I apologize if there has been a substantial answer on this already, I have searched for quite a while and can't find any helpful answers.
I have a django project that has varying levels of account access. I have a group of 'Managers' and I want to allow them to manage user accounts.
I want the Managers to be able to create the user account objects for the users. However, I don't want them to have to deal with creating their passwords and sending them to the users (for obvious reasons). This way, managers can impersonate users to get work done on their behalf, and users maintain password control and ownership of their data.
The idea is that managers create the account, and when the account is created Users will be sent a password reset form (same as django's out-of-box auth) which will allow them to set their passwords.
My code looks similar to below (omitted non-imperative stuff)
from django.contrib.auth.models import User
from django.contrib.auth.forms import PasswordResetForm
@manager_required
def manager_add_users(request):
add_user_form = manager_add_user_form(request.POST)
new_user_name = add_user_form.cleaned_data['user_name']
new_user_email = add_user_form.cleaned_data['user_email']
new_user = User.objects.create_user(
username = new_user_name,
email = new_user_email,
)
new_user.save()
set_password_form = PasswordResetForm({'email': new_user.email })
if set_password_form.is_valid():
print 'Reset Form Is Valid'
set_password_form.save(
request= request,
use_https=True,
from_email="support@org.com",
email_template_name='registration/password_reset_email.html')
The account creates properly and everything runs without error. The issue is that although the form is valid (reset form is valid statement prints) it is not actually sending the reset form. There are no form errors.
However, in testing when I initialize the form with an address that already exists in the system like this:
set_password_form = PasswordResetForm({'email':'existing_address@example.com'})
The password reset form sends without error. So it only works with existing user email addresses in the system, but although the user has been created and the .save() method called, it's still not catching it (The users are marked as 'Active' upon creation, so they should be able to be found)
I'm a bit at a loss. I can think of a few ways that I could get around this issue, but this seems the most direct way of doing it and I'm really not entirely sure why it doesn't work.
Yes, I am able to send messages. I am using django's backend mail for testing:
EMAIL_BACKEND = 'django.core.mail.backends.console.EmailBackend'
Glancing at the source code, it looks like Django is ignoring the request because the password is blank.
Try setting a temporary password (using, say, django.utils.crypto.get_random_string()
) before saving the user.