An enhanced permission system which support object permission in Django

Overview

django-permission

Build status Coverage Requirements Status Inspection Version License Format Supported python versions Status
Author
Alisue <[email protected]>
Supported python versions
Python 2.7, 3.3, 3.4, 3.5, 3.6
Supported django versions
Django 1.8 - 1.11b

An enhanced permission library which enables a logic-based permission system to handle complex permissions in Django.

Documentation

http://django-permission.readthedocs.org/en/latest/

Installation

Use pip like:

$ pip install django-permission

Usage

The following might help you to understand as well.

Configuration

  1. Add permission to the INSTALLED_APPS in your settings module

    INSTALLED_APPS = (
        # ...
        'permission',
    )
  2. Add our extra authorization/authentication backend

    AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS = (
        'django.contrib.auth.backends.ModelBackend', # default
        'permission.backends.PermissionBackend',
    )
  3. Follow the instructions below to apply logical permissions to django models

Autodiscovery

Like django's admin package, django-permission automatically discovers the perms.py in your application directory by running ``permission.autodiscover()``. Additionally, if the perms.py module has a PERMISSION_LOGICS variable, django-permission automatically run the following functions to apply the permission logics.

for model, permission_logic_instance in PERMISSION_LOGICS:
    if isinstance(model, str):
        model = get_model(*model.split(".", 1))
    add_permission_logic(model, permission_logic_instance)

Note

Autodiscover feature is automatically called if you are using django higher than 1.7 so no need to follow the tutorial below. To disable, use PERMISSION_AUTODISCOVER_ENABLE setting.

Quick tutorial

  1. Add import permission; permission.autodiscover() to your urls.py like:

    from django.conf.urls import patterns, include, url
    from django.contrib import admin
    
    admin.autodiscover()
    # add this line
    import permission; permission.autodiscover()
    
    urlpatterns = patterns('',
        url(r'^admin/', include(admin.site.urls)),
        # ...
    )
  2. Write perms.py in your application directory like:

    from permission.logics import AuthorPermissionLogic
    from permission.logics import CollaboratorsPermissionLogic
    
    PERMISSION_LOGICS = (
        ('your_app.Article', AuthorPermissionLogic()),
        ('your_app.Article', CollaboratorsPermissionLogic()),
    )

You can specify a different module or variable name, with PERMISSION_AUTODISCOVER_MODULE_NAME or PERMISSION_AUTODISCOVER_VARIABLE_NAME respectively.

Apply permission logic

Let's assume you wrote an article model which has an author attribute to store the creator of the article, and you want to give that author full control permissions (e.g. add, change and delete permissions).

What you need to do is just applying permission.logics.AuthorPermissionLogic to the Article model like

from django.db import models
from django.contrib.auth.models import User


class Article(models.Model):
    title = models.CharField('title', max_length=120)
    body = models.TextField('body')
    author = models.ForeignKey(User)

    # this is just required for easy explanation
    class Meta:
        app_label='permission'

# apply AuthorPermissionLogic
from permission import add_permission_logic
from permission.logics import AuthorPermissionLogic
add_permission_logic(Article, AuthorPermissionLogic())

Note

From django-permission version 0.8.0, you can specify related object with field__name attribute like django queryset lookup. See the working example below:

from django.db import models
from django.contrib.auth.models import User


class Article(models.Model):
    title = models.CharField('title', max_length=120)
    body = models.TextField('body')
    project = models.ForeignKey('permission.Project')

    # this is just required for easy explanation
    class Meta:
        app_label='permission'

class Project(models.Model):
    title = models.CharField('title', max_length=120)
    body = models.TextField('body')
    author = models.ForeignKey(User)

    # this is just required for easy explanation
    class Meta:
        app_label='permission'

# apply AuthorPermissionLogic to Article
from permission import add_permission_logic
from permission.logics import AuthorPermissionLogic
add_permission_logic(Article, AuthorPermissionLogic(
    field_name='project__author',
))

