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Using the Django authentication system¶
This document explains the usage of Django’s authentication system in its default configuration. This configuration has evolved to serve the most common project needs, handling a reasonably wide range of tasks, and has a careful implementation of passwords and permissions. For projects where authentication needs differ from the default, Django supports extensive extension and customization of authentication.
Django authentication provides both authentication and authorization together and is generally referred to as the authentication system, as these features are somewhat coupled.
User objects¶
User
objects are the core of the
authentication system. They typically represent the people interacting with
your site and are used to enable things like restricting access, registering
user profiles, associating content with creators etc. Only one class of user
exists in Django’s authentication framework, i.e., 'superusers'
or admin 'staff'
users are just user objects with
special attributes set, not different classes of user objects.
The primary attributes of the default user are:
See the full API documentation
for
full reference, the documentation that follows is more task oriented.
Creating users¶
The most direct way to create users is to use the included
create_user()
helper function:
>>> from django.contrib.auth.models import User
>>> user = User.objects.create_user('john', 'lennon@thebeatles.com', 'johnpassword')
# At this point, user is a User object that has already been saved
# to the database. You can continue to change its attributes
# if you want to change other fields.
>>> user.last_name = 'Lennon'
>>> user.save()
If you have the Django admin installed, you can also create users interactively.
Creating superusers¶
Create superusers using the createsuperuser
command:
$ python manage.py createsuperuser --username=joe --email=joe@example.com
You will be prompted for a password. After you enter one, the user will be
created immediately. If you leave off the --username
or the
--email
options, it will prompt you for those values.
Changing passwords¶
Django does not store raw (clear text) passwords on the user model, but only a hash (see documentation of how passwords are managed for full details). Because of this, do not attempt to manipulate the password attribute of the user directly. This is why a helper function is used when creating a user.
To change a user’s password, you have several options:
manage.py changepassword *username*
offers a method
of changing a User’s password from the command line. It prompts you to
change the password of a given user which you must enter twice. If
they both match, the new password will be changed immediately. If you
do not supply a user, the command will attempt to change the password
whose username matches the current system user.
You can also change a password programmatically, using
set_password()
:
>>> from django.contrib.auth.models import User
>>> u = User.objects.get(username='john')
>>> u.set_password('new password')
>>> u.save()
If you have the Django admin installed, you can also change user’s passwords on the authentication system’s admin pages.
Django also provides views and forms that may be used to allow users to change their own passwords.
Changing a user’s password will log out all their sessions if the
SessionAuthenticationMiddleware
is
enabled. See Session invalidation on password change for details.
Authenticating Users¶
-
authenticate
(**credentials)[source]¶ To authenticate a given username and password, use
authenticate()
. It takes credentials in the form of keyword arguments, for the default configuration this isusername
andpassword
, and it returns aUser
object if the password is valid for the given username. If the password is invalid,authenticate()
returnsNone
. Example:from django.contrib.auth import authenticate user = authenticate(username='john', password='secret') if user is not None: # the password verified for the user if user.is_active: print("User is valid, active and authenticated") else: print("The password is valid, but the account has been disabled!") else: # the authentication system was unable to verify the username and password print("The username and password were incorrect.")
Note
This is a low level way to authenticate a set of credentials; for example, it’s used by the
RemoteUserMiddleware
. Unless you are writing your own authentication system, you probably won’t use this. Rather if you are looking for a way to limit access to logged in users, see thelogin_required()
decorator.
Permissions and Authorization¶
Django comes with a simple permissions system. It provides a way to assign permissions to specific users and groups of users.
It’s used by the Django admin site, but you’re welcome to use it in your own code.
The Django admin site uses permissions as follows:
- Access to view the “add” form and add an object is limited to users with the “add” permission for that type of object.
- Access to view the change list, view the “change” form and change an object is limited to users with the “change” permission for that type of object.
- Access to delete an object is limited to users with the “delete” permission for that type of object.
Permissions can be set not only per type of object, but also per specific
object instance. By using the
has_add_permission()
,
has_change_permission()
and
has_delete_permission()
methods provided
by the ModelAdmin
class, it is possible to
customize permissions for different object instances of the same type.
User
objects have two many-to-many
fields: groups
and user_permissions
.
User
objects can access their related
objects in the same way as any other Django model:
myuser.groups = [group_list]
myuser.groups.add(group, group, ...)
myuser.groups.remove(group, group, ...)
myuser.groups.clear()
myuser.user_permissions = [permission_list]
myuser.user_permissions.add(permission, permission, ...)
myuser.user_permissions.remove(permission, permission, ...)
myuser.user_permissions.clear()
Default permissions¶
When django.contrib.auth
is listed in your INSTALLED_APPS
setting, it will ensure that three default permissions – add, change and
delete – are created for each Django model defined in one of your installed
applications.
