110👍
What might be easier in this case (and if you only need a few users) is to create some fake user accounts through the admin (including passwords) and then dump the users to a fixtures file using dumpdata:
$ python manage.py dumpdata auth.User --indent 4 > users.json
which will automatically create the fixtures for you and can be used later with loaddata
(You could just create one fake account and use the hash in the rest of your fixtures if you needed lots of test users)
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/django-admin/#dumpdata-appname-appname-appname-model
26👍
OK, I agree with the answers, but let me answer the original questions.
How to get the password “as Django would have hashed it”?
Let’s look a the file django/contrib/auth/hashers.py
:
def make_password(password, salt=None, hasher='default'):
"""
Turn a plain-text password into a hash for database storage
Same as encode() but generates a new random salt. If
password is None or blank then UNUSABLE_PASSWORD will be
returned which disallows logins.
"""
# ...
See this example session:
./manage.py shell
>>> from django.contrib.auth.hashers import make_password, HASHERS
>>> make_password('test')
'pbkdf2_sha256$10000$vkRy7QauoLLj$ry+3xm3YX+YrSXbri8s3EcXDIrx5ceM+xQjtpLdw2oE='
# fix salt:
>>> make_password('test', 'abc')
'pbkdf2_sha256$10000$abc$MqJS5OAgSmf9SD9mfoY8fgLo8sSKmEcef0AjjMp1Q7w='
# use different (maybe faster, maybe unsafe!) hasher
In [12]: HASHERS
Out[12]:
{'bcrypt': <django.contrib.auth.hashers.BCryptPasswordHasher object at 0x29c6d50>,
'crypt': <django.contrib.auth.hashers.CryptPasswordHasher object at 0x29c6f50>,
'md5': <django.contrib.auth.hashers.MD5PasswordHasher object at 0x29c6e10>,
'pbkdf2_sha1': <django.contrib.auth.hashers.PBKDF2SHA1PasswordHasher object at 0x29c6bd0>,
'pbkdf2_sha256': <django.contrib.auth.hashers.PBKDF2PasswordHasher object at 0x29c6cd0>,
'sha1': <django.contrib.auth.hashers.SHA1PasswordHasher object at 0x29c6dd0>,
'unsalted_md5': <django.contrib.auth.hashers.UnsaltedMD5PasswordHasher object at 0x29c6ed0>,
'unsalted_sha1': <django.contrib.auth.hashers.UnsaltedSHA1PasswordHasher object at 0x29c6e50>}
In [14]: [make_password('test', hasher=name) for name in HASHERS]
Out[14]:
['sha1$LdKsAbJRjlVP$2eb2346387cc510f576f2f11eebdfe18b20d1be1',
'pbkdf2_sha256$10000$Ck8gtWQJnJ9x$M/OqP548d5KcPqFuVRgXb84unjYbYDH6oyimbDndE3k=',
'pbkdf2_sha1$10000$BJqRu5OwylVF$hUvMLIzBujt9kPbML/dei1vLiMQ=',
'crypt$$d9grSeqDhMFek',
'098f6bcd4621d373cade4e832627b4f6',
'sha1$$a94a8fe5ccb19ba61c4c0873d391e987982fbbd3',
'bcrypt$$2a$12$WlJP5zm2lmdJ4g/pSE1xF.d/8w.XRT5mo/vGlkKdglBtzcxKw7XJS',
'md5$txHYmSYJKhD4$69286d4a1abd348fbddc9df7687e2ed4']
You can also manually use the hasher’s encode
method, but the above utility function has you covered in an easier way.
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16👍
I came across the same problem while writing fixtures for tests. Here’s how I’m handling this in unit tests.
Creating data from admin and dumping them into fixture works but I don’t quite like being dependent on manually doing it. So here’s what I do –
Create the fixture just as you’ve done and then in the setUp
method, set_password
s for the users.
user_fixture.json
[
{ "model": "auth.user",
"pk": 1,
"fields": {
"username": "user1",
"password": "password"
}
}
]
test_user.py
def setUp(self):
self.User = get_user_model()
# Fix the passwords of fixtures
for user in self.User.objects.all():
user.set_password(user.password)
user.save()
This way I can cleanly write the passwords in fixture and refer back to them when I need to and create more fixtures simply by editing the fixture file.
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6👍
Adding to the answer of @GauravButola, I created a custom management command to load the fixture and fix the passwords in one step. This is useful when not using a testing framework to do the setup of the passwords. The example is working with django 1.11 and probably earlier versions.
In your app providing the fixture add your management command (this is python3 times, so I omitted the init pys):
yourapp/
models.py
fixtures/
initial_data.json
management/
commands/
initdata.py
With initdata.py looking like this:
from django.core.management import BaseCommand, call_command
from django.contrib.auth.models import User
# from yourapp.models import User # if you have a custom user
class Command(BaseCommand):
help = "DEV COMMAND: Fill databasse with a set of data for testing purposes"
def handle(self, *args, **options):
call_command('loaddata','initial_data')
# Fix the passwords of fixtures
for user in User.objects.all():
user.set_password(user.password)
user.save()
Now you can load your initial_data and have valid passwords by calling:
./manage.py initdata
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4👍
Dump Users information from DataBase:
$ python manage.py dumpdata auth.User --indent 4 > users.json
Import / load data especific JSON fixture:
$ python manage.py loaddata users.json
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-1👍
pretty sure you do. it shouldn’t be that difficult. easiest way would be to look at the function user.set_password
i think it is, and look how they do it. you can probably call the function from a python terminal and then copy it into your initial data!
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