django-authority
This is a Django app for per-object-permissions that includes a bunch of helpers to create custom permission checks.
The main website for django-authority is
django-authority.readthedocs.org. You can also install the
in-development version of django-authority with
pip install django-authority==dev
or easy_install django-authority==dev
.
Example
To get the example project running do:
Bootstrap the buildout by running:
python bootstrap.py
Get the required packages by running:
bin/buildout
Sync the database:
bin/django-trunk syncdb
Run the development server and visit the admin at http://127.0.0.1:8000/admin/:
bin/django-trunk runserver
Now create a flatage and open it to see some of the templatetags in action. Don't hesitate to use the admin to edit the permission objects.
Full docs coming soon.
Please use https://github.com/jezdez/django-authority/issues/ for issues and bug reports.
Documentation
The documenation is currently in development. You can create a nice looking html version using the setup.py:
python setup.py build_sphinx
Changelog:
0.11 (2016-03-29):
- Added Migration in order to support Django 1.8
- Dropped Support for Django 1.7 and lower
- Fix linter issues
0.10 (2015-12-14):
- Fixed a bug with BasePermissionForm and django 1.8
0.9 (2015-11-11):
- Added support for Django 1.7 and 1.8
- Dropped support for Django 1.3
0.8 (2013-12-20):
- Added support for Django 1.6
0.7 (2013-07-03):
- No longer doing dependent sub-queries. It will be faster to do two small queries instead of one with a dependent sub-query in the general case.
0.6 (2013-06-13):
- Added support for custom user models (Django 1.5 only).
0.5 (2013-03-18):
- It is now possible to minimize the number of queries when using
django-authority by caching the results of the Permission query. This can be
done by adding
AUTHORITY_USE_SMART_CACHE = True
to your settings.py - Confirmed support (via travis ci) for all combinations of Python 2.6, Python2.7 and Django 1.3, Django 1.4, Django 1.5. Added Python 3.3 support for Django 1.5
0.4 (2010-01-15):
Fixed an issue with the UserPermissionForm not being able to override the widget of the user field.
Added ability to override form class in
add_permission
view.Added easy way to assign permissions via a permission instance, e.g.:
from django.contrib.auth.models import User from mysite.articles.permissions import ArticlePermission bob = User.objects.get(username='bob') article_permission = ArticlePermission(bob) article_permission.assign(content_object=article)
0.3 (2009-07-28):
This version adds multiple fields to the Permission model and is therefore a backwards incompatible update.
This was required to add a feature that allows users to request, withdraw, deny and approve permissions. Request and approval date are now saved, as well as an
approved
property. An admin action has been added for bulk approval.To migrate your existing data you can use the SQL files included in the source (migrations/), currently available for MySQL, Postgres and SQLite.
The templatetags have also been refactored to be easier to customize which required a change in the template tag signature:
Old:
{% permission_form flatpage %} {% permission_form flatpage "flatpage_permission.top_secret" %} {% permission_form OBJ PERMISSION_LABEL.CHECK_NAME %}
New:
{% permission_form for flatpage %} {% permission_form for flatpage using "flatpage_permission.top_secret" %} {% permission_form for OBJ using PERMISSION_LABEL.CHECK_NAME [with TEMPLATE] %}
New templatetags:
permission_request_form
get_permission_request
get_permission_requests
permission_request_approve_link
permission_request_delete_link
request_url_for_obj
The
add_permission
view is now accessible with GET requests and allows to request permissions, but also add them (only for users with the 'authority.add_permission' Django permission).