These permissions will be created when you run manage.py migrate
; the first time you run migrate
after adding
django.contrib.auth
to INSTALLED_APPS
, the default permissions
will be created for all previously-installed models, as well as for any new
models being installed at that time. Afterward, it will create default
permissions for new models each time you run manage.py migrate
(the function that creates permissions is connected to the
post_migrate
signal).
Assuming you have an application with an
app_label
foo
and a model named Bar
,
to test for basic permissions you should use:
- add:
user.has_perm('foo.add_bar')
- change:
user.has_perm('foo.change_bar')
- delete:
user.has_perm('foo.delete_bar')
The Permission
model is rarely accessed
directly.
Groups¶
django.contrib.auth.models.Group
models are a generic way of
categorizing users so you can apply permissions, or some other label, to those
users. A user can belong to any number of groups.
A user in a group automatically has the permissions granted to that group. For
example, if the group Site editors
has the permission
can_edit_home_page
, any user in that group will have that permission.
Beyond permissions, groups are a convenient way to categorize users to give
them some label, or extended functionality. For example, you could create a
group 'Special users'
, and you could write code that could, say, give them
access to a members-only portion of your site, or send them members-only email
messages.
Programmatically creating permissions¶
While custom permissions can be defined within
a model’s Meta
class, you can also create permissions directly. For
example, you can create the can_publish
permission for a BlogPost
model
in myapp
:
from myapp.models import BlogPost
from django.contrib.auth.models import Permission
from django.contrib.contenttypes.models import ContentType
content_type = ContentType.objects.get_for_model(BlogPost)
permission = Permission.objects.create(codename='can_publish',
name='Can Publish Posts',
content_type=content_type)
The permission can then be assigned to a
User
via its user_permissions
attribute or to a Group
via its
permissions
attribute.
Permission caching¶
The ModelBackend
caches permissions on
the User
object after the first time they need to be fetched for a
permissions check. This is typically fine for the request-response cycle since
permissions are not typically checked immediately after they are added (in the
admin, for example). If you are adding permissions and checking them immediately
afterward, in a test or view for example, the easiest solution is to re-fetch
the User
from the database. For example:
from django.contrib.auth.models import Permission, User
from django.shortcuts import get_object_or_404
def user_gains_perms(request, user_id):
user = get_object_or_404(User, pk=user_id)
# any permission check will cache the current set of permissions
user.has_perm('myapp.change_bar')
permission = Permission.objects.get(codename='change_bar')
user.user_permissions.add(permission)
# Checking the cached permission set
user.has_perm('myapp.change_bar') # False
# Request new instance of User
user = get_object_or_404(User, pk=user_id)
# Permission cache is repopulated from the database
user.has_perm('myapp.change_bar') # True
...
Authentication in Web requests¶
Django uses sessions and middleware to hook the
authentication system into request objects
.
These provide a request.user
attribute
on every request which represents the current user. If the current user has not
logged in, this attribute will be set to an instance
of AnonymousUser
, otherwise it will be an
instance of User
.
You can tell them apart with
is_authenticated()
, like so:
if request.user.is_authenticated():
# Do something for authenticated users.
...
else:
# Do something for anonymous users.
...
How to log a user in¶
If you have an authenticated user you want to attach to the current session
- this is done with a login()
function.
-
login
(request, user)[source]¶ To log a user in, from a view, use
login()
. It takes anHttpRequest
object and aUser
object.login()
saves the user’s ID in the session, using Django’s session framework.Note that any data set during the anonymous session is retained in the session after a user logs in.
This example shows how you might use both
authenticate()
andlogin()
:from django.contrib.auth import authenticate, login def my_view(request): username = request.POST['username'] password = request.POST['password'] user = authenticate(username=username, password=password) if user is not None: if user.is_active: login(request, user) # Redirect to a success page. else: # Return a 'disabled account' error message ... else: # Return an 'invalid login' error message. ...
Calling authenticate()
first
When you’re manually logging a user in, you must successfully authenticate
the user with authenticate()
before you call
login()
.
authenticate()
sets an attribute on the User
noting
which authentication backend successfully authenticated that user (see the
backends documentation for details), and
this information is needed later during the login process. An error will be
raised if you try to login a user object retrieved from the database
directly.
How to log a user out¶
-
logout
(request)[source]¶ To log out a user who has been logged in via
django.contrib.auth.login()
, usedjango.contrib.auth.logout()
within your view. It takes anHttpRequest
object and has no return value. Example:from django.contrib.auth import logout def logout_view(request): logout(request) # Redirect to a success page.