That's it. Now the following codes will work as expected:

user1 = User.objects.create_user(
    username='john',
    email='[email protected]',
    password='password',
)
user2 = User.objects.create_user(
    username='alice',
    email='[email protected]',
    password='password',
)

art1 = Article.objects.create(
    title="Article 1",
    body="foobar hogehoge",
    author=user1
)
art2 = Article.objects.create(
    title="Article 2",
    body="foobar hogehoge",
    author=user2
)

# You have to apply 'permission.add_article' to users manually because it
# is not an object permission.
from permission.utils.permissions import perm_to_permission
user1.user_permissions.add(perm_to_permission('permission.add_article'))

assert user1.has_perm('permission.add_article') == True
assert user1.has_perm('permission.change_article') == False
assert user1.has_perm('permission.change_article', art1) == True
assert user1.has_perm('permission.change_article', art2) == False

assert user2.has_perm('permission.add_article') == False
assert user2.has_perm('permission.delete_article') == False
assert user2.has_perm('permission.delete_article', art1) == False
assert user2.has_perm('permission.delete_article', art2) == True

#
# You may also be interested in django signals to apply 'add' permissions to the
# newly created users.
# https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/signals/#django.db.models.signals.post_save
#
from django.db.models.signals.post_save
from django.dispatch import receiver
from permission.utils.permissions import perm_to_permission

@receiver(post_save, sender=User)
def apply_permissions_to_new_user(sender, instance, created, **kwargs):
    if not created:
        return
    #
    # permissions you want to apply to the newly created user
    # YOU SHOULD NOT APPLY PERMISSIONS EXCEPT PERMISSIONS FOR 'ADD'
    # in this way, the applied permissions are not object permission so
    # if you apply 'permission.change_article' then the user can change
    # any article object.
    #
    permissions = [
        'permission.add_article',
    ]
    for permission in permissions:
        # apply permission
        # perm_to_permission is a utility to convert string permission
        # to permission instance.
        instance.user_permissions.add(perm_to_permission(permission))

See http://django-permission.readthedocs.org/en/latest/_modules/permission/logics/author.html#AuthorPermissionLogic to learn how this logic works.

Now, assume you add collaborators attribute to store collaborators of the article and you want to give them a change permission.

What you need to do is quite simple. Apply permission.logics.CollaboratorsPermissionLogic to the Article model as follows

from django.db import models
from django.contrib.auth.models import User


class Article(models.Model):
    title = models.CharField('title', max_length=120)
    body = models.TextField('body')
    author = models.ForeignKey(User)
    collaborators = models.ManyToManyField(User)

    # this is just required for easy explanation
    class Meta:
        app_label='permission'

# apply AuthorPermissionLogic and CollaboratorsPermissionLogic
from permission import add_permission_logic
from permission.logics import AuthorPermissionLogic
from permission.logics import CollaboratorsPermissionLogic
add_permission_logic(Article, AuthorPermissionLogic())
add_permission_logic(Article, CollaboratorsPermissionLogic(
    field_name='collaborators',
    any_permission=False,
    change_permission=True,
    delete_permission=False,
))

Note

From django-permission version 0.8.0, you can specify related object with field_name attribute like django queryset lookup. See the working example below:

from django.db import models
from django.contrib.auth.models import User


class Article(models.Model):
    title = models.CharField('title', max_length=120)
    body = models.TextField('body')
    project = models.ForeignKey('permission.Project')

    # this is just required for easy explanation
    class Meta:
        app_label='permission'

class Project(models.Model):
    title = models.CharField('title', max_length=120)
    body = models.TextField('body')
    collaborators = models.ManyToManyField(User)

    # this is just required for easy explanation
    class Meta:
        app_label='permission'

# apply AuthorPermissionLogic to Article
from permission import add_permission_logic
from permission.logics import CollaboratorsPermissionLogic
add_permission_logic(Article, CollaboratorsPermissionLogic(
    field_name='project__collaborators',
))

