This python package provides a simple password reset strategy for django rest framework, where users can request password reset tokens via their registered e-mail address.
The main idea behind this package is to not make any assumptions about how the token is delivered to the end-user (e-mail, text-message, etc...). Instead, this package provides a signal that can be reacted on (e.g., by sending an e-mail or a text message).
This package basically provides two REST endpoints:
- Request a token
- Verify (confirm) a token (and change the password)
- Install the package from pypi using pip:
pip install django-rest-passwordreset
- Add
django_rest_passwordreset
to yourINSTALLED_APPS
(afterrest_framework
) within your Django settings file:
INSTALLED_APPS = (
...
'django.contrib.auth',
...
'rest_framework',
...
'django_rest_passwordreset',
...
)
- This package stores tokens in a separate database table (see django_rest_passwordreset/models.py). Therefore, you have to run django migrations:
python manage.py migrate
- This package provides three endpoints, which can be included by including
django_rest_passwordreset.urls
in yoururls.py
as follows:
from django.urls import path, include
urlpatterns = [
...
path(r'^api/password_reset/', include('django_rest_passwordreset.urls', namespace='password_reset')),
...
]
Note: You can adapt the URL to your needs.
The following endpoints are provided:
POST ${API_URL}/
- request a reset password token by using theemail
parameterPOST ${API_URL}/confirm/
- using a validtoken
, the users password is set to the providedpassword
POST ${API_URL}/validate_token/
- will return a 200 if a giventoken
is valid
where ${API_URL}/
is the url specified in your urls.py (e.g., api/password_reset/
as in the example above)
reset_password_token_created(sender, instance, reset_password_token)
Fired when a reset password token is generatedpre_password_reset(sender, user)
- fired just before a password is being resetpost_password_reset(sender, user)
- fired after a password has been reset
-
Create two new django templates:
email/user_reset_password.html
andemail/user_reset_password.txt
. Those templates will contain the e-mail message sent to the user, aswell as the password reset link (or token). Within the templates, you can access the following context variables:current_user
,username
,email
,reset_password_url
. Feel free to adapt this to your needs. -
Add the following code, which contains a Django Signal Receiver (
@receiver(...)
), to your application. Take care where to put this code, as it needs to be executed by the python interpreter (see the section Thereset_password_token_created
signal is not fired below, aswell as this part of the django documentation and How to Create Django Signals Tutorial for more information).
from django.core.mail import EmailMultiAlternatives
from django.dispatch import receiver
from django.template.loader import render_to_string
from django.urls import reverse
from django_rest_passwordreset.signals import reset_password_token_created
@receiver(reset_password_token_created)
def password_reset_token_created(sender, instance, reset_password_token, *args, **kwargs):
"""
Handles password reset tokens
When a token is created, an e-mail needs to be sent to the user
:param sender: View Class that sent the signal
:param instance: View Instance that sent the signal
:param reset_password_token: Token Model Object
:param args:
:param kwargs:
:return:
"""
# send an e-mail to the user
context = {
'current_user': reset_password_token.user,
'username': reset_password_token.user.username,
'email': reset_password_token.user.email,
'reset_password_url': "{}?token={}".format(
instance.request.build_absolute_uri(reverse('password_reset:reset-password-confirm')),
reset_password_token.key)
}
# render email text
email_html_message = render_to_string('email/user_reset_password.html', context)
email_plaintext_message = render_to_string('email/user_reset_password.txt', context)
msg = EmailMultiAlternatives(
# title:
"Password Reset for {title}".format(title="Some website title"),
# message:
email_plaintext_message,
# from:
"noreply@somehost.local",
# to:
[reset_password_token.user.email]
)
msg.attach_alternative(email_html_message, "text/html")
msg.send()
- You should now be able to use the endpoints to request a password reset token via your e-mail address. If you want to test this locally, I recommend using some kind of fake mailserver (such as maildump).
The following settings can be set in Django settings.py
file:
-
DJANGO_REST_MULTITOKENAUTH_RESET_TOKEN_EXPIRY_TIME
- time in hours about how long the token is active (Default: 24)Please note: expired tokens are automatically cleared based on this setting in every call of
ResetPasswordRequestToken.post
. -
DJANGO_REST_PASSWORDRESET_NO_INFORMATION_LEAKAGE
- will cause a 200 to be returned onPOST ${API_URL}/reset_password/
even if the user doesn't exist in the databse (Default: False) -
DJANGO_REST_MULTITOKENAUTH_REQUIRE_USABLE_PASSWORD
- allows password reset for a user that does not have a usable password (Default: True)
By default, email
lookup is used to find the user instance. You can change that by adding
DJANGO_REST_LOOKUP_FIELD = 'custom_email_field'
into Django settings.py file.
If your setup demands that the IP adress of the user is in another header (e.g., 'X-Forwarded-For'), you can configure that (using Django Request Headers):
DJANGO_REST_PASSWORDRESET_IP_ADDRESS_HEADER = 'HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR'
The same is true for the user agent:
HTTP_USER_AGENT_HEADER = 'HTTP_USER_AGENT'
By default, a random string token of length 10 to 50 is generated using the RandomStringTokenGenerator
class.
This library offers a possibility to configure the params of RandomStringTokenGenerator
as well as switch to
another token generator, e.g. RandomNumberTokenGenerator
. You can also generate your own token generator class.
You can change that by adding
DJANGO_REST_PASSWORDRESET_TOKEN_CONFIG = {
"CLASS": ...,
"OPTIONS": {...}
}
into Django settings.py file.
This is the default configuration.