Note that
logout()
doesn’t throw any errors if the user wasn’t logged in.When you call
logout()
, the session data for the current request is completely cleaned out. All existing data is removed. This is to prevent another person from using the same Web browser to log in and have access to the previous user’s session data. If you want to put anything into the session that will be available to the user immediately after logging out, do that after callingdjango.contrib.auth.logout()
.
Limiting access to logged-in users¶
The raw way¶
The simple, raw way to limit access to pages is to check
request.user.is_authenticated()
and either redirect to a
login page:
from django.conf import settings
from django.shortcuts import redirect
def my_view(request):
if not request.user.is_authenticated():
return redirect('%s?next=%s' % (settings.LOGIN_URL, request.path))
# ...
…or display an error message:
from django.shortcuts import render
def my_view(request):
if not request.user.is_authenticated():
return render(request, 'myapp/login_error.html')
# ...
The login_required decorator¶
-
login_required
(redirect_field_name='next', login_url=None)[source]¶ As a shortcut, you can use the convenient
login_required()
decorator:from django.contrib.auth.decorators import login_required @login_required def my_view(request): ...
login_required()
does the following:- If the user isn’t logged in, redirect to
settings.LOGIN_URL
, passing the current absolute path in the query string. Example:/accounts/login/?next=/polls/3/
. - If the user is logged in, execute the view normally. The view code is free to assume the user is logged in.
By default, the path that the user should be redirected to upon successful authentication is stored in a query string parameter called
"next"
. If you would prefer to use a different name for this parameter,login_required()
takes an optionalredirect_field_name
parameter:from django.contrib.auth.decorators import login_required @login_required(redirect_field_name='my_redirect_field') def my_view(request): ...
Note that if you provide a value to
redirect_field_name
, you will most likely need to customize your login template as well, since the template context variable which stores the redirect path will use the value ofredirect_field_name
as its key rather than"next"
(the default).login_required()
also takes an optionallogin_url
parameter. Example:from django.contrib.auth.decorators import login_required @login_required(login_url='/accounts/login/') def my_view(request): ...
Note that if you don’t specify the
login_url
parameter, you’ll need to ensure that thesettings.LOGIN_URL
and your login view are properly associated. For example, using the defaults, add the following lines to your URLconf:from django.contrib.auth import views as auth_views url(r'^accounts/login/$', auth_views.login),
The
settings.LOGIN_URL
also accepts view function names and named URL patterns. This allows you to freely remap your login view within your URLconf without having to update the setting.- If the user isn’t logged in, redirect to
Note
The login_required decorator does NOT check the is_active flag on a user.
Limiting access to logged-in users that pass a test¶
To limit access based on certain permissions or some other test, you’d do essentially the same thing as described in the previous section.
The simple way is to run your test on request.user
in the view directly. For example, this view
checks to make sure the user has an email in the desired domain and if not,
redirects to the login page:
from django.shortcuts import redirect
def my_view(request):
if not request.user.email.endswith('@example.com'):
return redirect('/login/?next=%s' % request.path)
# ...
-
user_passes_test
(test_func, login_url=None, redirect_field_name='next')[source]¶ As a shortcut, you can use the convenient
user_passes_test
decorator which performs a redirect when the callable returnsFalse
:from django.contrib.auth.decorators import user_passes_test def email_check(user): return user.email.endswith('@example.com') @user_passes_test(email_check) def my_view(request): ...
user_passes_test()
takes a required argument: a callable that takes aUser
object and returnsTrue
if the user is allowed to view the page. Note thatuser_passes_test()
does not automatically check that theUser
is not anonymous.user_passes_test()
takes two optional arguments:login_url
- Lets you specify the URL that users who don’t pass the test will be
redirected to. It may be a login page and defaults to
settings.LOGIN_URL
if you don’t specify one. redirect_field_name
- Same as for
login_required()
. Setting it toNone
removes it from the URL, which you may want to do if you are redirecting users that don’t pass the test to a non-login page where there’s no “next page”.
For example:
@user_passes_test(email_check, login_url='/login/') def my_view(request): ...
The permission_required decorator¶
-
permission_required
(perm, login_url=None, raise_exception=False)[source]¶ It’s a relatively common task to check whether a user has a particular permission. For that reason, Django provides a shortcut for that case: the
permission_required()
decorator.:from django.contrib.auth.decorators import permission_required @permission_required('polls.can_vote') def my_view(request): ...
As for the
has_perm()
method, permission names take the form"<app label>.<permission codename>"
(i.e.polls.can_vote
for a permission on a model in thepolls
application).Note that
permission_required()
also takes an optionallogin_url
parameter. Example:from django.contrib.auth.decorators import permission_required @permission_required('polls.can_vote', login_url='/loginpage/') def my_view(request): ...
