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Django Social Auth

Django Social Auth is an easy to setup social authentication/authorization mechanism for Django projects.

Crafted using base code from django-twitter-oauth and django-openid-auth, implements a common interface to define new authentication providers from third parties.

You can check this documentation on Read the Docs too.

There's a demo at http://social.matiasaguirre.net/. Note: It lacks some backends support at the moment.

This application provides user registration and login using social sites credentials, some features are:

Dependencies that must be meet to use the application:

From pypi:

$ pip install django-social-auth

or:

$ easy_install django-social-auth

or clone from github:

$ git clone git://github.com/omab/django-social-auth.git

and add social_auth to PYTHONPATH:

$ export PYTHONPATH=$PYTHONPATH:$(pwd)/django-social-auth/

or:

$ cd django-social-auth
$ sudo python setup.py install
  • Add social_auth to PYTHONPATH and installed applications:

    INSTALLED_APPS = (
        ...
        'social_auth'
    )
    
  • Add desired authentication backends to Django's AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS setting:

    AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS = (
        'social_auth.backends.twitter.TwitterBackend',
        'social_auth.backends.facebook.FacebookBackend',
        'social_auth.backends.google.GoogleOAuthBackend',
        'social_auth.backends.google.GoogleOAuth2Backend',
        'social_auth.backends.google.GoogleBackend',
        'social_auth.backends.yahoo.YahooBackend',
        'social_auth.backends.browserid.BrowserIDBackend',
        'social_auth.backends.contrib.linkedin.LinkedinBackend',
        'social_auth.backends.contrib.livejournal.LiveJournalBackend',
        'social_auth.backends.contrib.orkut.OrkutBackend',
        'social_auth.backends.contrib.foursquare.FoursquareBackend',
        'social_auth.backends.contrib.github.GithubBackend',
        'social_auth.backends.contrib.dropbox.DropboxBackend',
        'social_auth.backends.contrib.flickr.FlickrBackend',
        'social_auth.backends.contrib.instagram.InstagramBackend',
        'social_auth.backends.contrib.vkontakte.VkontakteBackend',
        'social_auth.backends.contrib.skyrock.SkyrockBackend',
        'social_auth.backends.contrib.yahoo.YahooOAuthBackend',
        'social_auth.backends.OpenIDBackend',
        'social_auth.backends.contrib.bitbucket.BitbucketBackend',
        'social_auth.backends.contrib.live.LiveBackend',
        'django.contrib.auth.backends.ModelBackend',
    )
    

    Take into account that backends must be defined in AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS or Django won't pick them when trying to authenticate the user.

    Don't miss django.contrib.auth.backends.ModelBackend if using django.auth user model or users won't be able to login.

  • Setup needed OAuth keys (see OAuth section for details):

    TWITTER_CONSUMER_KEY         = ''
    TWITTER_CONSUMER_SECRET      = ''
    FACEBOOK_APP_ID              = ''
    FACEBOOK_API_SECRET          = ''
    LINKEDIN_CONSUMER_KEY        = ''
    LINKEDIN_CONSUMER_SECRET     = ''
    ORKUT_CONSUMER_KEY           = ''
    ORKUT_CONSUMER_SECRET        = ''
    GOOGLE_CONSUMER_KEY          = ''
    GOOGLE_CONSUMER_SECRET       = ''
    GOOGLE_OAUTH2_CLIENT_ID      = ''
    GOOGLE_OAUTH2_CLIENT_SECRET  = ''
    FOURSQUARE_CONSUMER_KEY      = ''
    FOURSQUARE_CONSUMER_SECRET   = ''
    GITHUB_APP_ID                = ''
    GITHUB_API_SECRET            = ''
    DROPBOX_APP_ID               = ''
    DROPBOX_API_SECRET           = ''
    FLICKR_APP_ID                = ''
    FLICKR_API_SECRET            = ''
    INSTAGRAM_CLIENT_ID          = ''
    INSTAGRAM_CLIENT_SECRET      = ''
    VK_APP_ID                    = ''
    VK_API_SECRET                = ''
    BITBUCKET_CONSUMER_KEY       = ''
    BITBUCKET_CONSUMER_SECRET    = ''
    LIVE_CLIENT_ID               = ''
    LIVE_CLIENT_SECRET           = ''
    SKYROCK_CONSUMER_KEY         = ''
    SKYROCK_CONSUMER_SECRET      = ''
    YAHOO_CONSUMER_KEY           = ''
    YAHOO_CONSUMER_SECRET        = ''
    
