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If I want to give an option for users to log in to a website using https:// instead of http://, I'd best to give them an option to get there in my view or template.

I'd like to have the link "Use secure connection" on my login page - but then, how do I do it without hardcoding the URL?

I'd like to be able to just do:

{% url login_page %}
{% url login_page_https %}

and have them point to http://example.com/login and https://example.com/login.

How can I do this?

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3 Answers

The {% url %} tag only generates the path portion of the URL, not the host portion. It only generates something like "/path/to/here" (all you need to do is "view source" and you'll see that's the entire contents of the href). It's your browser that assumes if you're currently on http://example.com the link should also be within http://example.com. So all you need to do to generate a secure link in your template is:

<a href="https://example.com{% url blah %}">

If you don't want to hardcode the domain name (and I wouldn't), you can use the Site object and have it look something like:

<a href="https://{{ site.domain }}{% url blah %}">

Or if you don't want to use the sites framework, you can use request.get_host:

<a href="https://{{ request.get_host }}{% url blah %}">
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This has 1 disadvantage though; when/if I move the site to diffrent domain, or something like that, relative URLs won't break, this one will. I was looking for something more like request.build_absolute_uri() function with option to replace http with https, but I guess it's better to implement it by myself. – kender Nov 23 '09 at 21:01
Well, there is no way to force https and use a relative URL. Edited to mention that you can use the Sites framework to avoid hardcoding the domain name. – Carl Meyer Nov 23 '09 at 22:08
The above option using request.get_host is essentially doing the same thing as request.get_absolute_uri and forcing https. – Carl Meyer Nov 23 '09 at 22:15
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I've not worked much with secure urls, but I have worked a bit with satchmo, which has a middleware and some utils for it. The middleware just checks for the key SSL = True in the view parameters, and makes the request secure that way. You probably don't need to make it that complex, but you can take a look at how it's implemented.

Satchmo is on bitbucked here

I was also able to find a snippets for middlewares which also should be able to help you get a secure login url:

The first is the original, while the 2nd should be ab improved version, at some point, but might not be the case anymore. You can take a look into them.

Using either satchmo or one of the middleware snippets you should be able to do something like

{% url login_page %}
{% url login_page SSL=1 %}
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The linked snippets are a good comprehensive solution if you want to define certain URLs as https-only and then have a middleware take care of it from there. They're overkill if all you are trying to do is create an https link. – Carl Meyer Nov 23 '09 at 22:17
True, for one link alone this is not worth it. In that case your solution is better. – googletorp Nov 24 '09 at 6:27
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Perhaps you could write a tag url_https that does the same thing as url but points to the HTTPS version of the url.

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