As in the
login_required()
decorator,login_url
defaults tosettings.LOGIN_URL
.If the
raise_exception
parameter is given, the decorator will raisePermissionDenied
, prompting the 403 (HTTP Forbidden) view instead of redirecting to the login page.If you want to use
raise_exception
but also give your users a chance to login first, you can add thelogin_required()
decorator:from django.contrib.auth.decorators import login_required, permission_required @login_required @permission_required('polls.can_vote', raise_exception=True) def my_view(request): ...
Changed in Django 1.7:The
permission_required()
decorator can take a list of permissions, in which case the user must have all of the permissions in order to access the view.
Applying permissions to generic views¶
To apply a permission to a class-based generic view, decorate the View.dispatch
method on the class. See
Decorating the class for details. Another approach is to
write a mixin that wraps as_view().
Session invalidation on password change¶
Warning
This protection only applies if
SessionAuthenticationMiddleware
is enabled in MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES
. It’s included if
settings.py
was generated by startproject
on Django ≥ 1.7.
Session verification will become mandatory in Django 1.10 regardless of
whether or not SessionAuthenticationMiddleware
is enabled. If you have
a pre-1.7 project or one generated using a template that doesn’t include
SessionAuthenticationMiddleware
, consider enabling it before then after
reading the upgrade considerations below.
If your AUTH_USER_MODEL
inherits from
AbstractBaseUser
or implements its own
get_session_auth_hash()
method, authenticated sessions will include the hash returned by this function.
In the AbstractBaseUser
case, this is an
HMAC of the password field. If the
SessionAuthenticationMiddleware
is
enabled, Django verifies that the hash sent along with each request matches
the one that’s computed server-side. This allows a user to log out all of their
sessions by changing their password.
The default password change views included with Django,
django.contrib.auth.views.password_change()
and the
user_change_password
view in the django.contrib.auth
admin, update
the session with the new password hash so that a user changing their own
password won’t log themselves out. If you have a custom password change view
and wish to have similar behavior, use this function:
-
update_session_auth_hash
(request, user)¶ This function takes the current request and the updated user object from which the new session hash will be derived and updates the session hash appropriately. Example usage:
from django.contrib.auth import update_session_auth_hash def password_change(request): if request.method == 'POST': form = PasswordChangeForm(user=request.user, data=request.POST) if form.is_valid(): form.save() update_session_auth_hash(request, form.user) else: ...
If you are upgrading an existing site and wish to enable this middleware without
requiring all your users to re-login afterward, you should first upgrade to
Django 1.7 and run it for a while so that as sessions are naturally recreated
as users login, they include the session hash as described above. Once you
start running your site with
SessionAuthenticationMiddleware
, any
users who have not logged in and had their session updated with the verification
hash will have their existing session invalidated and be required to login.
Note
Since
get_session_auth_hash()
is based on SECRET_KEY
, updating your site to use a new secret
will invalidate all existing sessions.
Authentication Views¶
Django provides several views that you can use for handling login, logout, and password management. These make use of the stock auth forms but you can pass in your own forms as well.
Django provides no default template for the authentication views. You should create your own templates for the views you want to use. The template context is documented in each view, see All authentication views.
Using the views¶
There are different methods to implement these views in your project. The
easiest way is to include the provided URLconf in django.contrib.auth.urls
in your own URLconf, for example:
urlpatterns = [
url('^', include('django.contrib.auth.urls'))
]
This will include the following URL patterns:
^login/$ [name='login']
^logout/$ [name='logout']
^password_change/$ [name='password_change']
^password_change/done/$ [name='password_change_done']
^password_reset/$ [name='password_reset']
^password_reset/done/$ [name='password_reset_done']
^reset/(?P<uidb64>[0-9A-Za-z_\-]+)/(?P<token>[0-9A-Za-z]{1,13}-[0-9A-Za-z]{1,20})/$ [name='password_reset_confirm']
^reset/done/$ [name='password_reset_complete']
The views provide a URL name for easier reference. See the URL documentation for details on using named URL patterns.
If you want more control over your URLs, you can reference a specific view in your URLconf:
from django.contrib.auth import views as auth_views
urlpatterns = [
url('^change-password/', auth_views.password_change)
]
The views have optional arguments you can use to alter the behavior of the
view. For example, if you want to change the template name a view uses, you can
provide the template_name
argument. A way to do this is to provide keyword
arguments in the URLconf, these will be passed on to the view. For example:
urlpatterns = [
url(
'^change-password/',
auth_views.password_change,
{'template_name': 'change-password.html'}
)
]
All views return a TemplateResponse
instance, which allows you to easily customize the response data before
rendering. A way to do this is to wrap a view in your own view:
from django.contrib.auth import views
def change_password(request):
template_response = views.password_change(request)
# Do something with `template_response`
return template_response
For more details, see the TemplateResponse documentation.
