The authentication that comes with Django is good enough for most common cases, but you may have needs not met by the out-of-the-box defaults. Customizing authentication in your projects requires understanding what points of the provided system are extensible or replaceable. This document provides details about how the auth system can be customized.
Authentication backends provide an extensible system for when a username and password stored with the user model need to be authenticated against a different service than Django’s default.
You can give your models custom permissions that can be checked through Django’s authorization system.
You can extend the default User
model, or
substitute a completely customized model.
There may be times you have the need to hook into another authentication source – that is, another source of usernames and passwords or authentication methods.
For example, your company may already have an LDAP setup that stores a username and password for every employee. It’d be a hassle for both the network administrator and the users themselves if users had separate accounts in LDAP and the Django-based applications.
So, to handle situations like this, the Django authentication system lets you plug in other authentication sources. You can override Django’s default database-based scheme, or you can use the default system in tandem with other systems.
See the authentication backend reference for information on the authentication backends included with Django.
Behind the scenes, Django maintains a list of “authentication backends” that it
checks for authentication. When somebody calls
django.contrib.auth.authenticate()
– as described in How to log
a user in – Django tries authenticating across
all of its authentication backends. If the first authentication method fails,
Django tries the second one, and so on, until all backends have been attempted.
The list of authentication backends to use is specified in the
AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS
setting. This should be a list of Python
path names that point to Python classes that know how to authenticate. These
classes can be anywhere on your Python path.
By default, AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS
is set to:
['django.contrib.auth.backends.ModelBackend']
That’s the basic authentication backend that checks the Django users database and queries the built-in permissions. It does not provide protection against brute force attacks via any rate limiting mechanism. You may either implement your own rate limiting mechanism in a custom auth backend, or use the mechanisms provided by most web servers.
The order of AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS
matters, so if the same
username and password is valid in multiple backends, Django will stop
processing at the first positive match.
If a backend raises a PermissionDenied
exception, authentication will immediately fail. Django won’t check the
backends that follow.
Note
Once a user has authenticated, Django stores which backend was used to
authenticate the user in the user’s session, and re-uses the same backend
for the duration of that session whenever access to the currently
authenticated user is needed. This effectively means that authentication
sources are cached on a per-session basis, so if you change
AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS
, you’ll need to clear out session data if
you need to force users to re-authenticate using different methods. A
simple way to do that is to execute Session.objects.all().delete()
.
An authentication backend is a class that implements two required methods:
get_user(user_id)
and authenticate(request, **credentials)
, as well as
a set of optional permission related authorization methods.
The get_user
method takes a user_id
– which could be a username,
database ID or whatever, but has to be the primary key of your user object –
and returns a user object or None
.
The authenticate
method takes a request
argument and credentials as
keyword arguments. Most of the time, it’ll look like this:
from django.contrib.auth.backends import BaseBackend
class MyBackend(BaseBackend):
def authenticate(self, request, username=None, password=None):
# Check the username/password and return a user.
...
But it could also authenticate a token, like so:
from django.contrib.auth.backends import BaseBackend
class MyBackend(BaseBackend):
def authenticate(self, request, token=None):
# Check the token and return a user.
...
Either way, authenticate()
should check the credentials it gets and return
a user object that matches those credentials if the credentials are valid. If
they’re not valid, it should return None
.
request
is an HttpRequest
and may be None
if it
wasn’t provided to authenticate()
(which passes it
on to the backend).
The Django admin is tightly coupled to the Django User object. The best way to deal with this is to create a Django User
object for each user that exists for your backend (e.g., in your LDAP
directory, your external SQL database, etc.) You can either write a script to
do this in advance, or your authenticate
method can do it the first time a
user logs in.
Here’s an example backend that authenticates against a username and password
variable defined in your settings.py
file and creates a Django User
object the first time a user authenticates:
from django.conf import settings
from django.contrib.auth.backends import BaseBackend
from django.contrib.auth.hashers import check_password
from django.contrib.auth.models import User
class SettingsBackend(BaseBackend):
"""
Authenticate against the settings ADMIN_LOGIN and ADMIN_PASSWORD.
