {
Authorization: `Bearer ${this.gmail.$auth.oauth_access_token}`,
},
})
},
})
Develop, run and deploy your Node.js code in Pipedream workflows, using it between no-code steps, with connected accounts, or integrate Data Stores and File Stores.
This includes installing NPM packages, within your code without having to manage a package.json
file or running npm install
.
Below is an example of installing the axios
package in a Pipedream Node.js code step. Pipedream imports the axios
package, performs the API request, and shares the response with subsequent workflow steps:
// To use previous step data, pass the `steps` object to the run() function
export default defineComponent({
async run({ steps, $ }) {
// Return data to use it in future steps
return steps.trigger.event
},
})