All authentication views¶
This is a list with all the views django.contrib.auth
provides. For
implementation details see Using the views.
-
login
(request, template_name=`registration/login.html`, redirect_field_name='next', authentication_form=AuthenticationForm, current_app=None, extra_context=None)[source]¶ URL name:
login
See the URL documentation for details on using named URL patterns.
Optional arguments:
template_name
: The name of a template to display for the view used to log the user in. Defaults toregistration/login.html
.redirect_field_name
: The name of aGET
field containing the URL to redirect to after login. Defaults tonext
.authentication_form
: A callable (typically just a form class) to use for authentication. Defaults toAuthenticationForm
.current_app
: A hint indicating which application contains the current view. See the namespaced URL resolution strategy for more information.extra_context
: A dictionary of context data that will be added to the default context data passed to the template.
Here’s what
django.contrib.auth.views.login
does:- If called via
GET
, it displays a login form that POSTs to the same URL. More on this in a bit. - If called via
POST
with user submitted credentials, it tries to log the user in. If login is successful, the view redirects to the URL specified innext
. Ifnext
isn’t provided, it redirects tosettings.LOGIN_REDIRECT_URL
(which defaults to/accounts/profile/
). If login isn’t successful, it redisplays the login form.
It’s your responsibility to provide the html for the login template , called
registration/login.html
by default. This template gets passed four template context variables:form
: AForm
object representing theAuthenticationForm
.next
: The URL to redirect to after successful login. This may contain a query string, too.site
: The currentSite
, according to theSITE_ID
setting. If you don’t have the site framework installed, this will be set to an instance ofRequestSite
, which derives the site name and domain from the currentHttpRequest
.site_name
: An alias forsite.name
. If you don’t have the site framework installed, this will be set to the value ofrequest.META['SERVER_NAME']
. For more on sites, see The “sites” framework.
If you’d prefer not to call the template
registration/login.html
, you can pass thetemplate_name
parameter via the extra arguments to the view in your URLconf. For example, this URLconf line would usemyapp/login.html
instead:url(r'^accounts/login/$', auth_views.login, {'template_name': 'myapp/login.html'}),
You can also specify the name of the
GET
field which contains the URL to redirect to after login by passingredirect_field_name
to the view. By default, the field is callednext
.Here’s a sample
registration/login.html
template you can use as a starting point. It assumes you have abase.html
template that defines acontent
block:{% extends "base.html" %} {% block content %} {% if form.errors %} <p>Your username and password didn't match. Please try again.</p> {% endif %} {% if next %} {% if user.is_authenticated %} <p>Your account doesn't have access to this page. To proceed, please login with an account that has access.</p> {% else %} <p>Please login to see this page.</p> {% endif %} {% endif %} <form method="post" action="{% url 'django.contrib.auth.views.login' %}"> {% csrf_token %} <table> <tr> <td>{{ form.username.label_tag }}</td> <td>{{ form.username }}</td> </tr> <tr> <td>{{ form.password.label_tag }}</td> <td>{{ form.password }}</td> </tr> </table> <input type="submit" value="login" /> <input type="hidden" name="next" value="{{ next }}" /> </form> {# Assumes you setup the password_reset view in your URLconf #} <p><a href="{% url 'password_reset' %}">Lost password?</a></p> {% endblock %}
If you have customized authentication (see Customizing Authentication) you can pass a custom authentication form to the login view via the
authentication_form
parameter. This form must accept arequest
keyword argument in its__init__
method, and provide aget_user()
method which returns the authenticated user object (this method is only ever called after successful form validation).
-
logout
(request, next_page=None, template_name='registration/logged_out.html', redirect_field_name='next', current_app=None, extra_context=None)[source]¶ Logs a user out.
URL name:
logout
Optional arguments:
next_page
: The URL to redirect to after logout.template_name
: The full name of a template to display after logging the user out. Defaults toregistration/logged_out.html
if no argument is supplied.redirect_field_name
: The name of aGET
field containing the URL to redirect to after log out. Defaults tonext
. Overrides thenext_page
URL if the givenGET
parameter is passed.current_app
: A hint indicating which application contains the current view. See the namespaced URL resolution strategy for more information.extra_context
: A dictionary of context data that will be added to the default context data passed to the template.
