Django - Removing username from user model - django

In order to create a new user model in Django 1.5.x, there are two approaches:
Inherit AbstractUser class which is the default user model you get, this way you can extend it with any attributes you want. However, if you want to remove any field, it's technically possible but not recommended; even if it can be done, it is against OOP principles, I believe. So if you would like to alter the current user model, there is the second approach.
Inherit AbstractBaseUser, which by looking at the code provides very basic functionality. You will miss all the goodness of permissions, profile retrieval and absolute url construction, unless you copy it from the default Django user model.
The above is my understanding of the situation. Correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't this mean that if I want to simply remove the username field out of the model since I won't need it at all, I have to copy paste the model code provided in the framework and inherit from AbstractBaseUser and PermissionsMixin? For such a simple thing, this approach doesn't look very pretty to me, and it looks a bit odd since I'm quite certain the custom user model was introduced largely because of the popular use case of email field as the user identifier instead of username.
Your thoughts (and corrections) please.

If You look at the source code of the django.contrib.auth.models file then you will see that definition of the AbstractUser class is rather short and starts like this:
class AbstractUser(AbstractBaseUser, PermissionsMixin):
...
It inherits from the AbstractBaseUser and PermissionMixin. You could define your custom model and also inherit it from the mentioned classes to get permissions support. If you want all other model fields then yes, you will need to copy them, but it's also an opportunity to customize things to match your needs.

Rather than using mixins and other applications which solve the problem,
The best way to tackle the problem of not wanting a username is to replace the username with the email address entered by the user.
What u need to do is,
go to the django source code which is usually situated in the python path.
usually in the site-packeges of the python folder,
go to django folder, and into contrib folder, and into auth folder, open the models.py file which contains the definition of the User model.
On Virtualenv -> <virtualenv_name>/lib/python2.7/site-packages/django
In the models.py of auth app
Go to -> AbstractUser class
replace the regex in "validators.RegexValidator" with this:
r"^[a-zA-Z0-9.!#$%&'*+/=?^_`{|}~-]+#[a-zA-Z0-9](?:[a-zA-Z0-9-]{0,61}[a-zA-Z0-9])?(?:\.[a-zA-Z0-9](?:[a-zA-Z0-9-]{0,61}[a-zA-Z0-9])?)+$"
replace only the regex part inside the "validators.RegexValidator"
and in the same class, alter the username field's max_length to 254
I didnt have the reputation to post image of the code, if anybody wants a screenshot of how it looks after altering the code, ping me.
Thats it!
now go back to your app and then you can replace the username field with the email of any type in this world.
The final step :
Go to your application where you are using the User model, meaning anywhere
python manage.py syncdb
python manage.py makemigrations
python manage.py migrate
if you don't see the auth model migrating then do,
python manage.py migrate auth
Now all you need to do is just replace the username with the email, during registration you can do somewhat like:
user = User.objects.create_user('email here', 'again email here', 'password here')
The best part about this is you dont have to change your authentication backend, as the email is itself the username and you can just label the username field as email.

Related

Django User inheritance

I am building a food ordering website with Django. I want my users to register an account on my site, and they should sign in to actually order. I want to use the User class built in with Django, but that doesn't include necessary fields like address, confirmation ID, and phone number. If I build a custom User model, that doesn't have many good helper functions which I can use like auth.authenticate. I searched this topic, and I found that I could use AbstractUser. But when I inherited my CustomUser class from AbstractUser, some strange things began to happen. After some more research, I found out that changing the User model after applying my built-in migrations give some errors as there are some relationships or something.
I deleted my database and created a new one. Now, I am extending my CustomUser class from the built-in User class. This works fine, only you can't do auth.authenticate checking with the, confirmation ID for instance. Also, it seems to create two models every time I create a new CustomUser, the other on in the Users under the auth tab.
Can you tell me any good way to connect the User model with a few more fields after applying the built-in migrations? Thanks in advance.
You should extend from AbstractUser and not User class ( behaviour you are experiencing is Multi-table inheritance (as documented))
Whole process of substituting default user model is well documented

What is the relationship with the variable user in Django with the User model?

I've noticed throughout my time studying Django that when I want to reference a users attributes I can do so by saying something like user.username etc. Obviously my assumption thus far has been that this variable "user" referencing the User model in Django but I haven't been able to find it anywhere officially. Can someone verify this to me so I can put this thought behind me?
Thank you!
You can find the default User model provided by Django in (your python environment)
django.contrib.auth.models
otherwise you can customize your User model like so

How to create a superuser in my own User Form?

