Integrated set of Django applications addressing authentication, registration, account management as well as 3rd party (social) account authentication.
This repository was forked from https://github.com/pennersr/django-allauth when django-allauth did not have support for stackexchange. The newer django-allauth version requires a database migration to support networks like stackexchange which seems to be an overkill to support an extra network. This application has support for without the database migration and stores the required information in app_settings.
Most existing Django apps that address the problem of social authentication focus on just that. You typically need to integrate another app in order to support authentication via a local account.
This approach separates the worlds of local and social authentication. However, there are common scenarios to be dealt with in both worlds. For example, an e-mail address passed along by an OpenID provider is not guaranteed to be verified. So, before hooking an OpenID account up to a local account the e-mail address must be verified. So, e-mail verification needs to be present in both worlds.
Integrating both worlds is quite a tedious process. It is definately not a matter of simply adding one social authentication app, and one local account registration app to your INSTALLED_APPS list.
This is the reason this project got started -- to offer a fully integrated authentication app that allows for both local and social authentication, with flows that just work.
From the start the focus has been to deliver an integrated experience and flows that just work, and to a lesser extent a completely pluggable social authentication framework.
Earlier versions of the project suffered from this, e.g. each provider had its own implementation with its own social account model definition.
Work is well underway to rectify this situation. These days, social account models have been unified, and adding support for additional OAuth/OAuth2 providers is child's play. All hardcodedness with respect to providers has been removed.
Ofcourse, there is always more that can be done. Do know that the biggest hurdles to overcome the initial shortcomings have been taken...
- Signup of both local and social accounts
- Connecting more than one social account to a local account
- Disconnecting a social account -- requires setting a password if only the local account remains
- Optional instant-signup for social accounts -- no questions asked
- E-mail address management (multiple e-mail addresses, setting a primary)
- Password forgotten flow
- E-mail address verification flow
- Facebook (both OAuth2 and JS SDK)
- Github
- Google (OAuth2)
- OpenId
- Persona
- SoundCloud (OAuth2)
- StackExchange
Note: OAuth/OAuth2 support is built using a common code base, making it easy to add support for additional OAuth/OAuth2 providers. More will follow soon...
- Supports multiple authentication schemes (e.g. login by user name, or by e-mail), as well as multiple strategies for account verification (ranging from none to e-mail verification).
- All access tokens are consistently stored so that you can publish wall updates etc.
- Pluggable signup form for asking additional questions during signup.
- Support for connecting multiple social accounts to a Django user account.
- The required consumer keys and secrets for interacting with Facebook, Twitter and the likes are to be configured in the database via the Django admin using the SocialApp model.
- Consumer keys, tokens make use of the Django sites framework. This is especially helpful for larger multi-domain projects, but also allows for for easy switching between a development (localhost) and production setup without messing with your settings and database.
settings.py:
TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS = ( ... "django.core.context_processors.request", ... "allauth.account.context_processors.account", "allauth.socialaccount.context_processors.socialaccount", ... ) AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS = ( ... # Needed to login by username in Django admin, regardless of `allauth` "django.contrib.auth.backends.ModelBackend", # `allauth` specific authentication methods, such as login by e-mail "allauth.account.auth_backends.AuthenticationBackend", ... ) INSTALLED_APPS = ( ... 'allauth', 'allauth.account', 'allauth.socialaccount', 'allauth.socialaccount.providers.facebook', 'allauth.socialaccount.providers.google', 'allauth.socialaccount.providers.github', 'allauth.socialaccount.providers.linkedin', 'allauth.socialaccount.providers.openid', 'allauth.socialaccount.providers.persona', 'allauth.socialaccount.providers.soundcloud', 'allauth.socialaccount.providers.twitter', ... )
urls.py:
urlpatterns = patterns('', ... (r'^accounts/', include('allauth.urls')), ... )
Available settings:
- ACCOUNT_ADAPTER (="allauth.account.adapter.DefaultAccountAdapter")
- Specifies the adapter class to use, allowing you to alter certain default behaviour.
- ACCOUNT_AUTHENTICATION_METHOD (="username" | "email" | "username_email")
- Specifies the login method to use -- whether the user logs in by entering his username, e-mail address, or either one of both.
- ACCOUNT_EMAIL_CONFIRMATION_ANONYMOUS_REDIRECT_URL (=settings.LOGIN_URL)
- The URL to redirect to after a successful e-mail confirmation, in case no user is logged in.