Template context:
title
: The string “Logged out”, localized.site
: The currentSite
, according to theSITE_ID
setting. If you don’t have the site framework installed, this will be set to an instance ofRequestSite
, which derives the site name and domain from the currentHttpRequest
.site_name
: An alias forsite.name
. If you don’t have the site framework installed, this will be set to the value ofrequest.META['SERVER_NAME']
. For more on sites, see The “sites” framework.current_app
: A hint indicating which application contains the current view. See the namespaced URL resolution strategy for more information.extra_context
: A dictionary of context data that will be added to the default context data passed to the template.
-
logout_then_login
(request, login_url=None, current_app=None, extra_context=None)[source]¶ Logs a user out, then redirects to the login page.
URL name: No default URL provided
Optional arguments:
login_url
: The URL of the login page to redirect to. Defaults tosettings.LOGIN_URL
if not supplied.current_app
: A hint indicating which application contains the current view. See the namespaced URL resolution strategy for more information.extra_context
: A dictionary of context data that will be added to the default context data passed to the template.
-
password_change
(request, template_name='registration/password_change_form.html', post_change_redirect=None, password_change_form=PasswordChangeForm, current_app=None, extra_context=None)[source]¶ Allows a user to change their password.
URL name:
password_change
Optional arguments:
template_name
: The full name of a template to use for displaying the password change form. Defaults toregistration/password_change_form.html
if not supplied.post_change_redirect
: The URL to redirect to after a successful password change.password_change_form
: A custom “change password” form which must accept auser
keyword argument. The form is responsible for actually changing the user’s password. Defaults toPasswordChangeForm
.current_app
: A hint indicating which application contains the current view. See the namespaced URL resolution strategy for more information.extra_context
: A dictionary of context data that will be added to the default context data passed to the template.
Template context:
form
: The password change form (seepassword_change_form
above).
-
password_change_done
(request, template_name='registration/password_change_done.html', current_app=None, extra_context=None)[source]¶ The page shown after a user has changed their password.
URL name:
password_change_done
Optional arguments:
template_name
: The full name of a template to use. Defaults toregistration/password_change_done.html
if not supplied.current_app
: A hint indicating which application contains the current view. See the namespaced URL resolution strategy for more information.extra_context
: A dictionary of context data that will be added to the default context data passed to the template.
-
password_reset
(request, is_admin_site=False, template_name='registration/password_reset_form.html', email_template_name='registration/password_reset_email.html', subject_template_name='registration/password_reset_subject.txt', password_reset_form=PasswordResetForm, token_generator=default_token_generator, post_reset_redirect=None, from_email=None, current_app=None, extra_context=None, html_email_template_name=None)[source]¶ Allows a user to reset their password by generating a one-time use link that can be used to reset the password, and sending that link to the user’s registered email address.
If the email address provided does not exist in the system, this view won’t send an email, but the user won’t receive any error message either. This prevents information leaking to potential attackers. If you want to provide an error message in this case, you can subclass
PasswordResetForm
and use thepassword_reset_form
argument.Users flagged with an unusable password (see
set_unusable_password()
aren’t allowed to request a password reset to prevent misuse when using an external authentication source like LDAP. Note that they won’t receive any error message since this would expose their account’s existence but no mail will be sent either.URL name:
password_reset
Optional arguments:
template_name
: The full name of a template to use for displaying the password reset form. Defaults toregistration/password_reset_form.html
if not supplied.email_template_name
: The full name of a template to use for generating the email with the reset password link. Defaults toregistration/password_reset_email.html
if not supplied.subject_template_name
: The full name of a template to use for the subject of the email with the reset password link. Defaults toregistration/password_reset_subject.txt
if not supplied.password_reset_form
: Form that will be used to get the email of the user to reset the password for. Defaults toPasswordResetForm
.token_generator
: Instance of the class to check the one time link. This will default todefault_token_generator
, it’s an instance ofdjango.contrib.auth.tokens.PasswordResetTokenGenerator
.post_reset_redirect
: The URL to redirect to after a successful password reset request.from_email
: A valid email address. By default Django uses theDEFAULT_FROM_EMAIL
.current_app
: A hint indicating which application contains the current view. See the namespaced URL resolution strategy for more information.extra_context
: A dictionary of context data that will be added to the default context data passed to the template.html_email_template_name
: The full name of a template to use for generating atext/html
multipart email with the password reset link. By default, HTML email is not sent.
New in Django 1.7:html_email_template_name
was added.Deprecated since version 1.8: The
is_admin_site
argument is deprecated and will be removed in Django 1.10.Template context:
form
: The form (seepassword_reset_form
above) for resetting the user’s password.
