#21648 closed Cleanup/optimization (fixed)
Deprecate "is_admin_site" option of auth.views.password_reset()
Reported by: | Owned by: | nobody | |
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Component: | contrib.auth | Version: | dev |
Severity: | Normal | Keywords: | |
Cc: | Triage Stage: | Accepted | |
Has patch: | yes | Needs documentation: | no |
Needs tests: | no | Patch needs improvement: | no |
Easy pickings: | no | UI/UX: | no |
Description
Hello,
Here https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.6/topics/auth/default/#django.contrib.auth.views.password_reset the option "is_admin_site" is not documented and its name doesn't describe what it is doing.
According to https://github.com/django/django/blob/master/django/contrib/auth/views.py#L160 and https://github.com/django/django/blob/master/django/contrib/auth/forms.py#L248-253 it uses the host of the request instead of the site framework, therefor it should be name something like "use_domain_from_request".
Kind regards,
Change History (11)
comment:1 by , 11 years ago
Easy pickings: | unset |
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Triage Stage: | Unreviewed → Accepted |
comment:2 by , 11 years ago
Is the use case for that parameter still accurate? Shouldn't we deprecate it?
comment:3 by , 10 years ago
Component: | Documentation → contrib.auth |
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Has patch: | set |
Summary: | the "is_admin_site" option of password_reset is undocumented and the name ambiguous → Deprecate "is_admin_site" option of auth.views.password_reset() |
Type: | Bug → Cleanup/optimization |
Version: | 1.6 → master |
Deprecation looks reasonable to me. I couldn't find a use case for it because if contrib.sites
isn't installed, contrib.sites.requests.RequestSite
(via get_current_site()
in PasswordResetForm
) uses request.get_host()
as well.
comment:4 by , 10 years ago
Resolution: | → fixed |
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Status: | new → closed |
comment:5 by , 10 years ago
A use case is if you are using just one Django instance (=> only one settings.py => only one settings.SITE_ID) and you want to use django CMS (which relies on django.contrib.sites) to host a website on xyz.domain.tld and you have several subdomains abc.domain.tld, xyz.domain.tld, etc. which do not use django CMS but only provide a (branded) login where users can also click the "forgot password" link and in the resulting email the referring URL (e.g. xyz.domain.tld) should be used.
django CMS:
/cms/models/pagemodel.py
from django.contrib.sites.models import Site site = models.ForeignKey(Site, help_text=_('The site the page is accessible at.'), verbose_name=_("site"))
http://docs.django-cms.org/en/2.4.0/extending_cms/api_references.html
cms.models.pagemodel.Page
site (django.contrib.sites.models.Site instance) – Site to put this page on
http://docs.django-cms.org/en/latest/getting_started/integrate.html#installing
Be sure to have 'django.contrib.sites' in INSTALLED_APPS and set SITE_ID parameter in your settings: they may be missing from the settings file generated by django-admin depending on your Django version and project template.
comment:7 by , 10 years ago
No I've got:
- One Django instance with one settings.py which contains
SITE_ID = 1
- Django CMS installed and INSTALLED_APPS containing django.contrib.sites The django CMS pages are only rendered for www.domain.tld
- Several subdomains pointing to the same Django instance. nginx is redirecting / to /admin on these subdomains as we only allow login and password reset but do not display any django CMS content there: abc.domain.tld, def.domain.tld, ghi.domain.tld, jkl.domain.tld
- In the templates I use a templatetag which returns different configurations (CSS, etc.) for the subdomains in use based on the host:
host = context['request'].get_host()
comment:8 by , 10 years ago
Thanks for the details. Do you think removing the option isn't acceptable then? Any sense whether this sort of setup is common? Would updating your site to use the sites framework be too much work?
comment:9 by , 10 years ago
Good question. I think that updating to the sites framework would be a lot of overhead for us as we just provide a branded site based on the URL. I don't know if this is a common setup but probably it's worth thinking about why the domain defined for a site shall be used for the password reset link in the email and if it would be sufficient to just use request.get_host()
comment:10 by , 10 years ago
It looks like #15089 would address these concerns, so I will try to move that ticket forward.
Yes, it seems poorly named, but I'm not sure it's worth renaming due to backwards compatibility concerns at this point. The parameter was added in the merge of magic-removal pre-1.0, but the functionality didn't appear to be used or tested until [9305c0e1].