I am creating my own form to register users, but how can I make possible to create superusers in it, and also I know django allows you, call user in the views like this:reques.user.username. I can only use that using django forms or I can also use that with my forms
I creating my own form because I don´t want the restriccion django password have, is there a way to change that, in oder to not create my own form
You can run command
python manage.py createsuperuser
Other way is that while saving User data make
is_superuser = True
For password
you need to inherit from AbstractBaseUser and then override that password field and needed to update it's hash, don't know how you will manage that thing but different hash are available.
Docs for custom user

Adding fields to user's personal info in Django admin page

I just started a Django project (there are no apps in it). I activated the admin in settings file and can access the Django administration page. There is a column in Django page to add users; while adding users I get only three fields under personnal info, but I need to store some more information about users. I Googled around and found that I can use user profiles to accomplish this. I tried, but I am having problems.
My aim is to add three more fields to the user table:
role
contact number
other
I need details like: which function I need to write and where to do this.
I found this, but I do not know where I need to write these steps. I would greatly appreciate a more clear explanation of this.
Django User Profiles is what you need. The blog you linked to has clear steps on how to do it. You can check out the Django documentation. http://www.turnkeylinux.org/blog/django-profile also provides a good explanation.
Basically you need to create a new model with User as ForeignKey and define the model in the settings.py as AUTH_PROFILE_MODULE = "django_app.your_profile_modelname". Create the profile and save it just like any other model, and access it using user.get_profile()
Adding a couple of things in response to your questions below:
First, do not create apps as a directory. Use startapp <appname> [destination] as described here. That will create the app directory.
Second, you have to add the app to INSTALLED_APPS in the project's settings file, do a syncdb. Basically, follow the steps in Django tutorial on writing your first app.
Third, UserProfile is a separate model. It is not an extension of User. It is associated with the User just because you added User as the ForeignKey.
Fourth, to be able to see the user profile model in admin, you do exactly what you would do to add any other model to admin page. Create a file names admin.py under your app with:
from django.contrib import admin
from myproject.app.models import UserProfile
admin.site.register(UserProfile)
There are three key concepts to understand:
There is no built in "profile" system in Django, beyond the limited auth app which is really geared just to user login. You are expected to roll your own.
There is nothing magical about a profile record in itslef, it is just like any other record that takes User as a foreign key (or, more properly, a one-to-one field as per the docs). You create it by creating a custom django app (traditionally called profiles) and a model for that app (traditionally called UserProfile, since Profile is not allowed as a model name).
The only thing that sets UserProfile aparts as a model is that you specify it as the AUTH_PROFILE_MODULE which means that it is accessible when called .get_profile() on a User record. That's it. If you set up the UserProfile like so:
def UserProfile(models.Model):
user = models.OneToOneField(User, related_name='profile')
other fields
then you can also access the profile as user.profile rather than user.get_profile() which some people prefer.
Again, nothing magical about the profile model -- it is just a model record like any other model record.
If you want to be able to edit additional fields within the user form that's more complicated; easiest way is probable unregister User and then register it again using your custom ModelAdmin and form class but judging by your question you're probably not at that level yet.

Django custom User model authentication

Since i'm not using the Auth User from Django, I have my own model CustomUser and I want make authentication on site through this model (CustomUser does not inherit from User model and not related to it at all).
class CustomUser(models.Model):
password = models.CharField(max_length = 40)
email = models.EmailField(max_length = 72, unique = True)
#stuff...
I checked https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/topics/auth/#writing-an-authentication-backend and the main thing I don't understand is:
from django.contrib.auth.models import User
Do I need to import Django User if I want to use my CustomUser?
I can't find a good tutorial which explains how you can use Django without standard Auth User.
*edit:
I know I can extend with User. But I just don't want that. The question is not: what is the best way to use User and store additional information etc etc. I appreciate it though.
BUT how I can use a Custom User without using Auth User. Even if I don't have a reason to. *
If it is possible I want to know how.
The whole Django auth system is tightly coupled with django.contrib.auth.models.User, so you should use it in the backend. Quoting Django docs
For now, the best way to deal with this is to create a Django User object for each user that exists for your backend
But the main question here is: what is so special about your CustomUser that you can't implement with normal User model (may be extended)? In 99% of cases using User is the best way.
Check out this post.
Most of the Django projects I’ve worked on need to store information about each user in addition to the standard name and email address held by the contrib.auth.models.User model.
If you’re using trunk as of revision 7477 (26th April 2008), your model classes can inherit from an existing model class. Additional fields are stored in a separate table which is linked to the table of the base model. When you retrieve your model, the query uses a join to get the fields from it and the base model.
http://scottbarnham.com/blog/2008/08/21/extending-the-django-user-model-with-inheritance/
And this post.
Copy the auth application over into your own project and modify it to your needs. This avoids some of the maintenance troubles, but removes the utility of Django bundling an auth system in the first place. It can also cause compatibility problems with other applications which expect the User model to be in django.contrib.auth.
http://www.b-list.org/weblog/2006/jun/06/django-tips-extending-user-model/
Perhaps this answers your question:
From 'https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.6/topics/auth/customizing/#substituting-a-custom-user-model':
Substituting a custom User model
New in Django 1.5.
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 name 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.
Of course there are some requisite warnings to consider (available at the above link), but this is looking like a good answer to your question: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.6/ref/settings/#auth-user-model
There are also some custom model compliance expectations to consider (too many to list here): https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.6/topics/auth/customizing/#specifying-a-custom-user-model
Unless there can be more than one value for AUTH_USER_MODEL (I doubt that is sane), then I think I will need to build my own custom authentication backend: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.6/topics/auth/customizing/#writing-an-authentication-backend
I hope this helps any other lost souls out there that need distinct User and Device authentication schemes (perhaps because of some pre-existing spec that makes messy what could be soooo easy).
Cheers!