Email template context:
email
: An alias foruser.email
user
: The currentUser
, according to theemail
form field. Only active users are able to reset their passwords (User.is_active is True
).site_name
: An alias forsite.name
. If you don’t have the site framework installed, this will be set to the value ofrequest.META['SERVER_NAME']
. For more on sites, see The “sites” framework.domain
: An alias forsite.domain
. If you don’t have the site framework installed, this will be set to the value ofrequest.get_host()
.protocol
: http or httpsuid
: The user’s primary key encoded in base 64.token
: Token to check that the reset link is valid.
Sample
registration/password_reset_email.html
(email body template):Someone asked for password reset for email {{ email }}. Follow the link below: {{ protocol}}://{{ domain }}{% url 'password_reset_confirm' uidb64=uid token=token %}
The same template context is used for subject template. Subject must be single line plain text string.
-
password_reset_done
(request, template_name='registration/password_reset_done.html', current_app=None, extra_context=None)[source]¶ The page shown after a user has been emailed a link to reset their password. This view is called by default if the
password_reset()
view doesn’t have an explicitpost_reset_redirect
URL set.URL name:
password_reset_done
Note
If the email address provided does not exist in the system, the user is inactive, or has an unusable password, the user will still be redirected to this view but no email will be sent.
Optional arguments:
template_name
: The full name of a template to use. Defaults toregistration/password_reset_done.html
if not supplied.current_app
: A hint indicating which application contains the current view. See the namespaced URL resolution strategy for more information.extra_context
: A dictionary of context data that will be added to the default context data passed to the template.
-
password_reset_confirm
(request, uidb64=None, token=None, template_name='registration/password_reset_confirm.html', token_generator=default_token_generator, set_password_form=SetPasswordForm, post_reset_redirect=None, current_app=None, extra_context=None)[source]¶ Presents a form for entering a new password.
URL name:
password_reset_confirm
Optional arguments:
uidb64
: The user’s id encoded in base 64. Defaults toNone
.token
: Token to check that the password is valid. Defaults toNone
.template_name
: The full name of a template to display the confirm password view. Default value isregistration/password_reset_confirm.html
.token_generator
: Instance of the class to check the password. This will default todefault_token_generator
, it’s an instance ofdjango.contrib.auth.tokens.PasswordResetTokenGenerator
.set_password_form
: Form that will be used to set the password. Defaults toSetPasswordForm
post_reset_redirect
: URL to redirect after the password reset done. Defaults toNone
.current_app
: A hint indicating which application contains the current view. See the namespaced URL resolution strategy for more information.extra_context
: A dictionary of context data that will be added to the default context data passed to the template.
Template context:
form
: The form (seeset_password_form
above) for setting the new user’s password.validlink
: Boolean, True if the link (combination ofuidb64
andtoken
) is valid or unused yet.
-
password_reset_complete
(request, template_name='registration/password_reset_complete.html', current_app=None, extra_context=None)[source]¶ Presents a view which informs the user that the password has been successfully changed.
URL name:
password_reset_complete
Optional arguments:
template_name
: The full name of a template to display the view. Defaults toregistration/password_reset_complete.html
.current_app
: A hint indicating which application contains the current view. See the namespaced URL resolution strategy for more information.extra_context
: A dictionary of context data that will be added to the default context data passed to the template.
Helper functions¶
-
redirect_to_login
(next, login_url=None, redirect_field_name='next')[source]¶ Redirects to the login page, and then back to another URL after a successful login.
Required arguments:
next
: The URL to redirect to after a successful login.
Optional arguments:
login_url
: The URL of the login page to redirect to. Defaults tosettings.LOGIN_URL
if not supplied.redirect_field_name
: The name of aGET
field containing the URL to redirect to after log out. Overridesnext
if the givenGET
parameter is passed.
Built-in forms¶
If you don’t want to use the built-in views, but want the convenience of not
having to write forms for this functionality, the authentication system
provides several built-in forms located in django.contrib.auth.forms
:
Note
The built-in authentication forms make certain assumptions about the user model that they are working with. If you’re using a custom User model, it may be necessary to define your own forms for the authentication system. For more information, refer to the documentation about using the built-in authentication forms with custom user models.
-
class
AdminPasswordChangeForm
[source]¶ A form used in the admin interface to change a user’s password.
Takes the
user
as the first positional argument.
-
class
AuthenticationForm
[source]¶ A form for logging a user in.
Takes
request
as its first positional argument, which is stored on the form instance for use by sub-classes.-
confirm_login_allowed
(user)[source]¶ - New in Django 1.7.