That's it. Now the following codes will work as expected:

user1 = User.objects.create_user(
    username='john',
    email='[email protected]',
    password='password',
)
user2 = User.objects.create_user(
    username='alice',
    email='[email protected]',
    password='password',
)

art1 = Article.objects.create(
    title="Article 1",
    body="foobar hogehoge",
    author=user1
)
art1.collaborators.add(user2)

assert user1.has_perm('permission.change_article') == False
assert user1.has_perm('permission.change_article', art1) == True
assert user1.has_perm('permission.delete_article', art1) == True

assert user2.has_perm('permission.change_article') == False
assert user2.has_perm('permission.change_article', art1) == True
assert user2.has_perm('permission.delete_article', art1) == False

See http://django-permission.readthedocs.org/en/latest/_modules/permission/logics/collaborators.html#CollaboratorsPermissionLogic to learn how this logic works.

There are StaffPermissionLogic and GroupInPermissionLogic for is_staff or group based permission logic as well.

Customize permission logic

Your own permission logic class must be a subclass of permission.logics.PermissionLogic and must override has_perm(user_obj, perm, obj=None) method which return boolean value.

Class, method, or function decorator

Like Django's permission_required but it can be used for object permissions and as a class, method, or function decorator. Also, you don't need to specify a object to this decorator for object permission. This decorator automatically determined the object from request (so you cannnot use this decorator for non view class/method/function but you anyway use user.has_perm in that case).

>>> from permission.decorators import permission_required
>>> # As class decorator
>>> @permission_required('auth.change_user')
>>> class UpdateAuthUserView(UpdateView):
...     pass
>>> # As method decorator
>>> class UpdateAuthUserView(UpdateView):
...     @permission_required('auth.change_user')
...     def dispatch(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
...         pass
>>> # As function decorator
>>> @permission_required('auth.change_user')
>>> def update_auth_user(request, *args, **kwargs):
...     pass

Override the builtin if template tag

django-permission overrides the builtin if tag, adding two operators to handle permissions in templates. You can write a permission test by using has keyword, and a target object with of as below.

{% if user has 'blogs.add_article' %}
    <p>This user have 'blogs.add_article' permissionp>
{% elif user has 'blog.change_article' of object %}
    <p>This user have 'blogs.change_article' permission of {{object}}p>
{% endif %}

{# If you set 'PERMISSION_REPLACE_BUILTIN_IF = False' in settings #}
{% permission user has 'blogs.add_article' %}
    <p>This user have 'blogs.add_article' permissionp>
{% elpermission user has 'blog.change_article' of object %}
    <p>This user have 'blogs.change_article' permission of {{object}}p>
{% endpermission %}

Note

From Django 1.9, users require to add 'permission.templatetags.permissionif' to 'builtins' option manually. See - https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.9/releases/1.9/#django-template-base-add-to-builtins-is-removed - https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.9/topics/templates/#module-django.template.backends.django Or following example:

TEMPLATES = [
    {
        'BACKEND': 'django.template.backends.django.DjangoTemplates',
        'OPTIONS': {
            'builtins': ['permission.templatetags.permissionif'],
        },
    },
]

License

The MIT License (MIT)

Copyright (c) 2015 Alisue, hashnote.net

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

PetitPotam - Coerce NTLM authentication from Windows hosts

Python implementation for PetitPotam

ollypwn 137 Dec 28, 2022
User Authentication in Flask using Flask-Login

User-Authentication-in-Flask Set up & Installation. 1 .Clone/Fork the git repo and create an environment Windows git clone https://github.com/Dev-Elie

ONDIEK ELIJAH OCHIENG 31 Dec 11, 2022
Toolkit for Pyramid, a Pylons Project, to add Authentication and Authorization using Velruse (OAuth) and/or a local database, CSRF, ReCaptcha, Sessions, Flash messages and I18N

Apex Authentication, Form Library, I18N/L10N, Flash Message Template (not associated with Pyramid, a Pylons project) Uses alchemy Authentication Authe

95 Nov 28, 2022
FastAPI Simple authentication & Login API using GraphQL and JWT

JeffQL A Simple FastAPI authentication & Login API using GraphQL and JWT. I choose this Name JeffQL cause i have a Low level Friend with a Nickname Je