  • Setup login URLs:

    LOGIN_URL          = '/login-form/'
    LOGIN_REDIRECT_URL = '/logged-in/'
    LOGIN_ERROR_URL    = '/login-error/'
    

    Check Django documentation at Login URL and Login redirect URL

    If a custom redirect URL is needed that must be different to LOGIN_URL, define the setting:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_LOGIN_REDIRECT_URL = '/another-login-url/'
    

    A different URL could be defined for newly registered users:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_NEW_USER_REDIRECT_URL = '/new-users-redirect-url/'
    

    or for newly associated accounts:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_NEW_ASSOCIATION_REDIRECT_URL = '/new-association-redirect-url/'
    

    or for account disconnections:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_DISCONNECT_REDIRECT_URL = '/account-disconnected-redirect-url/'
    

    Users will be redirected to LOGIN_ERROR_URL in case of error or user cancellation on some backends. This URL can be override by this setting:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_BACKEND_ERROR_URL = '/new-error-url/'
    
  • Configure authentication and association complete URL names to avoid possible clashes:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_COMPLETE_URL_NAME  = 'socialauth_complete'
    SOCIAL_AUTH_ASSOCIATE_URL_NAME = 'socialauth_associate_complete'
    
  • Add URLs entries:

    urlpatterns = patterns('',
        ...
        url(r'', include('social_auth.urls')),
        ...
    )
    

    All django-social-auth URLs names have socialauth_ prefix.

  • Define context processors if needed:

    TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS = (
        ...
        'social_auth.context_processors.social_auth_by_name_backends',
        'social_auth.context_processors.social_auth_backends',
        'social_auth.context_processors.social_auth_by_type_backends',
    )
    
    • social_auth_by_name_backends: Adds a social_auth dict where each key is a provider name and its value is a UserSocialAuth instance if user has associated an account with that provider, otherwise None.
    • social_auth_backends: Adds a social_auth dict with keys are associated, not_associated and backends. associated key is a list of UserSocialAuth instances associated with current user. not_associated is a list of providers names that the current user doesn't have any association yet. backends holds the list of backend names supported.
    • social_auth_by_type_backends: Simiar to social_auth_backends but each value is grouped by backend type openid, oauth2 and oauth.

    Check social_auth.context_processors for details.

    Note: social_auth_backends and social_auth_by_type_backends don't play nice together.

  • Sync database to create needed models:

    ./manage.py syncdb
    
  • Not mandatory, but recommended:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_DEFAULT_USERNAME = 'new_social_auth_user'
    

    or:

    import random
    SOCIAL_AUTH_DEFAULT_USERNAME = lambda: random.choice(['Darth Vader', 'Obi-Wan Kenobi', 'R2-D2', 'C-3PO', 'Yoda'])
    

    in case your user layout needs to purify username on some weird way.

    Final user name will have a random UUID-generated suffix in case it's already taken. The UUID token max length can be changed with the setting:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_UUID_LENGTH = 16
    
  • Backends will store extra values from response by default, set this to False to avoid such behavior:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_EXTRA_DATA = False
    

    Also more extra values will be stored if defined, details about this setting are listed below on OpenId and OAuth sections.

  • The update_user_details pipeline processor will set certain fields on user objects, such as email. Set this to a list of fields you only want to set for newly created users:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_PROTECTED_USER_FIELDS = ['email',]

    Session expiration time is an special value, it's recommended to define:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_EXPIRATION = 'expires'
    

    and use such setting name where expiration times are returned. View that completes login process will set session expiration time using this name if it's present or expires by default. Expiration configuration can be disabled with setting:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_SESSION_EXPIRATION = False
    
  • It's possible to override the used User model if needed:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_USER_MODEL = 'myapp.CustomUser'
    

    This class must have a custom Model Manager with a create_user method that resembles the one on auth.UserManager.

    Also, it's highly recommended that this class define the following fields:

    username   = CharField(...)
    last_login = DateTimeField(blank=True)
    is_active  = BooleanField(...)
    

    and the method:

    is_authenticated():
        ...
    

    These are needed to ensure a better django-auth integration, in other case login_required won't be usable. A warning is displayed if any of these are missing. By default auth.User is used.

    Check example application for implementation details, but first, please take a look to User Profiles, it might be what you were looking for.