Use the login name and a hash of the password. For example:
ADMIN_LOGIN = 'admin'
ADMIN_PASSWORD = 'pbkdf2_sha256$30000$Vo0VlMnkR4Bk$qEvtdyZRWTcOsCnI/oQ7fVOu1XAURIZYoOZ3iq8Dr4M='
"""
def authenticate(self, request, username=None, password=None):
login_valid = (settings.ADMIN_LOGIN == username)
pwd_valid = check_password(password, settings.ADMIN_PASSWORD)
if login_valid and pwd_valid:
try:
user = User.objects.get(username=username)
except User.DoesNotExist:
# Create a new user. There's no need to set a password
# because only the password from settings.py is checked.
user = User(username=username)
user.is_staff = True
user.is_superuser = True
user.save()
return user
return None
def get_user(self, user_id):
try:
return User.objects.get(pk=user_id)
except User.DoesNotExist:
return None
Custom auth backends can provide their own permissions.
The user model and its manager will delegate permission lookup functions
(get_user_permissions()
,
get_group_permissions()
,
get_all_permissions()
,
has_perm()
,
has_module_perms()
, and
with_perm()
) to any
authentication backend that implements these functions.
The permissions given to the user will be the superset of all permissions returned by all backends. That is, Django grants a permission to a user that any one backend grants.
If a backend raises a PermissionDenied
exception in has_perm()
or
has_module_perms()
, the authorization
will immediately fail and Django won’t check the backends that follow.
A backend could implement permissions for the magic admin like this:
from django.contrib.auth.backends import BaseBackend
class MagicAdminBackend(BaseBackend):
def has_perm(self, user_obj, perm, obj=None):
return user_obj.username == settings.ADMIN_LOGIN
This gives full permissions to the user granted access in the above example.
Notice that in addition to the same arguments given to the associated
django.contrib.auth.models.User
functions, the backend auth functions
all take the user object, which may be an anonymous user, as an argument.
A full authorization implementation can be found in the ModelBackend
class
in django/contrib/auth/backends.py, which is the default backend and
queries the auth_permission
table most of the time.
An anonymous user is one that is not authenticated i.e. they have provided no valid authentication details. However, that does not necessarily mean they are not authorized to do anything. At the most basic level, most websites authorize anonymous users to browse most of the site, and many allow anonymous posting of comments etc.
Django’s permission framework does not have a place to store permissions for
anonymous users. However, the user object passed to an authentication backend
may be an django.contrib.auth.models.AnonymousUser
object, allowing
the backend to specify custom authorization behavior for anonymous users. This
is especially useful for the authors of re-usable apps, who can delegate all
questions of authorization to the auth backend, rather than needing settings,
for example, to control anonymous access.
An inactive user is one that has its
is_active
field set to False
. The
ModelBackend
and
RemoteUserBackend
authentication
backends prohibits these users from authenticating. If a custom user model
doesn’t have an is_active
field,
all users will be allowed to authenticate.
You can use AllowAllUsersModelBackend
or AllowAllUsersRemoteUserBackend
if you
want to allow inactive users to authenticate.
The support for anonymous users in the permission system allows for a scenario where anonymous users have permissions to do something while inactive authenticated users do not.
Do not forget to test for the is_active
attribute of the user in your own
backend permission methods.
Django’s permission framework has a foundation for object permissions, though
there is no implementation for it in the core. That means that checking for
object permissions will always return False
or an empty list (depending on
the check performed). An authentication backend will receive the keyword
parameters obj
and user_obj
for each object related authorization
method and can return the object level permission as appropriate.
To create custom permissions for a given model object, use the permissions
model Meta attribute.
This example Task
model creates two custom permissions, i.e., actions users
can or cannot do with Task
instances, specific to your application:
class Task(models.Model):
...
class Meta:
permissions = [
("change_task_status", "Can change the status of tasks"),
("close_task", "Can remove a task by setting its status as closed"),
]
The only thing this does is create those extra permissions when you run
manage.py migrate
(the function that creates permissions
is connected to the post_migrate
signal).
