Please guide and suggest me the best way to solve this problem.
I have a user information table:
first: username, first_name, last_name, email, password [ provided by django ]
Second: mobile, parent_id and other user profile related details [ want to create ]
Goal: I want the second table with some fields and connect with the auth_user ( the name provided by django ) through OneToOne relation so I can fectch all the field through one object.
What I have tried
1 case
I created a second table and connect with FK relation and download all previous data from the previous DB and sperate data manually and uploaded through CSV into new tables.
Problem: I cannot access both table data through a single object.
2nd case So I update the second table with OneToOne relation.
Problem: add new users with this relation is perfectly fine but when trying to edit/ change previously saved data then got error
error: invalid literal for int() with base 10 during change in models
Note: Hundreds of user in the previous table, just safly migrate with new DB schema.
Please, give me a tricky idea to fix this issue.
Thanks to all.
Kudos to the savior.
code:
views.py [file]
...
@login_required()
def register(request, epin):
EPin = apps.get_model('epin', 'EPin')
if EPin.objects.filter(epin__exact=epin, is_active=1,
assigned_to=request.user.username).exists():
form = RegistrationForm()
if request.method == 'POST':
form = RegistrationForm(request.POST)
if form.is_valid():
if User.objects.filter(username__exact=request.POST['parent_id']).exists():
try:
with transaction.atomic():
username = generate_username()
password = generate_password()
EPin.objects.filter(epin__exact=epin,
is_active=1).update(used_by=username, is_active=0,
used_at=datetime.now())
Profile(mobile=request.POST['mobile'],
leg=request.POST['leg'],
product_id=request.POST['product'],
parent_id=request.POST['parent_id'],
user_id=username).save()
User.objects.create_user(username=username, password=password,
email=request.POST['email'],
first_name=request.POST['first_name'],
last_name=request.POST['last_name'])
logging.getLogger('info_logger').info('U : '+username+' P : '+password)
except Exception as e:
messages.warning(request, e)
logging.getLogger('error_logger').error(e)
# try:
# user_msg = 'Username :' + username + ' and Password : ' + password
# send_mail('Successfully registered ', user_msg,
# 'no-reply@example.in', [request.POST['email']])
# except Exception as e:
# messages.warning(request, e)
# logging.getLogger('error_logger').error(e)
# try:
# user_msg = 'Username :' + username + ' and Password : ' + password
# send_message(user_msg, request.POST['mobile'])
# except Exception as e:
# messages.warning(request, e)
# logging.getLogger('error_logger').error(e)
messages.success(request,
'New User successfully created!, Username and password sent on mobile and email.')
return redirect('epin')
else:
messages.warning(request, 'Invalid Sponsor ID, User not exists')
return render(request, 'users/register.html', {'form': form})
else:
messages.warning(request, 'Not a valid E-Pin -- ' + epin)
logging.getLogger('error_logger').error(epin+' not valid')
return redirect('epin')
models.py [file]
class Profile(models.Model):
user = models.OneToOneField(User, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
# user_id = models.CharField(max_length=10)
mobile = models.CharField(max_length=20)
parent_id = models.CharField(max_length=10)
created_at = models.DateTimeField(auto_now_add=True)
updated_at = models.DateTimeField(auto_now=True)
def __str__(self):
return f'{self.user.username}'
To relate Django´s user model as a Foreign key in another model use the following:
from django.contrib.auth.models import User
from django.contrib.auth import get_user_model
user = models.ForeignKey(get_user_model(), help_text="User", blank=True, null=True, on_delete=models.CASCADE)