    It's possible to disable user creations by django-social-auth with:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_CREATE_USERS = False
    

    It is also possible to associate multiple user accounts with a single email address, set value as True to enable, otherwise set as False to disable. This behavior is enabled by default (True) unless specifically set:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_ASSOCIATE_BY_MAIL = False
    
  • You can send extra parameters on auth process by defining settings per provider, example to request Facebook to show Mobile authorization page, define:

    FACEBOOK_AUTH_EXTRA_ARGUMENTS = {'display': 'touch'}
    

    For other providers, just define settings in the form:

    <uppercase backend name>_AUTH_EXTRA_ARGUMENTS = {...}
    
  • Also, you can send extra parameters on request token process by defining settings per provider in the same way explained above but with this other suffix:

    <uppercase backend name>_REQUEST_TOKEN_EXTRA_ARGUMENTS = {...}
    
  • By default the application doesn't make redirects to different domains, to disable this behavior:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_SANITIZE_REDIRECTS = False
    
  • Inactive users can be redirected to a different page if this setting is defined:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_INACTIVE_USER_URL = '...'
    

    Defaults to LOGIN_ERROR_URL.

  • The application catches any exception and logs errors to logger or django.contrib.messagess application by default. But it's possible to override the default behavior by defining a function to process the exceptions using this setting:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_PROCESS_EXCEPTIONS = 'social_auth.utils.process_exceptions'
    

    The function parameters will request holding the current request object, backend with the current backend and err which is the exception instance.

    Recently this set of exceptions were introduce to describe the situations a bit more than the old ValueError usually raised:

    AuthException           - Base exception class
    AuthFailed              - Authentication failed for some reason
    AuthCanceled            - Authentication was canceled by the user
    AuthUnknownError        - An unknown error stoped the authentication
                              process
    AuthTokenError          - Unauthorized or access token error, it was
                              invalid, impossible to authenticate or user
                              removed permissions to it.
    AuthMissingParameter    - A needed parameter to continue the process was
                              missing, usually raised by the services that
                              need some POST data like myOpenID
    

    These are a subclass of ValueError to keep backward compatibility.

    Having tracebacks is really useful when debugging, for that purpose this setting was defined:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_RAISE_EXCEPTIONS = DEBUG
    

    It's default value is DEBUG, so you need to set it to False to avoid tracebacks when DEBUG = True.

  • When your project is behind a reverse proxy that uses HTTPS the redirect URIs can became with the wrong schema (http:// instead of https://), and might cause errors with the auth process, to force HTTPS in the final URIs define this setting:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_REDIRECT_IS_HTTPS = True
    
  • The name of the last backend used to login is stored as a string in the session under the key social_auth_last_login_backend, the key can be customized by defining this setting:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_LAST_LOGIN = 'social_auth_last_login_backend'
    

Some settings can be tweak by backend by adding the backend name prefix (all uppercase and replace - with _), here's the supported settings so far:

LOGIN_ERROR_URL
SOCIAL_AUTH_BACKEND_ERROR_URL
SOCIAL_AUTH_NEW_ASSOCIATION_REDIRECT_URL
SOCIAL_AUTH_DISCONNECT_REDIRECT_URL
SOCIAL_AUTH_NEW_USER_REDIRECT_URL
SOCIAL_AUTH_LOGIN_REDIRECT_URL
SOCIAL_AUTH_INACTIVE_USER_URL

The final process of the authentication workflow is handled by a operations pipeline where custom functions can be added or default items can be removed to provide a custom behavior.

The default pipeline mimics the user creation and basic data gathering from previous django-social-auth versions and a big set of settings (listed below) that were used to alter the default behavior are now deprecated in favor of pipeline overrides.

The default pipeline is composed by:

(
    'social_auth.backends.pipeline.social.social_auth_user',
    'social_auth.backends.pipeline.associate.associate_by_email',
    'social_auth.backends.pipeline.user.get_username',
    'social_auth.backends.pipeline.user.create_user',
    'social_auth.backends.pipeline.social.associate_user',
    'social_auth.backends.pipeline.social.load_extra_data',
    'social_auth.backends.pipeline.user.update_user_details'
)

But it's possible to override it by defining the setting SOCIAL_AUTH_PIPELINE, for example a pipeline that won't create users, just accept already registered ones would look like this:

SOCIAL_AUTH_PIPELINE = (
    'social_auth.backends.pipeline.social.social_auth_user',
    'social_auth.backends.pipeline.social.associate_user',
    'social_auth.backends.pipeline.social.load_extra_data',
    'social_auth.backends.pipeline.user.update_user_details'
)
Each pipeline function will receive the following parameters:
  • Current social authentication backend
  • User ID given by authentication provider
  • User details given by authentication provider
  • is_new flag (initialized in False)
  • Any arguments passed to auth_complete backend method, default views pass this arguments:
    • current logged in user (if it's logged in, otherwise None)
    • current request

Each pipeline entry must return a dict or None, any value in the dict will be used in the kwargs argument for the next pipeline entry.

