How to Handle Order Claim Event
In this document, you’ll learn how to handle the order claim event and send a confirmation email when the event is triggered.
Overview
When a guest customer places an order, the order is not associated with a customer. It is associated with an email address.
After the customer registers, later on, they can claim that order by providing the order’s ID.
When the customer requests to claim the order, the event order-update-token.created
is triggered on the Medusa backend. This event should be used to send the customer a confirmation email.
What You’ll Learn
In this document, you’ll learn how to handle the order-update-token.created
event on the backend to send the customer a confirmation email.
Prerequisites
Medusa Components
It's assumed that you already have a Medusa backend installed and set up. If not, you can follow the quickstart guide to get started. The Medusa backend must also have an event bus module installed, which is available when using the default Medusa backend starter.
Notification Provider
To send an email or another type of notification method, you must have a notification provider installed or configured. You can either install an existing plugin or create your own.
This document has an example using the SendGrid plugin.
Step 1: Create a Subscriber
To subscribe to and handle an event, you must create a subscriber.
You can learn more about subscribers in the Subscribers documentation.
Create the file src/subscribers/claim-order.ts
with the following content:
You’ll be adding in the next step the necessary dependencies to the subscriber.
You can learn more about dependency injection in this documentation.
Step 2: Subscribe to the Event
In this step, you’ll subscribe to the order-update-token.created
event to send the customer a notification about their order edit.
There are two ways to do this:
Method 1: Using the NotificationService
If the notification provider you’re using already implements the logic to handle this event, you can subscribe to the event using the NotificationService
:
import { NotificationService } from "@medusajs/medusa"
type InjectedDependencies = {
notificationService: NotificationService
}
class ClaimOrderSubscriber {
constructor({ notificationService }: InjectedDependencies) {
notificationService.subscribe(
"order-update-token.created",
"<NOTIFICATION_PROVIDER_IDENTIFIER>"
)
}
}
export default ClaimOrderSubscriber
Where <NOTIFICATION_PROVIDER_IDENTIFIER>
is the identifier for your notification provider.
You can learn more about handling events with the Notification Service using this documentation.
Method 2: Using the EventBusService
If the notification provider you’re using isn’t configured to handle this event, or you want to implement some other custom logic, you can subscribe to the event using the EventBusService
:
import { EventBusService } from "@medusajs/medusa"
type InjectedDependencies = {
eventBusService: EventBusService
}
class ClaimOrderSubscriber {
constructor({ eventBusService }: InjectedDependencies) {
eventBusService.subscribe(
"order-update-token.created",
this.handleRequestClaimOrder
)
}
handleRequestClaimOrder = async (data) => {
// TODO: handle event
}
}
export default ClaimOrderSubscriber
When using this method, you’ll have to handle the logic of sending the confirmation email to the customer inside the handler function, which in this case is handleRequestClaimOrder
.
The handleRequestClaimOrder
event receives a data
object as a parameter. This object holds the following properties:
old_email
: The email associated with the orders.new_customer_id
: The ID of the customer claiming the orders.orders
: An array of the order IDs that the customer is requesting to claim.token
: A verification token. This token is used to later verify the claim request and associate the order with the customer.
In this method, you should typically send an email to the customer’s old email. In the email, you should link to a page in your storefront and pass the token
as a parameter.
The page would then send a request to the backend to verify that the token
is valid and associate the order with the customer. You can read more about how to implement this in your storefront in this documentation.
Example: Using SendGrid
For example, you can implement this subscriber to send emails using SendGrid:
import { EventBusService } from "@medusajs/medusa"
type InjectedDependencies = {
eventBusService: EventBusService,
sendgridService: any
}
class ClaimOrderSubscriber {
protected sendGridService: any
constructor({
eventBusService,
sendgridService,
}: InjectedDependencies) {
this.sendGridService = sendgridService
eventBusService.subscribe(
"order-update-token.created",
this.handleRequestClaimOrder
)
}
handleRequestClaimOrder = async (data) => {
this.sendGridService.sendEmail({
templateId: "order-claim-confirmation",
from: "hello@medusajs.com",
to: data.old_email,
data: {
link: `http://example.com/confirm-order-claim/${data.token}`,
// other data...
},
})
}
}
export default ClaimOrderSubscriber
Notice how the token
is passed to the storefront link as a parameter.