• Stars
    star
    2,410
  • Rank 19,090 (Top 0.4 %)
  • Language
    Python
  • License
    MIT License
  • Created about 10 years ago
  • Updated 12 months ago

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first to send feedback to the community and the maintainers!

Repository Details

REST implementation of Django authentication system.

djoser

Build Status https://img.shields.io/pypi/dm/djoser Docs

REST implementation of Django authentication system. djoser library provides a set of Django Rest Framework views to handle basic actions such as registration, login, logout, password reset and account activation. It works with custom user model.

Instead of reusing Django code (e.g. PasswordResetForm), we reimplemented few things to fit better into Single Page App architecture.

Developed by SUNSCRAPERS with passion & patience.

https://asciinema.org/a/94J4eG2tSBD2iEfF30a6vGtXw.png

Requirements

To be able to run djoser you have to meet following requirements:

  • Python>=3.8
  • Django>=3.0.0
  • Django REST Framework>=3.12

Installation

Simply install using pip:

$ pip install djoser

And continue with the steps described at configuration guide.

Documentation

Documentation is available to study at https://djoser.readthedocs.io and in docs directory.

Contributing and development

To start developing on djoser, clone the repository:

$ git clone [email protected]:sunscrapers/djoser.git

We use poetry as dependency management and packaging tool.

$ cd djoser
$ poetry install -E test

This will create a virtualenv with all development dependencies.

To run the test just type:

$ poetry run py.test testproject

We also prepared a convenient Makefile to automate commands above:

$ make init
$ make test

To activate the virtual environment run

$ poetry shell

Without poetry

New versions of pip can use pyproject.toml to build the package and install its dependencies.

$ pip install .[test]
$ cd testproject
$ ./manage.py test

Example project

You can also play with test project by running following commands:

$ make migrate
$ make runserver

Commiting your code

Before sending patches please make sure you have pre-commit activated in your local git repository:

$ pre-commit install

This will ensure that your code is cleaned before you commit it.

Similar projects

List of projects related to Django, REST and authentication:

Please, keep in mind that while using custom authentication and TokenCreateSerializer validation, there is a path that ignores intentional return of None from authenticate() and try to find User using parameters. Probably, that will be changed in the future.