Your code is in charge of checking the value of these permissions when a user
is trying to access the functionality provided by the application (changing the
status of tasks or closing tasks.) Continuing the above example, the following
checks if a user may close tasks:
user.has_perm('app.close_task')
User
model¶There are two ways to extend the default
User
model without substituting your own
model. If the changes you need are purely behavioral, and don’t require any
change to what is stored in the database, you can create a proxy model based on User
. This
allows for any of the features offered by proxy models including default
ordering, custom managers, or custom model methods.
If you wish to store information related to User
, you can use a
OneToOneField
to a model containing the fields for
additional information. This one-to-one model is often called a profile model,
as it might store non-auth related information about a site user. For example
you might create an Employee model:
from django.contrib.auth.models import User
class Employee(models.Model):
user = models.OneToOneField(User, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
department = models.CharField(max_length=100)
Assuming an existing Employee Fred Smith who has both a User and Employee model, you can access the related information using Django’s standard related model conventions:
>>> u = User.objects.get(username='fsmith')
>>> freds_department = u.employee.department
To add a profile model’s fields to the user page in the admin, define an
InlineModelAdmin
(for this example, we’ll use a
StackedInline
) in your app’s admin.py
and
add it to a UserAdmin
class which is registered with the
User
class:
from django.contrib import admin
from django.contrib.auth.admin import UserAdmin as BaseUserAdmin
from django.contrib.auth.models import User
from my_user_profile_app.models import Employee
# Define an inline admin descriptor for Employee model
# which acts a bit like a singleton
class EmployeeInline(admin.StackedInline):
model = Employee
can_delete = False
verbose_name_plural = 'employee'
# Define a new User admin
class UserAdmin(BaseUserAdmin):
inlines = (EmployeeInline,)
# Re-register UserAdmin
admin.site.unregister(User)
admin.site.register(User, UserAdmin)
These profile models are not special in any way - they are just Django models
that happen to have a one-to-one link with a user model. As such, they aren’t
auto created when a user is created, but
a django.db.models.signals.post_save
could be used to create or update
related models as appropriate.
Using related models results in additional queries or joins to retrieve the related data. Depending on your needs, a custom user model that includes the related fields may be your better option, however, existing relations to the default user model within your project’s apps may justify the extra database load.
User
model¶Some kinds of projects may have authentication requirements for which Django’s
built-in User
model is not always
appropriate. For instance, on some sites it makes more sense to use an email
address as your identification token instead of a username.
Django allows you to override the default user model by providing a value for
the AUTH_USER_MODEL
setting that references a custom model:
AUTH_USER_MODEL = 'myapp.MyUser'
This dotted pair describes the label
of the
Django app (which must be in your INSTALLED_APPS
), and the name of
the Django model that you wish to use as your user model.
If you’re starting a new project, it’s highly recommended to set up a custom
user model, even if the default User
model
is sufficient for you. This model behaves identically to the default user
model, but you’ll be able to customize it in the future if the need arises:
from django.contrib.auth.models import AbstractUser
class User(AbstractUser):
pass
Don’t forget to point AUTH_USER_MODEL
to it. Do this before creating
any migrations or running manage.py migrate
for the first time.
Also, register the model in the app’s admin.py
:
from django.contrib import admin
from django.contrib.auth.admin import UserAdmin
from .models import User
admin.site.register(User, UserAdmin)
Changing AUTH_USER_MODEL
after you’ve created database tables is
significantly more difficult since it affects foreign keys and many-to-many
relationships, for example.
This change can’t be done automatically and requires manually fixing your schema, moving your data from the old user table, and possibly manually reapplying some migrations. See #25313 for an outline of the steps.
Due to limitations of Django’s dynamic dependency feature for swappable
models, the model referenced by AUTH_USER_MODEL
must be created in
the first migration of its app (usually called 0001_initial
); otherwise,
you’ll have dependency issues.