- ACCOUNT_EMAIL_CONFIRMATION_AUTHENTICATED_REDIRECT_URL (=None)
- The URL to redirect to after a successful e-mail confirmation, in case of an authenticated user. Set to None to use settings.LOGIN_REDIRECT_URL.
- ACCOUNT_EMAIL_CONFIRMATION_EXPIRE_DAYS (=3)
- Determines the expiration date of email confirmation mails (# of days).
- ACCOUNT_EMAIL_REQUIRED (=False)
- The user is required to hand over an e-mail address when signing up.
- ACCOUNT_EMAIL_VERIFICATION (="mandatory" | "optional" | "none")
- Determines the e-mail verification method during signup. When set to "mandatory" the user is blocked from logging in until the email address is verified. Choose "optional" or "none" to allow logins with an unverified e-mail address. In case of "optional", the e-mail verification mail is still sent, whereas in case of "none" no e-mail verification mails are sent.
- ACCOUNT_EMAIL_SUBJECT_PREFIX (="[Site] ")
- Subject-line prefix to use for email messages sent. By default, the name of the current Site (django.contrib.sites) is used.
- ACCOUNT_SIGNUP_FORM_CLASS (=None)
- A string pointing to a custom form class (e.g. 'myapp.forms.SignupForm') that is used during signup to ask the user for additional input (e.g. newsletter signup, birth date). This class should implement a 'save' method, accepting the newly signed up user as its only parameter.
- ACCOUNT_SIGNUP_PASSWORD_VERIFICATION (=True)
- When signing up, let the user type in his password twice to avoid typ-o's.
- ACCOUNT_UNIQUE_EMAIL (=True)
- Enforce uniqueness of e-mail addresses.
- ACCOUNT_USER_DISPLAY (=a callable returning user.username)
- A callable (or string of the form 'some.module.callable_name') that takes a user as its only argument and returns the display name of the user. The default implementation returns user.username.
- ACCOUNT_USERNAME_MIN_LENGTH (=1)
- An integer specifying the minimum allowed length of a username.
- ACCOUNT_USERNAME_REQUIRED (=True)
- The user is required to enter a username when signing up. Note that the user will be asked to do so even if ACCOUNT_AUTHENTICATION_METHOD is set to email. Set to False when you do not wish to prompt the user to enter a username.
- ACCOUNT_PASSWORD_INPUT_RENDER_VALUE (=False)
- render_value parameter as passed to PasswordInput fields.
- ACCOUNT_PASSWORD_MIN_LENGTH (=6)
- An integer specifying the minimum password length.
- SOCIALACCOUNT_QUERY_EMAIL (=ACCOUNT_EMAIL_REQUIRED)
- Request e-mail address from 3rd party account provider? E.g. using OpenID AX, or the Facebook "email" permission.
- SOCIALACCOUNT_AUTO_SIGNUP (=True)
- Attempt to bypass the signup form by using fields (e.g. username, email) retrieved from the social account provider. If a conflict arises due to a duplicate e-mail address the signup form will still kick in.
- SOCIALACCOUNT_AVATAR_SUPPORT (= 'avatar' in settings.INSTALLED_APPS)
- Enable support for django-avatar. When enabled, the profile image of the user is copied locally into django-avatar at signup.
- SOCIALACCOUNT_PROVIDERS (= dict)
- Dictionary containing provider specific settings.
- The ACCOUNT_EMAIL_VERIFICATION setting is no longer a boolean based setting. Use a string value of "none", "optional" or "mandatory" instead.
- The template "account/password_reset_key_message.txt" has been moved to "account/email/password_reset_key_message.txt". The subject of the message has been moved into a template ("account/email/password_reset_key_subject.txt").
- The site foreign key from SocialApp to Site has been replaced by a ManyToManyField. Many apps can be used across multiple domains (Facebook cannot).
- Dropped support for CONTACT_EMAIL from the account template context processor. It was never documented and only used in the templates as an example -- there is no need to pollute the allauth settings with that. If your templates rely on it then you will have to put it in a context processor yourself.
- allauth now depends on Django 1.4 or higher.
- Major impact: dropped dependency on the emailconfirmation app, as
this project is clearly left unmaintained. Important tickets such
as pinax-archives/django-email-confirmation#5 are not
being addressed. All models and related functionality have been
directly integrated into the allauth.account app. When upgrading
take care of the following:
- The emailconfirmation setting EMAIL_CONFIRMATION_DAYS has been replaced by ACCOUNT_EMAIL_CONFIRMATION_EXPIRE_DAYS.
