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Custom Django User model that makes email the USERNAME_FIELD.

Project description

CUser makes it easy to use email address as your identification token instead of a username.

CUser is a custom Django user model (extends AbstractBaseUser) so it takes a tiny amount of effort to use.

The only difference between CUser and the vanilla Django User is email address is the USERNAME_FIELD (and username does not exist).

CUser supports Django 1.8+

Why use CUser?

Because you want everything in django.contrib.auth except for the username field and you also want users to log in with email addresses. And you don’t want to create your own custom user model or authentication backend.

Install & Set up

  1. If you previously used Django’s default user model, django.contrib.auth.models.User, jump to Notes first (then come back). Otherwise, continue onward!

  2. Install with pip install django-username-email

  3. Add cuser to your INSTALLED_APPS setting:

    INSTALLED_APPS = [
        ...
        'cuser',
    ]
  4. 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 = 'cuser.CUser'
  5. Instead of referring to User directly, you should reference the user model using django.contrib.auth.get_user_model()

  6. If you use Django’s default AuthenticationForm class, it is strongly recommended that you replace it with the one included with CUser. This will make the <input> have its type attribute set to email and browsers’ autocomplete feature will suggest email addresses instead of usernames. For example, if your project is using Django’s default login view (or LoginView in Django 1.11), this is what you would put in your urls.py in order to make use of CUser’s AuthenticationForm class:

    from cuser.forms import AuthenticationForm
    from django.conf.urls import include, url
    from django.contrib.auth.views import login
    
    urlpatterns = [
        url(r'^accounts/login/$', login, {'authentication_form': AuthenticationForm}, name='login'),
        url(r'^accounts/', include('django.contrib.auth.urls')),
        ...
    ]

    Or if you’re using Django 1.11:

    from cuser.forms import AuthenticationForm
    from django.conf.urls import include, url
    from django.contrib.auth.views import LoginView
    
    urlpatterns = [
        url(r'^accounts/login/$', LoginView.as_view(authentication_form=AuthenticationForm), name='login'),
        url(r'^accounts/', include('django.contrib.auth.urls')),
        ...
    ]
  7. Run migrations.

    python manage.py migrate

Configuration

To override any of the default settings, create a dictionary named CUSER in your settings.py with each setting you want to override. For example:

CUSER = {
    'app_verbose_name': 'Authentication and Authorization',
    'register_proxy_auth_group_model': True,
}

These are the settings:

app_verbose_name (default: _("Custom User"))

This controls the value that CUser will use for its AppConfig class’ verbose_name.

register_proxy_auth_group_model (default: False)

When set to True, CUser’s admin.py will unregister Django’s default Group model and register its own proxy model of Django’s default Group model (also named Group). This is useful if you want Django’s default Group model to appear in the same part of the admin as CUser’s CUser model.

Notes

If you have tables referencing Django’s User model, you will have to delete those table and migrations, then re-migrate. This will ensure everything is set up correctly from the beginning.

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 Profile(models.Model):
    user = models.ForeignKey(
        settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL,
        on_delete=models.CASCADE,
)

License

Released under the MIT license. See LICENSE for details.

Questions, comments, or anything else?

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