In addition, you may run into a CircularDependencyError
when running your
migrations as Django won’t be able to automatically break the dependency loop
due to the dynamic dependency. If you see this error, you should break the loop
by moving the models depended on by your user model into a second migration.
(You can try making two normal models that have a ForeignKey
to each other
and seeing how makemigrations
resolves that circular dependency if you want
to see how it’s usually done.)
AUTH_USER_MODEL
¶Reusable apps shouldn’t implement a custom user model. A project may use many
apps, and two reusable apps that implemented a custom user model couldn’t be
used together. If you need to store per user information in your app, use
a ForeignKey
or
OneToOneField
to settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL
as described below.
User
model¶If you reference User
directly (for
example, by referring to it in a foreign key), your code will not work in
projects where the AUTH_USER_MODEL
setting has been changed to a
different user model.
get_user_model
()¶Instead of referring to User
directly,
you should reference the user model using
django.contrib.auth.get_user_model()
. This method will return the
currently active user model – the custom user model if one is specified, or
User
otherwise.
When you define a foreign key or many-to-many relations to the user model,
you should specify the custom model using the AUTH_USER_MODEL
setting. For example:
from django.conf import settings
from django.db import models
class Article(models.Model):
author = models.ForeignKey(
settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL,
on_delete=models.CASCADE,
)
When connecting to signals sent by the user model, you should specify
the custom model using the AUTH_USER_MODEL
setting. For example:
from django.conf import settings
from django.db.models.signals import post_save
def post_save_receiver(sender, instance, created, **kwargs):
pass
post_save.connect(post_save_receiver, sender=settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL)
Generally speaking, it’s easiest to refer to the user model with the
AUTH_USER_MODEL
setting in code that’s executed at import time,
however, it’s also possible to call get_user_model()
while Django
is importing models, so you could use
models.ForeignKey(get_user_model(), ...)
.
If your app is tested with multiple user models, using
@override_settings(AUTH_USER_MODEL=...)
for example, and you cache the
result of get_user_model()
in a module-level variable, you may need to
listen to the setting_changed
signal to clear
the cache. For example:
from django.apps import apps
from django.contrib.auth import get_user_model
from django.core.signals import setting_changed
from django.dispatch import receiver
@receiver(setting_changed)
def user_model_swapped(**kwargs):
if kwargs['setting'] == 'AUTH_USER_MODEL':
apps.clear_cache()
from myapp import some_module
some_module.UserModel = get_user_model()
When you start your project with a custom user model, stop to consider if this is the right choice for your project.
Keeping all user related information in one model removes the need for additional or more complex database queries to retrieve related models. On the other hand, it may be more suitable to store app-specific user information in a model that has a relation with your custom user model. That allows each app to specify its own user data requirements without potentially conflicting or breaking assumptions by other apps. It also means that you would keep your user model as simple as possible, focused on authentication, and following the minimum requirements Django expects custom user models to meet.
If you use the default authentication backend, then your model must have a single unique field that can be used for identification purposes. This can be a username, an email address, or any other unique attribute. A non-unique username field is allowed if you use a custom authentication backend that can support it.
The easiest way to construct a compliant custom user model is to inherit from
AbstractBaseUser
.
AbstractBaseUser
provides the core
implementation of a user model, including hashed passwords and tokenized
password resets. You must then provide some key implementation details:
models.
CustomUser
¶USERNAME_FIELD
¶A string describing the name of the field on the user model that is
used as the unique identifier. This will usually be a username of some
kind, but it can also be an email address, or any other unique
identifier. The field must be unique (i.e., have unique=True
set
in its definition), unless you use a custom authentication backend that
can support non-unique usernames.
In the following example, the field identifier
is used
as the identifying field:
class MyUser(AbstractBaseUser):
identifier = models.CharField(max_length=40, unique=True)
...
USERNAME_FIELD = 'identifier'
EMAIL_FIELD
¶A string describing the name of the email field on the User
model.
