Frequently-asked questions
The following are miscellaneous common questions and answers related
to installing/using django-registration, culled from bug reports,
emails and other sources.
General
- What license is django-registration under?
- django-registration is offered under a three-clause BSD-style
license; this is an OSI-approved open-source license, and allows
you a large degree of freedom in modifiying and redistributing the
code. For the full terms, see the file LICENSE which came with
your copy of django-registration; if you did not receive a copy of
this file, you can view it online at
<http://bitbucket.org/ubernostrum/django-registration/src/tip/LICENSE>.
- Why are the forms and models for the default backend not in the default backend?
The model and manager used by the default backend are in registration.models, and the default
form class (and various subclasses) are in registration.forms;
logically, they might be expected to exist in
registration.backends.default, but there are several reasons
why that’s not such a good idea:
- Older versions of django-registration made use of the model and
form classes, and moving them would create an unnecessary
backwards incompatibility: import statements would need to
be changed, and some database updates would be needed to
reflect the new location of the
RegistrationProfile model.
- Due to the design of Django’s ORM, the RegistrationProfile
model would end up with an app_label of default, which
isn’t particularly descriptive and may conflict with other
applications. By keeping it in registration.models, it
retains an app_label of registration, which more
accurately reflects what it does and is less likely to cause
problems.
- Although the RegistrationProfile model and the various
form classes are used by the default backend,
they can and are meant to be reused as needed by other
backends. Any backend which uses an activation step should feel
free to reuse the RegistrationProfile model, for example,
and the registration form classes are in no way tied to a
specific backend (and cover a number of common use cases which
will crop up regardless of the specific backend logic in use).
Installation and setup
- How do I install django-registration?
- Full instructions are available in the quick start guide.
- Do I need to put a copy of django-registration in every project I use it in?
- No; putting applications in your project directory is a very bad
habit, and you should stop doing it. If you followed the
instructions mentioned above, django-registration was installed
into a location that’s on your Python import path, so you’ll only
ever need to add registration to your INSTALLED_APPS
setting (in any project, or in any number of projects), and it
will work.
- Does django-registration come with any sample templates I can use right away?
No, for two reasons:
- Providing default templates with an application is generally
hard to impossible, because different sites can have such
wildly different design and template structure. Any attempt to
provide templates which would work with all the possibilities
would probably end up working with none of them.
- A number of things in django-registration depend on the
specific registration backend you use,
including the variables which end up in template
contexts. Since django-registration has no way of knowing in
advance what backend you’re going to be using, it also has no
way of knowing what your templates will need to look like.
Fortunately, however, django-registration has good documentation
which explains what context variables will be available to
templates, and so it should be easy for anyone who knows Django’s
template system to create templates which integrate with their own
site.
Configuration
- Do I need to rewrite the views to change the way they behave?
No. There are several ways you can customize behavior without
making any changes whatsoever:
- Pass custom arguments – e.g., to specify forms, template names,
etc. – to the registration views.
- Use the signals sent by the views to add custom
behavior.
- Write a custom registration backend which
implements the behavior you need, and have the views use your
backend.
If none of these are sufficient, your best option is likely to
simply write your own views; however, it is hoped that the level
of customization exposed by these options will be sufficient for
nearly all user-registration workflows.
- How do I pass custom arguments to the views?
- Part 3 of the official Django tutorial, when it introduces
generic views,
covers the necessary mechanism: simply provide a dictionary of
keyword arguments in your URLconf.
- Does that mean I should rewrite django-registration’s default URLconf?
- No; if you’d like to pass custom arguments to the registration
views, simply write and include your own URLconf instead of
including the default one provided with django-registration.
- I don’t want to write my own URLconf because I don’t want to write patterns for all the auth views!
- You’re in luck, then; django-registration provides a URLconf which
only contains the patterns for the auth views, and which you can
include in your own URLconf anywhere you’d like; it lives at
registration.auth_urls.
- I don’t like the names you’ve given to the URL patterns!
- In that case, you should feel free to set up your own URLconf
which uses the names you want.
Troubleshooting
I’ve got functions listening for the registration/activation signals, but they’re not getting called!
The most common cause of this is placing django-registration in a
sub-directory that’s on your Python import path, rather than
installing it directly onto the import path as normal. Importing
from django-registration in that case can cause various issues,
including incorrectly connecting signal handlers. For example, if
you were to place django-registration inside a directory named
django_apps, and refer to it in that manner, you would end up
with a situation where your code does this:
from django_apps.registration.signals import user_registered
But django-registration will be doing:
from registration.signals import user_registered
From Python’s point of view, these import statements refer to two
different objects in two different modules, and so signal handlers
connected to the signal from the first import will not be called
when the signal is sent using the second import.
To avoid this problem, follow the standard practice of installing
django-registration directly on your import path and always
referring to it by its own module name: registration (and in
general, it is always a good idea to follow normal Python
practices for installing and using Django applications).
Tips and tricks
- How do I log a user in immediately after registration or activation?
- You can most likely do this simply by writing a function which
listens for the appropriate signal; your function
should set the backend attribute of the user to the correct
authentication backend, and then call
django.contrib.auth.login() to log the user in.
- How do I re-send an activation email?
- Assuming you’re using the default backend, a custom admin action
is provided for this; in the admin for the
RegistrationProfile model, simply
click the checkbox for the user(s) you’d like to re-send the email
for, then select the “Re-send activation emails” action.
- How do I manually activate a user?
- In the default backend, a custom admin action is provided for
this. In the admin for the RegistrationProfile model, click
the checkbox for the user(s) you’d like to activate, then select
the “Activate users” action.