Opened 13 years ago
Closed 12 years ago
#17763 closed Bug (duplicate)
Problem with auth_permission name length
Reported by: | Owned by: | anonymous | |
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Component: | contrib.auth | Version: | 1.0 |
Severity: | Normal | Keywords: | |
Cc: | shai@… | Triage Stage: | Accepted |
Has patch: | no | Needs documentation: | no |
Needs tests: | no | Patch needs improvement: | no |
Easy pickings: | yes | UI/UX: | no |
Description
Django automatically generates a name that is longer than what the default field length can hold.
INSERT INTO "auth_permission" ("name", "content_type_id", "codename") VALUES (%s, %s, %s) (u'Can add study plan practice assessment tutorial question', 52, u'add_studyplanpracticeassessmenttutorialquestion')
This will fail with a error about it not being able to fit in a varchar(50)
Table "public.auth_permission" Column | Type | Modifiers -----------------+------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------- id | integer | not null default nextval('auth_permission_id_seq'::regclass) name | character varying(50 ) | not null content_type_id | integer | not null codename | character varying(100) | not null
This was under PostgreSQL and after modifying the field to have a length of 200, I was able to perform the insert.
Change History (7)
comment:1 by , 13 years ago
Triage Stage: | Unreviewed → Accepted |
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comment:2 by , 13 years ago
Owner: | changed from | to
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comment:3 by , 13 years ago
Owner: | changed from | to
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Status: | new → assigned |
comment:4 by , 13 years ago
The problem is with regards to the "name" field, not the codename field (as described above). The codename field will be populated by a smaller string than the name field, as it is the same length minus whitespace and descriptive characters (e.g. "Can add"/"Can modify"/..). So the setup should take this into consideration such that len(name)>len(codename). Currently the opposite is the case (excerpt from contrib.auth.models).
class Permission(models.Model): .. name = models.CharField(_('name'), max_length=50) .. codename = models.CharField(_('codename'), max_length=100) ..
Two options here:
- name length should be increased to at least 120 to accommodate for potential white space and additional info (e.g. "Can change"/"Can delete"/"Can add"..) that it stores when compared to codename.
- Cut the length down to 50 when initialising the model.
Currently it is failing for me because this model name is too long: "Can change material variant distributor region country"
This is only length 54. I wouldn't say that the length is excessively long. It should certainly be supported by django.
comment:5 by , 13 years ago
Cc: | added |
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Version: | 1.3 → 1.0 |
To strengthen ricw's point, the name value is based on the model's verbose name, which is not necessarily derived from the class name.
Having a field whose name indicates verbosity limited to 39 characters is strongly counter-intuitive.
Also, ricw's option 1 has been wontfix'd in #4748; the problem has been with us since before 1.0.
My own suggestion of a fix: Change django.contrib.auth.management._get_all_permissions
to read:
def _get_all_permissions(opts): "Returns (codename, name) for all permissions in the given opts." perms = [] for action in ('add', 'change', 'delete'): perm_name = u'Can %s %s' % (action, opts.verbose_name_raw) if len(perm_name)>50: perm_name= perm_name[:40] + u'...' + perm_name[-7:] perms.append((_get_permission_codename(action, opts), perm_name)) return perms + list(opts.permissions)
Because the name is just used for UI anyway. Of course, you can play with the "40" and "7" there -- that's what I thought was reasonable. And perhaps the two-line snippet for "make display string fit in length" should be factored out and used elsewhere.
If a core developer finds the approach acceptable, but would rather have this as a patch, just say so.
comment:6 by , 12 years ago
I brought this ticket up on django-developers, and it was indicated that it's best to alter your columns manually & change max_length on the model until native migrations are in Django.
https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!topic/django-developers/Q5yELp1UV_s
comment:7 by , 12 years ago
Resolution: | → duplicate |
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Status: | assigned → closed |
Closed as duplicate of #8162
Django should check the length of the permission name before attempting to save it.
If it's too long, I see two possible solutions:
1 - raise an error better error message, telling to use a shorter model name
Indeed, even the simplest of views is hard to read with such long model names:
Python encourages concise and readable code, I'm fine with not supporting "app + model" names above 50 chars.
2 - only raise a warning and automatically truncate the name to 50 chars
But then there's still a problem when two models have the same prefix, for instance:
StudyPlanPracticeAssessmentTutorialMultipleChoicesQuestionAnswer
StudyPlanPracticeAssessmentTutorialMultipleChoicesQuestionAnswerEvaluationElement
Technically, we could write something like
if len(name) > 50: name = name[:46] + hash(name[46:])[:4]
, but that won't help end users manipulating permissions to distinguish the two permissions.I prefer solution 1.