django-guardian
is implementation of per object permissions [1] as
authorization backend which is supported since Django 1.2. It won't
work with older Django releases.
Online documentation is available at http://django-guardian.rtfd.org/.
To install django-guardian
simply run:
pip install django-guardian
We need to hook django-guardian
into our project.
Put
guardian
into yourINSTALLED_APPS
at settings module:INSTALLED_APPS = ( ... 'guardian', )
Add extra authorization backend:
AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS = ( 'django.contrib.auth.backends.ModelBackend', # default 'guardian.backends.ObjectPermissionBackend', )
Configure anonymous user ID
ANONYMOUS_USER_ID = -1
After installation and project hooks we can finally use object permissions with Django.
Lets start really quickly:
>>> jack = User.objects.create_user('jack', '[email protected]', 'topsecretagentjack') >>> admins = Group.objects.create(name='admins') >>> jack.has_perm('change_group', admins) False >>> UserObjectPermission.objects.assign_perm('change_group', user=jack, obj=admins) <UserObjectPermission: admins | jack | change_group> >>> jack.has_perm('change_group', admins) True
Of course our agent jack here would not be able to change_group globally:
>>> jack.has_perm('change_group') False
Replace admin.ModelAdmin
with GuardedModelAdmin
for those models
which should have object permissions support within admin panel.
For example:
from django.contrib import admin from myapp.models import Author from guardian.admin import GuardedModelAdmin # Old way: #class AuthorAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin): # pass # With object permissions support class AuthorAdmin(GuardedModelAdmin): pass admin.site.register(Author, AuthorAdmin)
[1] | Great paper about this feature is available at djangoadvent articles. |