= form_for [@ip_pool, @ip_address], :remote => true do |f| = f.error_messages %fieldset.fieldSet .fieldSet__field = f.label :ipv4, :class => 'fieldSet__label' .fieldSet__input= f.text_field :ipv4, :autofocus => true, :class => 'input input--text' .fieldSet__field = f.label :ipv6, :class => 'fieldSet__label' .fieldSet__input= f.text_field :ipv6, :class => 'input input--text' .fieldSet__field = f.label :hostname, :class => 'fieldSet__label' .fieldSet__input= f.text_field :hostname, :class => 'input input--text' .fieldSet__field = f.label :priority, :class => 'fieldSet__label' .fieldSet__input = f.text_field :priority, :class => 'input input--text', placeholder: '100' %p.fieldSet__text This priority will determine the likelihood of this IP address being selected for use when sending a message. The higher the number the more likely the IP is to be chosen. By default, the priority is set to the maximum value of 100. This can be used to warm up new IP addresses by adding them with a low priority. To give an indication of how this works, if you have three IPs with 1, 50 and 100 as their priorities, and you send 100,000 emails, the priority 1 address will receive a tiny percentage, the priority 50 will receive roughly one third of e-mails and the priority 100 will receive roughly two thirds. .fieldSetSubmit.buttonSet = f.submit :class => 'button button--positive js-form-submit' .fieldSetSubmit__delete - if @ip_address.persisted? = link_to "Delete IP address", [@ip_pool, @ip_address], :class => 'button button--danger', :method => :delete, :remote => true, :data => {:confirm => "Are you sure you wish to remove this IP from the pool?"}