Background
I have a custom authentication back end for our django applications that refers to an LDAP server.
As soon as I authenticate someone, I have a wealth of information that our network infrastructure guys put in the LDAP server about the user - their last names (which can change, for instance, if they marry), their e-mails (which can also change), plus other company specific information that would be useful to transfer to the Django auth_user table or profile table for local reference. (*)
To take advantage of this data, as of now, in our custom authenticate method I'm looking up (if it is an existing user logging in) or creating a new (if a new user that never logged in to our Django apps) user, making any changes to it and saving it.
This smells bad to me. Authentication should be about saying yay or nay in granting access, not about collecting information about the user to store. I believe that should happen elsewhere!
But I don't know where that elsewhere is...
My current implementation also causes a problem on the very first login of a user to one of our Django apps, because:
- New user to our apps logs in -
request.usernow has a user with nouser.id - My custom authenticate method saves the user information. Now the user exists in the DB
django.contrib.auth.login()kicks in and retrieves therequest.user(which still has nouser.idand no idea that authenticate saved the user) and tries to save an update to last logged in date.- Save fails because there is already a row in the database for that username (unique constraint violation)
Yes, this only happens the very first time a user logs in; the next time around it will be an update, request.user will have a user.id and everything is fine.
Edit: I'm investigating the striked-out area above. The login code clearly only uses the request.user if the user is None (which, coming out of the validation of the AuthenticationForm it shouldn't be. I probably am doing something wrong in my code...
But it still smells bad to have the authentication doing more than just, you know, authenticating...
Question
What is the right place to plug in changes to the user instance during the login process?
Ideally I would be able to, in my custom authenticate method, state that after login the information collected from a LDAP server should be written to the user instance and potentially the user profile instance.
(*) I do this local caching of the ldap information because I don't want to depend on it being up and running to let users log in to my systems; if ldap is down, the last username and password in auth_user are accepted.