This value is returned by
get_email_field_name()
.
REQUIRED_FIELDS
¶A list of the field names that will be prompted for when creating a
user via the createsuperuser
management command. The user
will be prompted to supply a value for each of these fields. It must
include any field for which blank
is
False
or undefined and may include additional fields you want
prompted for when a user is created interactively.
REQUIRED_FIELDS
has no effect in other parts of Django, like
creating a user in the admin.
For example, here is the partial definition for a user model that defines two required fields - a date of birth and height:
class MyUser(AbstractBaseUser):
...
date_of_birth = models.DateField()
height = models.FloatField()
...
REQUIRED_FIELDS = ['date_of_birth', 'height']
Note
REQUIRED_FIELDS
must contain all required fields on your user
model, but should not contain the USERNAME_FIELD
or
password
as these fields will always be prompted for.
is_active
¶A boolean attribute that indicates whether the user is considered
“active”. This attribute is provided as an attribute on
AbstractBaseUser
defaulting to True
. How you choose to
implement it will depend on the details of your chosen auth backends.
See the documentation of the is_active attribute on the built-in
user model
for details.
get_full_name
()¶Optional. A longer formal identifier for the user such as their full
name. If implemented, this appears alongside the username in an
object’s history in django.contrib.admin
.
get_short_name
()¶Optional. A short, informal identifier for the user such as their
first name. If implemented, this replaces the username in the greeting
to the user in the header of django.contrib.admin
.
Importing AbstractBaseUser
AbstractBaseUser
and BaseUserManager
are importable from
django.contrib.auth.base_user
so that they can be imported without
including django.contrib.auth
in INSTALLED_APPS
.
The following attributes and methods are available on any subclass of
AbstractBaseUser
:
models.
AbstractBaseUser
¶get_username
()¶Returns the value of the field nominated by USERNAME_FIELD
.
clean
()¶Normalizes the username by calling normalize_username()
. If you
override this method, be sure to call super()
to retain the
normalization.
get_email_field_name
()¶Returns the name of the email field specified by the
EMAIL_FIELD
attribute. Defaults to
'email'
if EMAIL_FIELD
isn’t specified.
normalize_username
(username)¶Applies NFKC Unicode normalization to usernames so that visually identical characters with different Unicode code points are considered identical.
is_authenticated
¶Read-only attribute which is always True
(as opposed to
AnonymousUser.is_authenticated
which is always False
).
This is a way to tell if the user has been authenticated. This does not
imply any permissions and doesn’t check if the user is active or has
a valid session. Even though normally you will check this attribute on
request.user
to find out whether it has been populated by the
AuthenticationMiddleware
(representing the currently logged-in user), you should know this
attribute is True
for any User
instance.
is_anonymous
¶Read-only attribute which is always False
. This is a way of
differentiating User
and AnonymousUser
objects. Generally, you should prefer using
is_authenticated
to this attribute.
set_password
(raw_password)¶Sets the user’s password to the given raw string, taking care of the
password hashing. Doesn’t save the
AbstractBaseUser
object.
When the raw_password is None
, the password will be set to an
unusable password, as if
set_unusable_password()
were used.
check_password
(raw_password)¶Returns True
if the given raw string is the correct password for
the user. (This takes care of the password hashing in making the
comparison.)
set_unusable_password
()¶Marks the user as having no password set. This isn’t the same as
having a blank string for a password.
check_password()
for this user
will never return True
. Doesn’t save the
AbstractBaseUser
object.
You may need this if authentication for your application takes place against an existing external source such as an LDAP directory.
has_usable_password
()¶Returns False
if
set_unusable_password()
has
been called for this user.
get_session_auth_hash
()¶Returns an HMAC of the password field. Used for Session invalidation on password change.
AbstractUser
subclasses AbstractBaseUser
:
models.
AbstractUser
¶clean
()¶Normalizes the email by calling
BaseUserManager.normalize_email()
. If you override this method,
be sure to call super()
to retain the normalization.
