72

I integrated devise with facebook. Now when I create a user account after the user has logged in with his/her facebook account,

  user = User.create(:email => data["email"], 
                     :password => Devise.friendly_token[0,20]) 
  user.confirmed_at = DateTime.now
  user.save!

even though the account has been confirmed, an confirmation email is still fired. Any idea how I can turn the email firing off?

3
  • 1
    Take :confirmation out of the list of modules passed to devise on the user class? Since you aren't actually using it. Sep 19, 2011 at 0:50
  • 2
    well but other users who register on my site DO need to be email confirmed
    – xjq233p_1
    Sep 19, 2011 at 1:04
  • 5
    I think @disappeardng is asking for an exception case.
    – user482594
    Sep 19, 2011 at 1:12

3 Answers 3

160

The confirm callback happens after create, so it's happening on line 1 of your example, before you set confirmed_at manually.

As per the comments, the most correct thing to do would be to use the method provided for this purpose, #skip_confirmation!. Setting confirmed_at manually will work, but it circumvents the provided API, which is something which should be avoided when possible.

So, something like:

user = User.new(user_attrs)
user.skip_confirmation!
user.save!

Original answer:

If you pass the confirmed_at along with your create arguments, the mail should not be sent, as the test of whether or not an account is already "confirmed" is to look at whether or not that date is set.

User.create(
  :email => data['email'], 
  :password => Devise.friendly_token[0,20], 
  :confirmed_at => DateTime.now
)

That, or just use new instead of create to build your user record.

8
  • fyi I had to declare confirmed_at as a attr_accessible (dunno if that's a potential security breach). Other than that this works!
    – xjq233p_1
    Sep 19, 2011 at 3:18
  • 8
    Use User.new and user.skip_confirmation! to avoid having to make confirmed_at accessible.
    – waldo
    Oct 8, 2011 at 5:10
  • Using new doesn't work as the email is sent when you call save! @waldo's suggestion on skip_confirmation works though
    – Khash
    Jun 22, 2012 at 13:46
  • 2
    @Khash No, the point is that you need to set confirmed_at before saving. Simply using new over create changes nothing, but if he'd used new then set confirmed_at before saving, the email would not have been sent. In fact, all skip_confirmation! does is set confirmed_at. Jun 22, 2012 at 16:40
  • That being said, allowing the provided skip_confirmation! to handle the actual work is preferable. Jun 22, 2012 at 16:48
15

If you just want to prevent sending the email, you can use #skip_confirmation_notification, like so:

user = User.new(your, args)
user.skip_confirmation_notification!
user.save!

See documentation

Skips sending the confirmation/reconfirmation notification email after_create/after_update. Unlike #skip_confirmation!, record still requires confirmation.

1
  • This worked for me! Top answer didn't. :( Thanks! :) Mar 22, 2016 at 6:50
0

Open up the Rails console

rails c

Note the user (through id) or using rails helper methods, eg. first, last. Create a variable to hold the user.

user =  User.last

Use the skip_confirmation helper to confirm the user, then save.

user.skip_confirmation
user.save

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