- Instead of directly confirming the e-mail address upon the GET request the confirmation is now processed as part of an explicit POST. Therefore, a new template account/email_confirm.html must be setup.
- Existing emailconfirmation data should be migrated to the new tables. For this purpose a special management command is available: python manage.py account_emailconfirmationmigration. This command does not drop the old emailconfirmation tables -- you will have to do this manually yourself. Why not use South? EmailAddress uniqueness depends on the configuration (ACCOUNT_UNIQUE_EMAIL), South does not handle settings dependent database models.
- {% load account_tags %} is deprecated, simply use: {% load account %}
- {% load socialaccount_tags %} is deprecated, simply use: {% load socialaccount %}
- The ACCOUNT_EMAIL_AUTHENTICATION setting has been dropped in favor of ACCOUNT_AUTHENTICATION_METHOD.
- The login form field is now always named login. This used to by either username or email, depending on the authentication method. If needed, update your templates accordingly.
- The allauth template tags (containing template tags for OpenID, Twitter and Facebook) have been removed. Use the socialaccount template tags instead (specifically: {% provider_login_url ... %}).
- The allauth.context_processors.allauth context processor has been removed, in favor of allauth.socialaccount.context_processors.socialaccount. In doing so, all hardcodedness with respect to providers (e.g allauth.facebook_enabled) has been removed.
- Upgrade your settings.INSTALLED_APPS: Replace allauth.<provider> (where provider is one of twitter, facebook or openid) with allauth.socialaccount.providers.<provider>
- All provider related models (FacebookAccount, FacebookApp, TwitterAccount, TwitterApp, OpenIDAccount) have been unified into generic SocialApp and SocialAccount models. South migrations are in place to move the data over to the new models, after which the original tables are dropped. Therefore, be sure to run migrate using South.
Most providers require you to sign up for a so called API client or app, containing a client ID and API secret. You must add a SocialApp record per provider via the Django admin containing these app credentials.
When creating the OAuth app on the side of the provider pay special attention to the callback URL (sometimes also referred to as redirect URL). If you do not configure this correctly, you will receive login failures when attemtping to log in, such as:
An error occured while attempting to login via your social network account.
Use a callback URL of the form:
http://example.com/accounts/twitter/login/callback/ http://example.com/accounts/soundcloud/login/callback/ ...
For local development, use the following:
http://127.0.0.1:8000/accounts/twitter/callback/
For Facebook both OAuth2 and the Facebook Connect Javascript SDK are supported. You can even mix the two.
Advantage of the Javascript SDK may be a more streamlined user experience as you do not leave your site. Furthermore, you do not need to worry about tailoring the login dialog depending on whether or not you are using a mobile device. Yet, relying on Javascript may not be everybody's cup of tea.
To initiate a login use:
{% load socialaccount %} <a href="{% provider_login_url "facebook" method="js_sdk" %}">Facebook Connect</a>
or:
{% load socialaccount %} <a href="{% provider_login_url "facebook" method="oauth2" %}">Facebook OAuth2</a>
The following Facebook settings are available:
SOCIALACCOUNT_PROVIDERS = \ { 'facebook': { 'SCOPE': ['email', 'publish_stream'], 'METHOD': 'oauth2' , 'LOCALE_FUNC': 'path.to.callable'} }
By default, email scope is required depending whether or not SOCIALACCOUNT_QUERY_EMAIL is enabled.
The locale for the JS SDK is chosen based on the current active language of the request, taking a best guess. This can be customized using the LOCALE_FUNC setting, which takes either a callable or a path to a callable. This callable must take exactly one argument, the request, and return a valid Facebook locale as a string:
SOCIALACCOUNT_PROVIDERS = \ { 'facebook': { 'LOCALE_FUNC': lambda request: return 'zh_CN'} }
The Google provider is OAuth2 based. Register your Google API client over at https://code.google.com/apis/console/. Make sure you list a redirect uri of the form http://example.com/accounts/google/login/callback/.
You can specify the scope to use as follows:
SOCIALACCOUNT_PROVIDERS = \ { 'google': { 'SCOPE': ['https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.profile'] } }
By default, profile scope is required, and optionally email scope depending on whether or not SOCIALACCOUNT_QUERY_EMAIL is enabled.