DJANGO_REST_PASSWORDRESET_TOKEN_CONFIG = {
"CLASS": "django_rest_passwordreset.tokens.RandomStringTokenGenerator"
}
You can configure the length as follows:
DJANGO_REST_PASSWORDRESET_TOKEN_CONFIG = {
"CLASS": "django_rest_passwordreset.tokens.RandomStringTokenGenerator",
"OPTIONS": {
"min_length": 20,
"max_length": 30
}
}
It uses os.urandom()
to generate a good random string.
DJANGO_REST_PASSWORDRESET_TOKEN_CONFIG = {
"CLASS": "django_rest_passwordreset.tokens.RandomNumberTokenGenerator"
}
You can configure the minimum and maximum number as follows:
DJANGO_REST_PASSWORDRESET_TOKEN_CONFIG = {
"CLASS": "django_rest_passwordreset.tokens.RandomNumberTokenGenerator",
"OPTIONS": {
"min_number": 1500,
"max_number": 9999
}
}
It uses random.SystemRandom().randint()
to generate a good random number.
Please see token_configuration/django_rest_passwordreset/tokens.py for example implementation of number and string token generator.
The basic idea is to create a new class that inherits from BaseTokenGenerator, takes arbitrary arguments (args
and kwargs
)
in the __init__
function as well as implementing a generate_token
function.
from django_rest_passwordreset.tokens import BaseTokenGenerator
class RandomStringTokenGenerator(BaseTokenGenerator):
"""
Generates a random string with min and max length using os.urandom and binascii.hexlify
"""
def __init__(self, min_length=10, max_length=50, *args, **kwargs):
self.min_length = min_length
self.max_length = max_length
def generate_token(self, *args, **kwargs):
""" generates a pseudo random code using os.urandom and binascii.hexlify """
# determine the length based on min_length and max_length
length = random.randint(self.min_length, self.max_length)
# generate the token using os.urandom and hexlify
return binascii.hexlify(
os.urandom(self.max_length)
).decode()[0:length]
This library should be compatible with the latest Django and Django Rest Framework Versions. For reference, here is a matrix showing the guaranteed and tested compatibility.
django-rest-passwordreset Version | Django Versions | Django Rest Framework Versions | Python |
---|---|---|---|
0.9.7 | 1.8, 1.11, 2.0, 2.1 | 3.6 - 3.9 | 2.7 |
1.0 | 1.11, 2.0, 2.2 | 3.6 - 3.9 | 2.7 |
1.1 | 1.11, 2.2 | 3.6 - 3.9 | 2.7 |
1.2 | 2.2, 3.0, 3.1 | 3.10, 3.11 | 3.5 - 3.8 |
This package supports the DRF auto-generated documentation (via coreapi
) as well as the DRF browsable API.
To add the endpoints to the browsable API, you can use a helper function in your urls.py
file:
from rest_framework.routers import DefaultRouter
from django_rest_passwordreset.urls import add_reset_password_urls_to_router
router = DefaultRouter()
add_reset_password_urls_to_router(router, base_path='api/auth/passwordreset')
Alternatively you can import the ViewSets manually and customize the routes for your setup:
from rest_framework.routers import DefaultRouter
from django_rest_passwordreset.views import ResetPasswordValidateTokenViewSet, ResetPasswordConfirmViewSet, \
ResetPasswordRequestTokenViewSet
router = DefaultRouter()
router.register(
r'api/auth/passwordreset/validate_token',
ResetPasswordValidateTokenViewSet,
basename='reset-password-validate'
)
router.register(
r'api/auth/passwordreset/confirm',
ResetPasswordConfirmViewSet,
basename='reset-password-confirm'
)
router.register(
r'api/auth/passwordreset/',
ResetPasswordRequestTokenViewSet,
basename='reset-password-request'
)
Django 2.1 introduced a breaking change for migrations (see Django Issue #29790). We therefore had to rewrite the migration 0002_pk_migration.py such that it covers Django versions before (<
) 2.1 and later (>=
) 2.1.
Some information is written down in Issue #8.
You need to make sure that the code with @receiver(reset_password_token_created)
is executed by the python interpreter. To ensure this, you have two options:
-
Put the code at a place that is automatically loaded by Django (e.g., models.py, views.py), or
-
Import the file that contains the signal within your app.py
ready
function:
some_app/signals.py
from django.core.mail import EmailMultiAlternatives
from django.dispatch import receiver
from django.template.loader import render_to_string
from django.urls import reverse
from django_rest_passwordreset.signals import reset_password_token_created
@receiver(reset_password_token_created)
def password_reset_token_created(sender, instance, reset_password_token, *args, **kwargs):
# ...
some_app/app.py
from django.apps import AppConfig
class SomeAppConfig(AppConfig):
name = 'your_django_project.some_app'
verbose_name = 'Some App'
def ready(self):
import your_django_project.some_app.signals # noqa
some_app/init.py
default_app_config = 'your_django_project.some_app.SomeAppConfig'
Apparently, the following piece of code in the Django Model prevents MongodB from working:
id = models.AutoField(
primary_key=True
)
See issue #49 for details.
This library tries to follow the unix philosophy of "do one thing and do it well" (which is providing a basic password reset endpoint for Django Rest Framework). Contributions are welcome in the form of pull requests and issues! If you create a pull request, please make sure that you are not introducing breaking changes.
See folder tests/. Basically, all endpoints are covered with multiple unit tests.
Use this code snippet to run tests:
python setup.py install
cd tests
python manage.py test
To release this package on pypi, the following steps are used:
rm -rf dist/ build/
python setup.py sdist
twine upload dist/*