The workflow will be cut if the exception social_auth.backends.exceptions.StopPipeline is raised at any point.

If any function returns something else beside a dict or None, the workflow will be cut and the value returned immediately, this is useful to return HttpReponse instances like HttpResponseRedirect.

It's possible to cut the pipeline process to return to the user asking for more data and resume the process later, to accomplish this add the entry social_auth.backends.pipeline.misc.save_status_to_session (or a similar implementation) to the pipeline setting before any entry that returns an HttpResponse instance:

SOCIAL_AUTH_PIPELINE = (
    ...
    social_auth.backends.pipeline.misc.save_status_to_session,
    app.pipeline.redirect_to_basic_user_data_form
    ...
)

When it's time to resume the process just redirect the user to /complete/<backend>/ view. By default the pipeline will be resumed in the next entry after save_status_to_session but this can be modified by setting the following setting to the import path of the pipeline entry to resume processing:

SOCIAL_AUTH_PIPELINE_RESUME_ENTRY = 'social_auth.backends.pipeline.misc.save_status_to_session'

save_status_to_session saves needed data into user session, the key can be defined by SOCIAL_AUTH_PARTIAL_PIPELINE_KEY which default value is partial_pipeline:

SOCIAL_AUTH_PARTIAL_PIPELINE_KEY = 'partial_pipeline'

Check the example application to check a basic usage.

The following settings are deprecated in favor of pipeline functions.

  • These settings should be avoided and override get_username pipeline entry with the desired behavior:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_FORCE_RANDOM_USERNAME
    SOCIAL_AUTH_DEFAULT_USERNAME
    SOCIAL_AUTH_UUID_LENGTH
    SOCIAL_AUTH_USERNAME_FIXER
    SOCIAL_AUTH_ASSOCIATE_URL_NAME
    
  • User creation setting should be avoided and remove the entry create_user from pipeline instead:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_CREATE_USERS
    
  • Automatic data update should be stopped by overriding update_user_details pipeline entry instead of using this setting:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_CHANGE_SIGNAL_ONLY
    
  • Extra data retrieval from providers should be stopped by removing load_extra_data from pipeline instead of using this setting:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_EXTRA_DATA
    
  • Automatic email association should be avoided by removing associate_by_email pipeline entry instead of using this setting:

    SOCIAL_AUTH_ASSOCIATE_BY_MAIL
    
  • Associate URLs are deprecated since the login ones can handle the case, this avoids issues where providers check the redirect URI and redirects to the configured value in the application. So, from now on a single entry point is recommended being:

    /<social auth path>/login/<backend>/
    

    And to complete the process:

    /<social auth path>/complete/<backend>/
    

Authentication process starts with socialauth_begin URL.

Template code example:

<ul>
  <li>
    <a href="{% url socialauth_begin 'twitter' %}">Enter using Twitter</a>
  </li>
  <li>
    <a href="{% url socialauth_begin 'facebook' %}">Enter using Facebook</a>
  </li>
</ul>

In the example above we assume that Twitter and Facebook authentication backends enabled, and following settings provided:

TWITTER_CONSUMER_KEY = 'real key here'
TWITTER_CONSUMER_SECRET = 'real secret here'
FACEBOOK_APP_ID = 'real id here'
FACEBOOK_API_SECRET = 'real secret here'

A pre_update signal is sent when user data is about to be updated with new values from authorization service provider, this apply to new users and already existent ones. This is useful to update custom user fields or User Profiles, for example, to store user gender, location, etc. Example:

from social_auth.signals import pre_update
from social_auth.backends.facebook import FacebookBackend

def facebook_extra_values(sender, user, response, details, **kwargs):
    user.gender = response.get('gender')
    return True

pre_update.connect(facebook_extra_values, sender=FacebookBackend)

New data updating is made automatically but could be disabled and left only to signal handler if this setting value is set to True:

SOCIAL_AUTH_CHANGE_SIGNAL_ONLY = False

Take into account that when defining a custom User model and declaring signal handler in models.py, the imports and handler definition must be made after the custom User model is defined or circular imports issues will be raised.