Yasser Tahiri 26 Nov 24, 2022
Django-react-firebase-auth - A web app showcasing OAuth2.0 + OpenID Connect using Firebase, Django-Rest-Framework and React

Demo app to show Django Rest Framework working with Firebase for authentication

Teshank Raut 6 Oct 13, 2022
Plotly Dash plugin to allow authentication through 3rd party OAuth providers.

dash-auth-external Integrate your dashboards with 3rd parties and external OAuth providers. Overview Do you want to build a Plotly Dash app which pull

James Holcombe 15 Dec 11, 2022
A Python tool to generate and refresh Amazon access tokens.

amazon_auth A Python tool to generate and refresh Amazon access tokens. Description This tool generates and outputs Amazon access and refresh tokens f

15 Nov 21, 2022
Basic auth for Django.

easy-basicauth WARNING! THIS LIBRARY IS IN PROGRESS! ANYTHING CAN CHANGE AT ANY MOMENT WITHOUT ANY NOTICE! Installation pip install easy-basicauth Usa

bichanna 2 Mar 25, 2022
An introduction of Markov decision process (MDP) and two algorithms that solve MDPs (value iteration, policy iteration) along with their Python implementations.

Markov Decision Process A Markov decision process (MDP), by definition, is a sequential decision problem for a fully observable, stochastic environmen

Yu Shen 31 Dec 30, 2022
This app makes it extremely easy to build Django powered SPA's (Single Page App) or Mobile apps exposing all registration and authentication related functionality as CBV's (Class Base View) and REST (JSON)

Welcome to django-rest-auth Repository is unmaintained at the moment (on pause). More info can be found on this issue page: https://github.com/Tivix/d

Tivix 2.4k Jan 03, 2023
Corsair_scan is a security tool to test Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS).

Welcome to Corsair_scan Corsair_scan is a security tool to test Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) misconfigurations. CORS is a mechanism that allow

Santander Security Research 116 Nov 09, 2022
row level security for FastAPI framework

Row Level Permissions for FastAPI While trying out the excellent FastApi framework there was one peace missing for me: an easy, declarative way to def

Holger Frey 315 Dec 25, 2022
Python's simple login system concept - Advanced level

Simple login system with Python - For beginners Creating a simple login system using python for beginners this repository aims to provide a simple ove

Low_Scarlet 1 Dec 13, 2021
Social auth made simple

Python Social Auth Python Social Auth is an easy-to-setup social authentication/registration mechanism with support for several frameworks and auth pr

Matías Aguirre 2.8k Dec 24, 2022
Creation & manipulation of PyPI tokens

PyPIToken: Manipulate PyPI API tokens PyPIToken is an open-source Python 3.6+ library for generating and manipulating PyPI tokens. PyPI tokens are ver

Joachim Jablon 8 Nov 01, 2022
OAuthlib support for Python-Requests!

Requests-OAuthlib This project provides first-class OAuth library support for Requests. The OAuth 1 workflow OAuth 1 can seem overly complicated and i

1.6k Dec 28, 2022
Flask Implementation of a login page and some basic functionality.

login_page Flask Implementation of a login page and some basic functionality. How to Run $ chmod +x run.sh setup.sh $ # run setup.sh only if the datab

3 Jun 03, 2021
Flask user session management.

Flask-Login Flask-Login provides user session management for Flask. It handles the common tasks of logging in, logging out, and remembering your users

Max Countryman 3.2k Dec 28, 2022
Ready-to-use and customizable users management for FastAPI

FastAPI Users Ready-to-use and customizable users management for FastAPI Documentation: https://frankie567.github.io/fastapi-users/ Source Code: https

François Voron 2.4k Jan 04, 2023
Django Auth Protection This package logout users from the system by changing the password in Simple JWT REST API.

Django Auth Protection Django Auth Protection This package logout users from the system by changing the password in REST API. Why Django Auth Protecti

Iman Karimi 5 Oct 26, 2022