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Add users to your app and decide what they can access.

Project description

plain.auth

Add users to your app and decide what they can access.

Overview

The plain.auth package handles user authentication and authorization for Plain applications. You can check if a user is logged in like this:

from plain.auth import get_request_user

user = get_request_user(request)
if user:
    print(f"Hello, {user.email}!")
else:
    print("You are not logged in.")

You can restrict a view to logged-in users using AuthViewMixin:

from plain.auth.views import AuthViewMixin
from plain.views import View

class ProfileView(AuthViewMixin, View):
    login_required = True

    def get(self):
        return f"Welcome, {self.user.email}!"

Authentication setup

Settings configuration

Configure your authentication settings in app/settings.py:

INSTALLED_PACKAGES = [
    # ...
    "plain.auth",
    "plain.sessions",
    "plain.passwords",  # Or another auth method
]

MIDDLEWARE = [
    "plain.sessions.middleware.SessionMiddleware",
]

AUTH_USER_MODEL = "users.User"
AUTH_LOGIN_URL = "login"

Creating a user model

You can create your own user model using plain create users or manually:

# app/users/models.py
from datetime import datetime

from plain import postgres
from plain.postgres import types
from plain.passwords.models import PasswordField


@postgres.register_model
class User(postgres.Model):
    email: str = types.EmailField()
    password = PasswordField()
    is_admin: bool = types.BooleanField(default=False)
    created_at: datetime = types.DateTimeField(auto_now_add=True)

    def __str__(self):
        return self.email

Login views

To log users in, you need to pair this package with an authentication method:

Here's an example with password authentication:

# app/urls.py
from plain.auth.views import LogoutView
from plain.urls import path
from plain.passwords.views import PasswordLoginView


class LoginView(PasswordLoginView):
    template_name = "login.html"


urlpatterns = [
    path("logout/", LogoutView, name="logout"),
    path("login/", LoginView, name="login"),
]

Checking if a user is logged in

In templates, you can use the get_current_user() function:

{% if get_current_user() %}
    <p>Hello, {{ get_current_user().email }}!</p>
{% else %}
    <p>You are not logged in.</p>
{% endif %}

In Python code, use get_request_user():

from plain.auth import get_request_user

user = get_request_user(request)
if user:
    print(f"Hello, {user.email}!")
else:
    print("You are not logged in.")

Restricting views

You can use AuthViewMixin to restrict views to logged-in users, admin users, or custom logic:

from plain.auth.views import AuthViewMixin
from plain.http import ForbiddenError403
from plain.views import View


class LoggedInView(AuthViewMixin, View):
    login_required = True


class AdminOnlyView(AuthViewMixin, View):
    login_required = True
    admin_required = True


class CustomPermissionView(AuthViewMixin, View):
    def check_auth(self):
        super().check_auth()
        if not self.user.is_special:
            raise ForbiddenError403("You're not special!")

The AuthViewMixin provides:

  • login_required - Requires a logged-in user
  • admin_required - Requires user.is_admin to be True
  • check_auth() - Override for custom authorization logic

Testing with authenticated users

When writing tests, you can use login_client() to simulate an authenticated user:

from plain.auth.test import login_client
from plain.test import Client

from app.users.models import User


def test_profile_view():
    user = User.objects.create(email="test@example.com")
    client = Client()
    login_client(client, user)

    response = client.get("/profile/")
    assert response.status_code == 200

You can also log out a test user with logout_client():

from plain.auth.test import login_client, logout_client

# ... after logging in
logout_client(client)

Settings

Setting Default Env var
AUTH_USER_MODEL Required PLAIN_AUTH_USER_MODEL
AUTH_LOGIN_URL Required PLAIN_AUTH_LOGIN_URL
AUTH_USER_SESSION_HASH_FIELD "password" or "" PLAIN_AUTH_USER_SESSION_HASH_FIELD

See default_settings.py for more details.

FAQs

How do I log in a user programmatically?

You can use the login() function to log in a user:

from plain.auth.sessions import login

login(request, user)

How do I log out a user programmatically?

You can use the logout() function:

from plain.auth.sessions import logout

logout(request)

How do I invalidate sessions when a user changes their password?

By default, if you have plain.passwords installed, sessions are automatically invalidated when the password field changes. This is controlled by the AUTH_USER_SESSION_HASH_FIELD setting. You can change this to a different field name, or set it to an empty string to disable this feature.

How do I get the user model class?

You can use the get_user_model() function:

from plain.auth.sessions import get_user_model

User = get_user_model()

Installation

Install the plain.auth package from PyPI:

uv add plain.auth

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