Also a new-user signal (socialauth_registered) is sent when new accounts are created:

from social_auth.signals import socialauth_registered

def new_users_handler(sender, user, response, details, **kwargs):
    user.is_new = True
    return False

socialauth_registered.connect(new_users_handler, sender=None)

Almost every service covered provide some kind of API that is protected with access_token or token pairs (like Twitter OAuth keys). These tokens are gathered by the authentication mechanism and stored in UserSocialAuth.extra_data.

UserSocialAuth has a property named tokens to easilly access this useful values, it will return a dictionary containing the tokens values. A simple usage example:

>>> from pprint import pprint
>>> from social_auth.models import UserSocialAuth
>>> instance = UserSocialAuth.objects.filter(provider='twitter').get(...)
>>> pprint(instance.tokens)
{u'oauth_token': u'xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx',
 u'oauth_token_secret': u'yyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy'}
>>> instance = UserSocialAuth.objects.filter(provider='facebook').get(...)
>>> pprint(instance.tokens)
{u'access_token': u'xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx'}

OpenId support is simpler to implement than OAuth. Google and Yahoo providers are supported by default, others are supported by POST method providing endpoint URL.

OpenId backends can store extra data in UserSocialAuth.extra_data field by defining a set of values names to retrieve from any of the used schemas, AttributeExchange and SimpleRegistration. As their keywords differ we need two settings.

Settings is per backend, so we have two possible values for each one. Name is dynamically checked using uppercase backend name as prefix:

<uppercase backend name>_SREG_EXTRA_DATA
<uppercase backend name>_AX_EXTRA_DATA

Example:

GOOGLE_SREG_EXTRA_DATA = [(..., ...)]
GOOGLE_AX_EXTRA_DATA = [(..., ...)]

Settings must be a list of tuples mapping value name in response and value alias used to store. A third value (boolean) is supported to, it's purpose is to signal if the value should be discarded if it evaluates to False, this is to avoid replacing old (needed) values when they don't form part of current response. If not present, then this check is avoided and the value will replace any data.

OAuth communication demands a set of keys exchange to validate the client authenticity prior to user approbation. Twitter, Facebook and Orkut facilitates these keys by application registration, Google works the same, but provides the option for unregistered applications.

Check next sections for details.

OAuth backends also can store extra data in UserSocialAuth.extra_data field by defining a set of values names to retrieve from service response.

Settings is per backend and it's name is dynamically checked using uppercase backend name as prefix:

<uppercase backend name>_EXTRA_DATA

Example:

FACEBOOK_EXTRA_DATA = [(..., ...)]

Settings must be a list of tuples mapping value name in response and value alias used to store. A third value (boolean) is supported to, it's purpose is to signal if the value should be discarded if it evaluates to False, this is to avoid replacing old (needed) values when they don't form part of current response. If not present, then this check is avoided and the value will replace any data.

Twitter offers per application keys named Consumer Key and Consumer Secret. To enable Twitter these two keys are needed. Further documentation at Twitter development resources:

  • Register a new application at Twitter App Creation,

  • mark the "Yes, use Twitter for login" checkbox, and

  • fill Consumer Key and Consumer Secret values:

    TWITTER_CONSUMER_KEY
    TWITTER_CONSUMER_SECRET
    
  • You need to specify an URL callback or the application will be marked as Client type instead of the Browser. Almost any dummy value will work if you plan some test.

Facebook works similar to Twitter but it's simpler to setup and redirect URL is passed as a parameter when issuing an authorization. Further documentation at Facebook development resources:

  • Register a new application at Facebook App Creation, and

  • fill App Id and App Secret values in values:

    FACEBOOK_APP_ID
    FACEBOOK_API_SECRET
    
  • Define FACEBOOK_EXTENDED_PERMISSIONS to get extra permissions from facebook. NOTE: to get users' email addresses, you must request the 'email' permission:

    FACEBOOK_EXTENDED_PERMISSIONS = ['email']
    

    Take into account that Facebook doesn't return user email by default, this setting is needed if email is required:

    FACEBOOK_EXTENDED_PERMISSIONS = ['email']
    
  • Define FACEBOOK_PROFILE_EXTRA_PARAMS to pass extra parameters to https://graph.facebook.com/me when gathering the user profile data, like:

    FACEBOOK_PROFILE_EXTRA_PARAMS = {'locale': 'ru_RU'}
    

If you define a redirect URL in Facebook setup page, be sure to not define http://127.0.0.1:8000 or http://localhost:8000 because it won't work when testing. Instead I define http://myapp.com and setup a mapping on /etc/hosts or use dnsmasq.

If you need to perform authentication from Facebook Canvas application, take a look to Facebook Canvas Application Authentication.

