0

I'm trying to create a site with invite only login. In addition the invited users can sign in only by using some OAuth login method.

I'm using Django 1.4.

I'm using apps github.com/lizrice/django-allauth and github.com/lizrice/django-invitation

In installed_apps I have included all the apps that documentation tells me to include:

'allauth',
'allauth.account',
'allauth.socialaccount',
'allauth.socialaccount.providers.google',
'invitation',

I have set up few variables in settings.py:

SOCIALACCOUNT_AUTO_SIGNUP = False
SOCIALACCOUNT_ENABLED = True
INVITE_MODE = True
ACCOUNT_INVITATION_DAYS = 10
INVITATIONS_PER_USER = 1
INVITATION_USE_ALLAUTH = True

And in urls.py I have only needed urls

url(r'^accounts/register/$', register,
        {
            'backend': 'invitation.backends.InvitationBackend',
        },
    name='registration_register'),
(r'^accounts/', include('invitation.urls')),
(r'^accounts/', include('allauth.urls')),

I can create an invitation code and with that invitation code I can proceed to registration. Now, the registration view brings up the following error (full Stacktrace):

The view invitation.views.register didn't return an HttpResponse object.

Registration view should display a registration flow where user can select OAuth provider to create an account.

Edit: with my configuration, the error comes from allauth/socialaccount/views.py

def signup(request, **kwargs):
    if request.user.is_authenticated():
        return HttpResponseRedirect(reverse(connections))
    sociallogin = request.session.get('socialaccount_sociallogin')
    if not sociallogin:
        return HttpResponseRedirect(reverse('account_login'))

There is no session item with that name, so code tries to reverse to 'account_login'. This URL is defined in allauth. Allauth is in the installed_apps list and the urls are included.

Edit: Added Stacktrace

Edit: removed registration, it is not needed.

2
  • First, always post the full stacktrace, not just the error. Second, is invitation.views.register part of the django-invitation package you're using or is that something you setup? If it's part of the package, then they've got a serious flaw in their view code. There's some conditional branch there that ends up not returning a response object. Sep 19, 2012 at 17:24
  • Yes, invitation.views.register is part of django-invitation. It is quite possible that I have not configured these three apps correctly. Seems that request.session['socialaccount_sociallogin'] does not get set. This is defined in allauth/socialaccount/helpers.py, in function _process_signup. Debugging revelead that code does not get executed there.
    – rice
    Sep 19, 2012 at 20:21

1 Answer 1

1

It's more than possible that this code of mine is flawed :-) but let's see if we can get to the bottom of it. Also, note that pennersr suggested a better way to do this but I haven't had a chance to implement it yet.

The idea with this is that you don't let people sign up for a new account unless they've got a valid invite code - but if they're going to sign in through a social account you can't tell if they're an existing user or a new user until after they already signed in. If it turns out they're a new user, we'll tell them they need an invitation key. Time passes, they get hold of an invitation key somehow and come back to your site and enter it. If they happen to be in the same session, they'll still be logged in socially (I think that's where request.session['socialaccount_sociallogin'] comes into it). If not then they'll go to the account login page, from which they can sign in socially or create a new username/pw account.

Anyway. The call to reverse('account_login') should, I believe, resolve to allauth.account.views.login - can you check that's happening for you? On a quick inspection I can't see how that function wouldn't return an HttpResponse object so I wonder if it's being called at all.

3
  • After a few hours of more debugging, I still don't understand why invitation.views.register returns None while the allauth.socialaccount.views.signup returns valid response. The functionality you described does work. If user signs in without a key, user is created but it's not active. With a key same user becomes active when signing in the second time. I think I will next take a look at the way pennersr suggested. Thank you for the response anyway!
    – rice
    Sep 23, 2012 at 14:08
  • Sorry. My intent wasn't to be antagonistic, but every branch of logic in a view needs to return some sort of response. Returning None or anything else but an HttpResponse or subclass thereof is incorrect. Sep 24, 2012 at 14:36
  • 1
    Problem is in invitation/views.py, row 15. The redefined function registration_register is missing return, correct row would be return allauth_signup(request, template_name=template_name)
    – rice
    Sep 25, 2012 at 6:11

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.