django-sesame provides one-click login for your Django project. It uses specially crafted URLs containing an authentication token, for example: https://example.com/?url_auth_token=AAAAARchl18CIQUlImmbV9q7PZk%3A89AEU34b0JLSrkT8Ty2RPISio5
It's useful if you want to share private content without requiring your visitors to remember a username and a password or to go through an authentication process involving a third-party.
django-sesame is tested with:
- Django 1.11 (LTS) and 2.0.
- all supported Python versions.
It requires django.contrib.auth
. It's compatible with custom user models.
It uses django.contrib.session
when it's available.
Technically, django-sesame can provide stateless authenticated navigation
without django.contrib.sessions
, provided all internal links include the
authentication token, but that increases the security issues explained below.
django-sesame is released under the BSD license, like Django itself.
Before using django-sesame in your project, you should review the following advice carefully.
The major security weakness in django-sesame is a direct consequence of the feature it implements: whoever obtains an authentication token will be able to log in to your website. URLs end up in countless insecure places: emails, referer headers, proxy logs, browser history, etc. You can't avoid that. So use django-sesame only for mundane things.
If a data leak would affect you in non-trivial ways, don't use this library. You have been warned.
Otherwise, a reasonable attempt has been made to provide a secure solution. django-sesame uses Django's signing framework to create signed tokens.
Tokens are tied to the primary key and the password of the corresponding user. Changing the password invalidates the token. When the authentication backend uses salted passwords — that's been the default in Django for a long time — the token is invalidated even if the new password is identical to the old one.
By default, tokens never expire. If you want them to expire after a given
amount of time, set the SESAME_MAX_AGE
setting to a duration in seconds.
Then each token will contain the time it was generated at and django-sesame
will check if it's still valid at each login attempt.
Add
sesame.backends.ModelBackend
toAUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS
:AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS += ['sesame.backends.ModelBackend']
Add
sesame.middleware.AuthenticationMiddleware
toMIDDLEWARE
:MIDDLEWARE += ['sesame.middleware.AuthenticationMiddleware']
Generate authentication tokens with
sesame.utils.get_query_string(user)
.
That's all!
django-sesame provides two functions to generate authenticated URLs.
sesame.utils.get_query_string(user)
returns a complete query string that you can append to any URL to enable one-click login.sesame.utils.get_parameters(user)
returns a dictionary of GET parameters to add to the query string, if you're already building one.
Share resulting URLs with your users while ensuring adequate confidentiality.
By default, the URL parameter is called url_auth_token
. You can set the
SESAME_TOKEN_NAME
setting to a shorter name that doesn't conflict with
query string parameters used by your application.