The LinkedIn provider is OAuth based. Register your LinkedIn app over at https://www.linkedin.com/secure/developer?newapp=. Leave the OAuth redirect URL empty.
You can specify the scope to use as follows:
SOCIALACCOUNT_PROVIDERS = \ { 'linkedin': { 'SCOPE': ['r_emailaddress'] } }
By default, r_emailaddress scope is required depending on whether or not SOCIALACCOUNT_QUERY_EMAIL is enabled.
Note: if you are experiencing issues where it seems as if the scope has no effect you may be using an old LinkedIn app that is not scope enabled. Please refer to https://developer.linkedin.com/forum/when-will-old-apps-have-scope-parameter-enabled for more background information.
The OpenID provider does not require any settings per se. However, a typical OpenID login page presents the user with a predefined list of OpenID providers and allows the user to input his own OpenID identity URL in case his provider is not listed by default. The list of providers displayed by the builtin templates can be configured as follows:
SOCIALACCOUNT_PROVIDERS = \ { 'openid': { 'SERVERS': [dict(id='yahoo', name='Yahoo', openid_url='http://me.yahoo.com'), dict(id='hyves', name='Hyves', openid_url='http://hyves.nl'), dict(id='google', name='Google', openid_url='https://www.google.com/accounts/o8/id')]}}
If you want to manually include login links yourself, you can use the following template tag:
{% load socialaccount %} <a href="{% provider_login_url "openid" openid="https://www.google.com/accounts/o8/id" next="/success/url/" %}">Google</a>
Mozilla Persona does not require any settings. The REQUEST_PARAMETERS dictionary contains optional parameters that are passed as is to the navigator.id.request() method to influence the look and feel of the Persona dialog:
SOCIALACCOUNT_PROVIDERS = \ { 'persona': { 'REQUEST_PARAMETERS': {'siteName': 'Example' } } }
SoundCloud allows you to choose between OAuth1 and OAuth2. Choose the latter.
The following signals are emitted:
allauth.account.signals.user_logged_in
Sent when a user logs in.
allauth.account.signals.user_signed_up
Sent when a user signs up for an account. This is signal is typically followed by a user_logged_in, unless e-mail verification prohibits the user to log in.
allauth.socialaccount.signals.pre_social_login
Sent after a user successfully authenticates via a social provider, but before the login is fully processed. This signal is emitted as part of the social login and/or signup process, as well as when connecting additional social accounts to an existing account. Access tokens and profile information, if applicable for the provider, is provided.
The following template tag libraries are available:
- account: tags for dealing with accounts in general
- socialaccount: tags focused on social accounts
Use user_display to render a user name without making assumptions on how the user is represented (e.g. render the username, or first name?):
{% load account %} {% user_display user %}
Or, if you need to use in a {% blocktrans %}:
{% load account %} {% user_display user as user_display %} {% blocktrans %}{{ user_display }} has logged in...{% endblocktrans %}
Then, override the ACCOUNT_USER_DISPLAY setting with your project specific user display callable.
Use the provider_login_url tag to generate provider specific login URLs:
{% load socialaccount %} <a href="{% provider_login_url "openid" openid="https://www.google.com/accounts/o8/id" next="/success/url/" %}">Google</a> <a href="{% provider_login_url "twitter" %}">Twitter</a>
For easy access to the social accounts for a user:
{% get_social_accounts user as accounts %}
Then:
{{accounts.twitter}} -- a list of connected Twitter accounts {{accounts.twitter.0}} -- the first Twitter account {% if accounts %} -- if there is at least one social account
Even when email verification is not mandatory during signup, there may be circumstances during which you really want to prevent unverified users to proceed. For this purpose you can use the following decorator:
from allauth.account.decorators import verified_email_required @verified_email_required def verified_users_only_view(request): ...
The behavior is as follows:
- If the user isn't logged in, it acts identical to the login_required decorator.
- If the user is logged in but has no verified e-mail address, an e-mail verification mail is automatically resend and the user is presented with a page informing him he needs to verify his email address.
- http://officecheese.com
- http://www.mycareerstack.com
- http://jug.gl
- http://www.charityblossom.org/
- http://www.superreceptionist.in
- http://www.edithuddle.com
- http://kwatsi.com
- http://www.smartgoalapp.com
- http://www.neekanee.com/
- ...
Please mail me ([email protected]) links to sites that have django-allauth up and running.