Orkut offers per application keys named Consumer Key and Consumer Secret. To enable Orkut these two keys are needed.

Check Google support and Orkut API for details on getting your consumer_key and consumer_secret keys.

  • fill Consumer Key and Consumer Secret values:

    ORKUT_CONSUMER_KEY
    ORKUT_CONSUMER_SECRET
    
  • add any needed extra data to:

    ORKUT_EXTRA_DATA = ''
    
  • configure extra scopes in:

    ORKUT_EXTRA_SCOPES = [...]
    

Google provides Consumer Key and Consumer Secret keys to registered applications, but also allows unregistered application to use their authorization system with, but beware that this method will display a security banner to the user telling that the application is not trusted.

Check Google OAuth and make your choice.

  • fill Consumer Key and Consumer Secret values:

    GOOGLE_CONSUMER_KEY
    GOOGLE_CONSUMER_SECRET
    

anonymous values will be used if not configured as described in their OAuth reference

  • configure the display name to be used in the "grant permissions" dialog that Google will display to users in:

    GOOGLE_DISPLAY_NAME = ''
    

    shows 'Social Auth' by default, but that might not suite your application.

  • setup any needed extra scope in:

    GOOGLE_OAUTH_EXTRA_SCOPE = [...]
    

Check which applications can be included in their Google Data Protocol Directory

Recently Google launched OAuth2 support following the definition at OAuth2 draft. It works in a similar way to plain OAuth mechanism, but developers must register an application and apply for a set of keys. Check Google OAuth2 document for details.

Note:
This support is experimental as Google implementation may change and OAuth2 is still a draft.

To enable OAuth2 support:

  • fill Client ID and Client Secret settings, these values can be obtained easily as described on OAuth2 Registering doc:

    GOOGLE_OAUTH2_CLIENT_ID = ''
    GOOGLE_OAUTH2_CLIENT_SECRET = ''
    

    previous name GOOGLE_OAUTH2_CLIENT_KEY is supported for backward compatibility.

  • scopes are shared between OAuth mechanisms:

    GOOGLE_OAUTH_EXTRA_SCOPE = [...]
    

Check which applications can be included in their Google Data Protocol Directory

LinkedIn setup is similar to any other OAuth service. To request extra fields using LinkedIn fields selectors just define the setting:

LINKEDIN_EXTRA_FIELD_SELECTORS = [...]

with the needed fields selectors, also define LINKEDIN_EXTRA_DATA properly, that way the values will be stored in UserSocialAuth.extra_data field.

By default id, first-name and last-name are requested and stored.

GitHub works similar to Facebook (OAuth).

  • Register a new application at GitHub Developers, set your site domain as the callback URL or it might cause some troubles when associating accounts,

  • Fill App Id and App Secret values in the settings:

    GITHUB_APP_ID = ''
    GITHUB_API_SECRET = ''
    
  • Also it's possible to define extra permissions with:

    GITHUB_EXTENDED_PERMISSIONS = [...]
    

Bitbucket works similar to Twitter (OAuth).

  • Register a new application by emailing [email protected] with an application name and a bit of a description,

  • Fill Consumer Key and Consumer Secret values in the settings:

    BITBUCKET_CONSUMER_KEY = ''
    BITBUCKET_CONSUMER_SECRET = ''
    

Dropbox uses OAuth v1.0 for authentication.

  • Register a new application at Dropbox Developers, and

  • fill App Key and App Secret values in the settings:

    DROPBOX_APP_ID = ''
    DROPBOX_API_SECRET = ''
    

Flickr uses OAuth v1.0 for authentication.

  • Register a new application at the Flickr App Garden, and

  • fill Key and Secret values in the settings:

    FLICKR_APP_ID = ''
    FLICKR_API_SECRET = ''
    
  • Flickr might show a messages saying "Oops! Flickr doesn't recognise the permission set.", if encountered with this error, just define this setting:

    FLICKR_AUTH_EXTRA_ARGUMENTS = {'perms':'read'}
    

Support for BrowserID is possible by posting the assertion code to /complete/browserid/ URL.

The setup doesn't need any setting, just the usual BrowserID javascript include in your document and the needed mechanism to trigger the POST to django-social-auth.

Check the second "Use Case" for an implementation example.

