The developer who wrote my app initially is the only person who has admin rights to the app. Now it's being worked on by other developers and I cannot get him to grant me admin access. I've looked for ways around this but have not found a way yet, any help from the community would be much appreciated.
Thanks in advance!
OK so I figured out that it takes about 5 min to just get a new ID and recode my app. I haven't done it yet but it should be a breeze. One thing I'm worried about however, my app asked for users to verify who they were much more in the early stages and I hope a new ID doesn't resent the trust factor.
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(I have done a search through the questions to see if I could find something on this, but have not found answers.)
I have two google groups through my G-suite and I want to automatically add people to both groups after they sign up for my club through a process on my website. I think this should be possible using:
https://developers.google.com/admin-sdk/directory/v1/guides/manage-group-members
I have gone into the API Console, created a new project, enabled the Admin SDKI API, and got an API key. However, I think I am running into the Authorization issue because we keep getting an error that the authorization token is missing.
I have tried using the OAuth 2.0 but I'm not sure if this should be "Internal" or "External". I'm not creating a whole app for someone to use - all I want to do is on the back end of the site take information that comes through when someone joins the club and automatically have them added to my google groups.
Is it possible for someone to please explain to me what I need to do?
I'm sorry this is kind of a basic question.
Thank you for your help.
I was wondering of how to create a personal account in django.
For example I have two users in my project the details of one user-login cannot be seen by another...I mean User1 will have his/her personal data which will be not visible to User2...
Basically,I mean to say how to differentiate datas of Users in django...
Any guess??
Actually I am very much new to django. Thats why facing this difficulty.It will be real help if anyone can suggest me to solve this problem..
Thank you...
i have read all the answers ( i could find on the matter), and they say, if you are a developer, tester or admin of the application, you should be able to test the app without any problem. I have tried as a admin of the app, developer, tester etc (all the roles given in the developer dashboard) no luck, next i have tried with the test users, still no luck, when i ask the user for the permission (publish_stream), the popup always says
Submit for Login Review Some of the permissions below have not been
approved for use by Facebook.
I have setup the "privacy policy link", i have uploaded the application icon, entered the application description, still no luck. in the mean time, the other two permissions i ask (user_photos and email) work with no problem.
I can't get what i am doing wrong. has anyone had problems like this?how did he manage to solve them? any help will be much appreciated.
P.S the only thing i haven't tried is to submit the freaking app for review, but the app is far from done, so i think, the review will be rejected
You really don´t need to go through the review process for testing, unapproved permissions work for every Admin, Developer or Tester of the App. publish_stream is deprecated though, what you probably want is publish_actions.
If it still does not work with an Admin/Dev/Tester and the publish_actions permission, i´d suspect a bug. In that case you could report it: https://developers.facebook.com/bugs/
I should first note that I am a newbie in python/django applications but I am trying hard to learn :)
I am working/experimenting on a django project that supports login through openid providers. So I was able to login through my google account with no problems.
Recently, I decided to change the url of my site but at the same time I kept the current database because I dont want to lose my data,users etc. After that point, I am not able to login to the application. This is the following scenario that happens all the time:
Try to login to my site
Site doesn't remember me and I am redirected to google server
I fill my credentials in google server
I am redirected to my site that complains that the user already exists
So, I don't know how to manage with this problem. Is there any workaround or a hack that I can do to my database that will solve this problem? When I browse to my database I find several tables that may be related:
django_authopenid_association, django_authopenid_nonce, django_authopenid_userassociation,django_authopenid_userpasswordqueu
One of the tables in my database (django_authopenid_association) contains the following data. Do you believe that If I reset anything there is going to help?
If you have any good advices/tips are more than welcome.
Thanx
I found a solution/temp hack that worked for me. Of course, this doesn't imply that my solution is the optimal nor that I recommend this to anyone else.
What I did is to create a second account to my application using the same gmail account but having different user name. Then, I edit the new entry in the django_authopenid_association table, copy paste the openid_url value and use it for my old user (database entry 1 in the screenshot of my question).
After that, since I was able to login with my old user, I delete from the database the new user and everything seems to work smoothly until now.
I'm working on a django site, which I want the authentication part to work exactly like how Stack Overflow works. A new user comes to the site, they click on "create new account", choose their OpenID provider, get validated, then an account is created for them with "openiduser4356" or something as the username. The user can then go into preferences and change the username to whatever they want. I don't want any kind of local account sign-ups at all.
I pretty much spent all day getting django-authopenid working and it seems the only way this plugin works is by adding OpenID identities to already existing accounts. Heck, you can't even run your site when you have django-authopenid installed unless you have django-registration installed as well...
Before I spend another day wrestling with this thing to try getting it to do what I want, I'd rather just know off the bat if this kind of thing is even possible/a good idea. I noticed that there are a few other OpenID plugins for django out there. Are any of them any better at doing what I'm trying to do?
django-openid does not depend on django-registration.
You might also take a look at a fork of django-openid, django-openid-consumer. It works with the most recent python-openid libraries.
If you don't mind using rpxnow.com, check out http://github.com/howthebodyworks/django-rpx/tree/master