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.. _qtut_authentication:
==============================
20: Logins With Authentication
==============================
Login views that authenticate a username and password against a list of users.
Background
==========
Most web applications have URLs that allow people to add/edit/delete content
via a web browser. Time to add :ref:`security <security_chapter>` to the
application. In this first step we introduce authentication. That is, logging
in and logging out, using Pyramid's rich facilities for pluggable user storage.
In the next step we will introduce protection of resources with authorization
security statements.
Objectives
==========
- Introduce the Pyramid concepts of authentication.
- Create login and logout views.
Steps
=====
#. We are going to use the view classes step as our starting point:
.. code-block:: bash
$ cd ..; cp -r view_classes authentication; cd authentication
$ $VENV/bin/pip install -e .
#. Put the security hash in the ``authentication/development.ini``
configuration file as ``tutorial.secret`` instead of putting it in the code:
.. literalinclude:: authentication/development.ini
:language: ini
:linenos:
#. Get authentication (and for now, authorization policies) and login route
into the :term:`configurator` in ``authentication/tutorial/__init__.py``:
.. literalinclude:: authentication/tutorial/__init__.py
:linenos:
#. Create an ``authentication/tutorial/security.py`` module that can find our
user information by providing an *authentication policy callback*:
.. literalinclude:: authentication/tutorial/security.py
:linenos:
#. Update the views in ``authentication/tutorial/views.py``:
.. literalinclude:: authentication/tutorial/views.py
:linenos:
#. Add a login template at ``authentication/tutorial/login.pt``:
.. literalinclude:: authentication/tutorial/login.pt
:language: html
:linenos:
#. Provide a login/logout box in ``authentication/tutorial/home.pt``:
.. literalinclude:: authentication/tutorial/home.pt
:language: html
:linenos:
#. Run your Pyramid application with:
.. code-block:: bash
$ $VENV/bin/pserve development.ini --reload
#. Open http://localhost:6543/ in a browser.
#. Click the "Log In" link.
#. Submit the login form with the username ``editor`` and the password
``editor``.
#. Note that the "Log In" link has changed to "Logout".
#. Click the "Logout" link.
Analysis
========
Unlike many web frameworks, Pyramid includes a built-in but optional security
model for authentication and authorization. This security system is intended to
be flexible and support many needs. In this security model, authentication (who
are you) and authorization (what are you allowed to do) are not just pluggable,
but de-coupled. To learn one step at a time, we provide a system that
identifies users and lets them log out.
In this example we chose to use the bundled :ref:`AuthTktAuthenticationPolicy
<authentication_module>` policy. We enabled it in our configuration and
provided a ticket-signing secret in our INI file.
Our view class grew a login view. When you reached it via a ``GET`` request, it
returned a login form. When reached via ``POST``, it processed the submitted
username and password against the "groupfinder" callable that we registered in
the configuration.
In our template, we fetched the ``logged_in`` value from the view class. We use
this to calculate the logged-in user, if any. In the template we can then
choose to show a login link to anonymous visitors or a logout link to logged-in
users.
Extra credit
============
#. What is the difference between a user and a principal?
#. Can I use a database behind my ``groupfinder`` to look up principals?
#. Once I am logged in, does any user-centric information get jammed onto each
request? Use ``import pdb; pdb.set_trace()`` to answer this.
.. seealso:: See also :ref:`security_chapter`,
:ref:`AuthTktAuthenticationPolicy <authentication_module>`.
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