Instagram uses OAuth v2 for Authentication

  • Register a new application at the Instagram API, and

  • fill Client Id and Client Secret values in the settings:

    INSTAGRAM_CLIENT_ID = ''
    INSTAGRAM_CLIENT_SECRET = ''
    
  • extra scopes can be defined by using:

    INSTAGRAM_AUTH_EXTRA_ARGUMENTS = {'scope': 'likes comments relationships'}
    

Note

Instagram only allows one callback url so you'll have to change your urls.py to accomodate both /complete and /associate routes, for example by having a single /associate url which takes a ?complete=true parameter for the cases when you want to complete rather than associate.

Vkontakte uses OAuth v2 for Authentication

  • Register a new application at the Vkontakte API, and

  • fill App Id and Api Secret values in the settings:

    VK_APP_ID = ''
    VK_API_SECRET = ''
    
  • Define VK_EXTRA_DATA to pass extra fields when gathering the user profile data, like:

    VK_EXTRA_DATA = ['photo','country']
    
  • Also it's possible to define extra permissions with:

    VK_EXTRA_SCOPE = [...]
    

    See the names of the privileges VKontakte.

You can also use Vkontakte's own OpenAPI to log in, but you need to provide a HTML template with JavaScript code to authenticate. See vkontakte.html in templates folder for details.

To support authentication for VKontakte applications see authentication for VKontakte applications.

OAuth2 based Live Connect workflow, notice that it isn't OAuth WRAP.

  • Register a new application at Live Connect Developer Center, set your site domain as redirect domain,

  • Fill Client Id and Client Secret values in the settings:

    LIVE_CLIENT_ID = ''
    LIVE_CLIENT_SECRET = ''
    
  • Also it's possible to define extra permissions with:

    LIVE_EXTENDED_PERMISSIONS = [...]
    

    Defaults are "wl.basic" and "wl.emails". Latter one is necessary to retrieve user email.

Skyrock offers per application keys named Consumer Key and Consumer Secret. To enable Skyrock these two keys are needed. Further documentation at Skyrock API Documentation:

  • Register a new application at Skyrock App Creation,

  • fill Consumer Key and Consumer Secret values:

    SKYROCK_CONSUMER_KEY
    SKYROCK_CONSUMER_SECRET
    

OAuth 1.0 workflow, useful if you are planning to use Yahoo's API.

  • Register a new application at Yahoo Developer Center, set your app domain and configure scopes (they can't be overriden by application).

  • Fill Consumer Key and Consumer Secret values in the settings:

    YAHOO_CONSUMER_KEY = ''
    YAHOO_CONSUMER_SECRET = ''
    

Evernote OAuth 1.0 workflow.

  • Register a new application at Evernote API Key form.

  • Fill Consumer Key and Consumer Secret values in the settings:

    EVERNOTE_CONSUMER_KEY = ''
    EVERNOTE_CONSUMER_SECRET = ''
    
  • To test in the sandbox add to settings:

    EVERNOTE_DEBUG = True
    

Yandex uses OAuth 2.0 workflow, fill and YANDEX_APP_ID and YANDEX_API_SECRET settings to log in. Currently there are 2 backends for Yandex, one is Yaru to log in using Ya.ru service and another one is YandexOAuth that could use service API from settings. Use YANDEX_OAUTH2_API_URL to set up which service to use. Tested with 'https://api-yaru.yandex.ru/me/' for Ya.ru and 'http://api.moikrug.ru/v1/my/' for Moi Krug.

Yandex also uses OpenID 2.0. You do not need to provide user's name because Yandex will do it for you.

Mail.ru uses OAuth2 workflow, to use it fill in settings

MAILRU_OAUTH2_CLIENT_KEY = '' MAILRU_OAUTH2_APP_KEY = '' MAILRU_OAUTH2_CLIENT_SECRET = ''

Odnoklassniki.ru uses OAuth2 workflow, to use it fill in settings

ODNOKLASSNIKI_OAUTH2_CLIENT_KEY = '' ODNOKLASSNIKI_OAUTH2_APP_KEY = '' ODNOKLASSNIKI_OAUTH2_CLIENT_SECRET = ''

To test the application just run:

./manage.py test social_auth

This will run a bunch of tests, so far only login process is tested, more will come eventually.

User accounts on the different sites are needed to run tests, configure the credentials in the following way:

# twitter testing
TEST_TWITTER_USER = 'testing_account'
TEST_TWITTER_PASSWORD = 'password_for_testing_account'

# facebook testing
TEST_FACEBOOK_USER = 'testing_account'
TEST_FACEBOOK_PASSWORD = 'password_for_testing_account'

# google testing
TEST_GOOGLE_USER = '[email protected]'
TEST_GOOGLE_PASSWORD = 'password_for_testing_account'

There's support for Selenium tests too on root contrib directory. To run install selenium:

$ pip install selenium

and create a test_settings.py copying test_settings.py.template and fill the needed account information. Then run:

cd contrib/tests
./runtests.py

Some particular use cases are listed below.