You should also define a custom manager for your user model. If your user model
defines username
, email
, is_staff
, is_active
, is_superuser
,
last_login
, and date_joined
fields the same as Django’s default user,
you can install Django’s UserManager
;
however, if your user model defines different fields, you’ll need to define a
custom manager that extends BaseUserManager
providing two additional methods:
models.
CustomUserManager
¶create_user
(username_field, password=None, **other_fields)¶The prototype of create_user()
should accept the username field,
plus all required fields as arguments. For example, if your user model
uses email
as the username field, and has date_of_birth
as a
required field, then create_user
should be defined as:
def create_user(self, email, date_of_birth, password=None):
# create user here
...
create_superuser
(username_field, password=None, **other_fields)¶The prototype of create_superuser()
should accept the username
field, plus all required fields as arguments. For example, if your user
model uses email
as the username field, and has date_of_birth
as a required field, then create_superuser
should be defined as:
def create_superuser(self, email, date_of_birth, password=None):
# create superuser here
...
For a ForeignKey
in USERNAME_FIELD
or
REQUIRED_FIELDS
, these methods receive the value of the
to_field
(the primary_key
by default) of an existing instance.
BaseUserManager
provides the following
utility methods:
models.
BaseUserManager
¶normalize_email
(email)¶Normalizes email addresses by lowercasing the domain portion of the email address.
get_by_natural_key
(username)¶Retrieves a user instance using the contents of the field
nominated by USERNAME_FIELD
.
make_random_password
(length=10, allowed_chars='abcdefghjkmnpqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHJKLMNPQRSTUVWXYZ23456789')¶Returns a random password with the given length and given string of
allowed characters. Note that the default value of allowed_chars
doesn’t contain letters that can cause user confusion, including:
i
, l
, I
, and 1
(lowercase letter i, lowercase
letter L, uppercase letter i, and the number one)o
, O
, and 0
(lowercase letter o, uppercase letter o,
and zero)User
¶If you’re entirely happy with Django’s User
model, but you want to add some additional profile information, you could
subclass django.contrib.auth.models.AbstractUser
and add your custom
profile fields, although we’d recommend a separate model as described in the
“Model design considerations” note of Specifying a custom user model.
AbstractUser
provides the full implementation of the default
User
as an abstract model.
Django’s built-in forms and views make certain assumptions about the user model that they are working with.
The following forms are compatible with any subclass of
AbstractBaseUser
:
AuthenticationForm
: Uses the username
field specified by USERNAME_FIELD
.SetPasswordForm
PasswordChangeForm
AdminPasswordChangeForm
The following forms make assumptions about the user model and can be used as-is if those assumptions are met:
PasswordResetForm
: Assumes that the user
model has a field that stores the user’s email address with the name returned
by get_email_field_name()
(email
by
default) that can be used to identify the user and a boolean field named
is_active
to prevent password resets for inactive users.Finally, the following forms are tied to
User
and need to be rewritten or extended
to work with a custom user model:
If your custom user model is a subclass of AbstractUser
, then you can
extend these forms in this manner:
from django.contrib.auth.forms import UserCreationForm
from myapp.models import CustomUser
class CustomUserCreationForm(UserCreationForm):
class Meta(UserCreationForm.Meta):
model = CustomUser
fields = UserCreationForm.Meta.fields + ('custom_field',)
django.contrib.admin
¶If you want your custom user model to also work with the admin, your user model must define some additional attributes and methods. These methods allow the admin to control access of the user to admin content:
models.
CustomUser
is_staff
¶Returns True
if the user is allowed to have access to the admin site.
is_active
¶Returns True
if the user account is currently active.
has_perm(perm, obj=None):
Returns True
if the user has the named permission. If obj
is
provided, the permission needs to be checked against a specific object
instance.
has_module_perms(app_label):
Returns True
if the user has permission to access models in
the given app.