By default,
AuthenticationForm
rejects users whoseis_active
flag is set toFalse
. You may override this behavior with a custom policy to determine which users can log in. Do this with a custom form that subclassesAuthenticationForm
and overrides theconfirm_login_allowed()
method. This method should raise aValidationError
if the given user may not log in.For example, to allow all users to log in regardless of “active” status:
from django.contrib.auth.forms import AuthenticationForm class AuthenticationFormWithInactiveUsersOkay(AuthenticationForm): def confirm_login_allowed(self, user): pass
Or to allow only some active users to log in:
class PickyAuthenticationForm(AuthenticationForm): def confirm_login_allowed(self, user): if not user.is_active: raise forms.ValidationError( _("This account is inactive."), code='inactive', ) if user.username.startswith('b'): raise forms.ValidationError( _("Sorry, accounts starting with 'b' aren't welcome here."), code='no_b_users', )
-
-
class
PasswordResetForm
[source]¶ A form for generating and emailing a one-time use link to reset a user’s password.
-
send_mail
(subject_template_name, email_template_name, context, from_email, to_email, html_email_template_name=None)[source]¶ - New in Django 1.8.
Uses the arguments to send an
EmailMultiAlternatives
. Can be overridden to customize how the email is sent to the user.Parameters: - subject_template_name – the template for the subject.
- email_template_name – the template for the email body.
- context – context passed to the
subject_template
,email_template
, andhtml_email_template
(if it is notNone
). - from_email – the sender’s email.
- to_email – the email of the requester.
- html_email_template_name – the template for the HTML body;
defaults to
None
, in which case a plain text email is sent.
By default,
save()
populates thecontext
with the same variables thatpassword_reset()
passes to its email context.
-
-
class
SetPasswordForm
[source]¶ A form that lets a user change their password without entering the old password.
Authentication data in templates¶
The currently logged-in user and their permissions are made available in the
template context when you use
RequestContext
.
Technicality
Technically, these variables are only made available in the template
context if you use RequestContext
and the
'django.contrib.auth.context_processors.auth'
context processor is
enabled. It is in the default generated settings file. For more, see the
RequestContext docs.
Users¶
When rendering a template RequestContext
, the
currently logged-in user, either a User
instance or an AnonymousUser
instance, is
stored in the template variable {{ user }}
:
{% if user.is_authenticated %}
<p>Welcome, {{ user.username }}. Thanks for logging in.</p>
{% else %}
<p>Welcome, new user. Please log in.</p>
{% endif %}
This template context variable is not available if a RequestContext
is not
being used.
Permissions¶
The currently logged-in user’s permissions are stored in the template variable
{{ perms }}
. This is an instance of
django.contrib.auth.context_processors.PermWrapper
, which is a
template-friendly proxy of permissions.
In the {{ perms }}
object, single-attribute lookup is a proxy to
User.has_module_perms
.
This example would display True
if the logged-in user had any permissions
in the foo
app:
{{ perms.foo }}
Two-level-attribute lookup is a proxy to
User.has_perm
. This example
would display True
if the logged-in user had the permission
foo.can_vote
:
{{ perms.foo.can_vote }}
Thus, you can check permissions in template {% if %}
statements:
{% if perms.foo %}
<p>You have permission to do something in the foo app.</p>
{% if perms.foo.can_vote %}
<p>You can vote!</p>
{% endif %}
{% if perms.foo.can_drive %}
<p>You can drive!</p>
{% endif %}
{% else %}
<p>You don't have permission to do anything in the foo app.</p>
{% endif %}
It is possible to also look permissions up by {% if in %}
statements.
For example:
{% if 'foo' in perms %}
{% if 'foo.can_vote' in perms %}
<p>In lookup works, too.</p>
{% endif %}
{% endif %}
Managing users in the admin¶
When you have both django.contrib.admin
and django.contrib.auth
installed, the admin provides a convenient way to view and manage users,
groups, and permissions. Users can be created and deleted like any Django
model. Groups can be created, and permissions can be assigned to users or
groups. A log of user edits to models made within the admin is also stored and
displayed.
Creating Users¶
You should see a link to “Users” in the “Auth” section of the main admin index page. The “Add user” admin page is different than standard admin pages in that it requires you to choose a username and password before allowing you to edit the rest of the user’s fields.
Also note: if you want a user account to be able to create users using the Django admin site, you’ll need to give them permission to add users and change users (i.e., the “Add user” and “Change user” permissions). If an account has permission to add users but not to change them, that account won’t be able to add users. Why? Because if you have permission to add users, you have the power to create superusers, which can then, in turn, change other users. So Django requires add and change permissions as a slight security measure.
Be thoughtful about how you allow users to manage permissions. If you give a non-superuser the ability to edit users, this is ultimately the same as giving them superuser status because they will be able to elevate permissions of users including themselves!
Changing Passwords¶
User passwords are not displayed in the admin (nor stored in the database), but the password storage details are displayed. Included in the display of this information is a link to a password change form that allows admins to change user passwords.