  1. Use social auth just for account association (no login):

    urlpatterns += patterns('',
        url(r'^associate/(?P<backend>[^/]+)/$', associate,
            name='socialauth_associate_begin'),
        url(r'^associate/complete/(?P<backend>[^/]+)/$', associate_complete,
            name='socialauth_associate_complete'),
        url(r'^disconnect/(?P<backend>[^/]+)/$', disconnect,
            name='socialauth_disconnect'),
        url(r'^disconnect/(?P<backend>[^/]+)/(?P<association_id>[^/]+)/$',
            disconnect, name='socialauth_disconnect_individual'),
    )
    
  2. Include a similar snippet in your page to make BrowserID work:

    <!-- Include BrowserID JavaScript -->
    <script src="https://browserid.org/include.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
    
    <!-- Define a form to send the POST data -->
    <form method="post" action="{% url socialauth_complete "browserid" %}">
        <input type="hidden" name="assertion" value="" />
        <a rel="nofollow" id="browserid" href="#">BrowserID</a>
    </form>
    
    <!-- Setup click handler that retieves BrowserID assertion code and sends
         POST data -->
    <script type="text/javascript">
        $(function () {
            $('#browserid').click(function (e) {
                e.preventDefault();
                var self = $(this);
    
                navigator.id.get(function (assertion) {
                    if (assertion) {
                        self.parent('form')
                                .find('input[type=hidden]')
                                    .attr('value', assertion)
                                    .end()
                                .submit();
                    } else {
                        alert('Some error occurred');
                    }
                });
            });
        });
    </script>
    

Join to django-social-auth discussion list and bring any questions or suggestions that would improve this application. Convore discussion group is deprecated since the service is going to be shut down on April 1st.

South users should add this rule to enable migrations:

try:
    import south
    from south.modelsinspector import add_introspection_rules
    add_introspection_rules([], ["^social_auth\.fields\.JSONField"])
except:
    pass

If defining a custom user model, do not import social_auth from any models.py that would finally import from the models.py that defines your User class or it will make your project fail with a recursive import because social_auth uses get_model() to retrieve your User.

There's an ongoing movement to create a list of third party backends on djangopackages.com, so, if somebody doesn't want it's backend in the contrib directory but still wants to share, just split it in a separated package and link it there.

Seems that this bug described in StackOverflow hits users using django-social-auth with Python versions 2.7.2rev4 and 2.7.3 (so far) and Facebook backend. The bug report #315 explains it a bit more and shows a workaround fit avoid it.

Maybe several, please create issues in github

Attributions to whom deserves:

  • caioariede (Caio Ariede):
    • Improvements and Orkut support
  • krvss (Stas Kravets):
    • Initial setup.py configuration
    • LiveJournal support
    • Mail.ru, Odnoklassniki support
    • Yandex OpenID support
    • VKontakte OpenAPI support
  • jezdez (Jannis Leidel):
    • Improvements and documentation update
  • alfredo (Alfredo Ramirez)
    • Facebook and Doc improvements
  • mattucf (Matt Brown)
    • Twitter and OAuth improvements
  • Quard (Vadym Zakovinko)
    • LinkedIn support
  • micrypt (Seyi Ogunyemi)
    • OAuth2 migration
  • bedspax
    • Foursquare support
  • revolunet (Julien Bouquillon)
    • GitHub support
  • danielgtaylor (Daniel G. Taylor)
    • Dropbox support
    • Flickr support
    • Provider name context processor
  • r4vi (Ravi Kotecha)
    • Instagram support
  • andrusha (Andrew Korzhuev)
    • MSN Live Connect support
    • Yahoo OAuth 1.0 support
  • niQo (Nicolas Quiénot)
    • Skyrock.com support
  • hassek (Tomas Henriquez)
    • Evernote support

Base work is copyrighted by:

  • django-twitter-oauth:

    Original Copyright goes to Henrik Lied (henriklied)
    Code borrowed from https://github.com/henriklied/django-twitter-oauth
    
  • django-openid-auth:

    django-openid-auth -  OpenID integration for django.contrib.auth
    Copyright (C) 2007 Simon Willison
    Copyright (C) 2008-2010 Canonical Ltd.
    

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Django social authentication made simple

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