You will also need to register your custom user model with the admin. If
your custom user model extends django.contrib.auth.models.AbstractUser
,
you can use Django’s existing django.contrib.auth.admin.UserAdmin
class. However, if your user model extends
AbstractBaseUser
, you’ll need to define
a custom ModelAdmin
class. It may be possible to subclass the default
django.contrib.auth.admin.UserAdmin
; however, you’ll need to
override any of the definitions that refer to fields on
django.contrib.auth.models.AbstractUser
that aren’t on your
custom user class.
Note
If you are using a custom ModelAdmin
which is a subclass of
django.contrib.auth.admin.UserAdmin
, then you need to add your custom
fields to fieldsets
(for fields to be used in editing users) and to
add_fieldsets
(for fields to be used when creating a user). For
example:
from django.contrib.auth.admin import UserAdmin
class CustomUserAdmin(UserAdmin):
...
fieldsets = UserAdmin.fieldsets + (
(None, {'fields': ('custom_field',)}),
)
add_fieldsets = UserAdmin.add_fieldsets + (
(None, {'fields': ('custom_field',)}),
)
See a full example for more details.
To make it easy to include Django’s permission framework into your own user
class, Django provides PermissionsMixin
.
This is an abstract model you can include in the class hierarchy for your user
model, giving you all the methods and database fields necessary to support
Django’s permission model.
PermissionsMixin
provides the following
methods and attributes:
models.
PermissionsMixin
¶is_superuser
¶Boolean. Designates that this user has all permissions without explicitly assigning them.
get_user_permissions
(obj=None)¶Returns a set of permission strings that the user has directly.
If obj
is passed in, only returns the user permissions for this
specific object.
get_group_permissions
(obj=None)¶Returns a set of permission strings that the user has, through their groups.
If obj
is passed in, only returns the group permissions for
this specific object.
get_all_permissions
(obj=None)¶Returns a set of permission strings that the user has, both through group and user permissions.
If obj
is passed in, only returns the permissions for this
specific object.
has_perm
(perm, obj=None)¶Returns True
if the user has the specified permission, where
perm
is in the format "<app label>.<permission codename>"
(see
permissions). If User.is_active
and is_superuser
are both True
, this method always
returns True
.
If obj
is passed in, this method won’t check for a permission for
the model, but for this specific object.
has_perms
(perm_list, obj=None)¶Returns True
if the user has each of the specified permissions,
where each perm is in the format
"<app label>.<permission codename>"
. If User.is_active
and
is_superuser
are both True
, this method always
returns True
.
If obj
is passed in, this method won’t check for permissions for
the model, but for the specific object.
has_module_perms
(package_name)¶Returns True
if the user has any permissions in the given package
(the Django app label). If User.is_active
and
is_superuser
are both True
, this method always
returns True
.
One limitation of custom user models is that installing a custom user model
will break any proxy model extending User
.
Proxy models must be based on a concrete base class; by defining a custom user
model, you remove the ability of Django to reliably identify the base class.
If your project uses proxy models, you must either modify the proxy to extend
the user model that’s in use in your project, or merge your proxy’s behavior
into your User
subclass.
Here is an example of an admin-compliant custom user app. This user model uses
an email address as the username, and has a required date of birth; it
provides no permission checking beyond an admin
flag on the user account.
This model would be compatible with all the built-in auth forms and views,
except for the user creation forms. This example illustrates how most of the
components work together, but is not intended to be copied directly into
projects for production use.
This code would all live in a models.py
file for a custom
authentication app:
from django.db import models
from django.contrib.auth.models import (
BaseUserManager, AbstractBaseUser
)
class MyUserManager(BaseUserManager):
def create_user(self, email, date_of_birth, password=None):
"""
Creates and saves a User with the given email, date of
birth and password.
"""
if not email:
raise ValueError('Users must have an email address')
user = self.model(
email=self.normalize_email(email),
date_of_birth=date_of_birth,
)
user.set_password(password)
user.save(using=self._db)
return user
def create_superuser(self, email, date_of_birth, password=None):
"""
Creates and saves a superuser with the given email, date of
birth and password.
"""
user = self.create_user(
email,
password=password,
date_of_birth=date_of_birth,
)
user.is_admin = True
user.save(using=self._db)
return user
class MyUser(AbstractBaseUser):
email = models.EmailField(
verbose_name='email address',
max_length=255,
unique=True,
)
date_of_birth = models.DateField()
is_active = models.BooleanField(default=True)
is_admin = models.BooleanField(default=False)
objects = MyUserManager()
USERNAME_FIELD = 'email'
REQUIRED_FIELDS = ['date_of_birth']
def __str__(self):
return self.email
def has_perm(self, perm, obj=None):
"Does the user have a specific permission?"
# Simplest possible answer: Yes, always
return True
def has_module_perms(self, app_label):
"Does the user have permissions to view the app `app_label`?"
# Simplest possible answer: Yes, always
return True
@property
def is_staff(self):
"Is the user a member of staff?"
# Simplest possible answer: All admins are staff
return self.is_admin
Then, to register this custom user model with Django’s admin, the following
code would be required in the app’s admin.py
file:
from django import forms
from django.contrib import admin
from django.contrib.auth.models import Group
from django.contrib.auth.admin import UserAdmin as BaseUserAdmin
from django.contrib.auth.forms import ReadOnlyPasswordHashField
from django.core.exceptions import ValidationError
from customauth.models import MyUser
class UserCreationForm(forms.ModelForm):
"""A form for creating new users. Includes all the required
fields, plus a repeated password."""
password1 = forms.CharField(label='Password', widget=forms.PasswordInput)
password2 = forms.CharField(label='Password confirmation', widget=forms.PasswordInput)
class Meta:
model = MyUser
fields = ('email', 'date_of_birth')
def clean_password2(self):
# Check that the two password entries match
password1 = self.cleaned_data.get("password1")
password2 = self.cleaned_data.get("password2")
if password1 and password2 and password1 != password2:
raise ValidationError("Passwords don't match")
return password2
def save(self, commit=True):
# Save the provided password in hashed format
user = super().save(commit=False)
user.set_password(self.cleaned_data["password1"])
if commit:
user.save()
return user
class UserChangeForm(forms.ModelForm):
"""A form for updating users. Includes all the fields on
the user, but replaces the password field with admin's
disabled password hash display field.
"""
password = ReadOnlyPasswordHashField()
class Meta:
model = MyUser
fields = ('email', 'password', 'date_of_birth', 'is_active', 'is_admin')
class UserAdmin(BaseUserAdmin):
# The forms to add and change user instances
form = UserChangeForm
add_form = UserCreationForm
# The fields to be used in displaying the User model.
# These override the definitions on the base UserAdmin
# that reference specific fields on auth.User.
list_display = ('email', 'date_of_birth', 'is_admin')
list_filter = ('is_admin',)
fieldsets = (
(None, {'fields': ('email', 'password')}),
('Personal info', {'fields': ('date_of_birth',)}),
('Permissions', {'fields': ('is_admin',)}),
)
# add_fieldsets is not a standard ModelAdmin attribute. UserAdmin
# overrides get_fieldsets to use this attribute when creating a user.
add_fieldsets = (
(None, {
'classes': ('wide',),
'fields': ('email', 'date_of_birth', 'password1', 'password2'),
}),
)
search_fields = ('email',)
ordering = ('email',)
filter_horizontal = ()
# Now register the new UserAdmin...
admin.site.register(MyUser, UserAdmin)
# ... and, since we're not using Django's built-in permissions,
# unregister the Group model from admin.
admin.site.unregister(Group)
Finally, specify the custom model as the default user model for your project
using the AUTH_USER_MODEL
setting in your settings.py
:
AUTH_USER_MODEL = 'customauth.MyUser'
In older versions, ReadOnlyPasswordHashField
is not
disabled
by default and
UserChangeForm.clean_password()
is required to return the initial
value, whatever the user provides.
Dec 13, 2021