64

I want to get the currently logged in user (request.user) in the save method of models.py. I want to check the role of the user and see if it can perform some operations based on his role.

models.py:

class TimeSheet(models.Model):
    check_in_time = models.TimeField()
    check_out_time = models.TimeField()

class Tasks(models.Model):
    time_sheet = models.ForeignKey(TimeSheet)
    project = models.ForeignKey(Project)
    start_time = models.TimeField()
    end_time = models.TimeField()

    def save(self, *args,**kwargs):
        project = SpentTime.objects.get(project__project__id = self.project.id)
        start = datetime.datetime.strptime(str(self.start_time), '%H:%M:%S')
        end = datetime.datetime.strptime(str(self.end_time), '%H:%M:%S')
        time = float("{0:.2f}".format((end - start).seconds/3600.0))

        if common.isDesigner(request.user):
            SpentTime.objects.filter(project__project__id = self.project.id).update(design = float(project.design) + time)

        if common.isDeveloper(request.user):
            SpentTime.objects.filter(project__project__id = self.project.id).update(develop = float(project.develop) + time)

        super(Tasks, self).save(*args, **kwargs)

Here the Tasks model is being used as inline in Timesheet model. I want to check the role of the currently logged in user and update another model based on the user's role. Here I need request.user to check the role of the current user. I am not using any forms or templates and completely making use of Django admin. Is there any method to get request.user in the save method or to check and update the values in another model in admin.py?

6 Answers 6

48

You can tackle this problem from another angle. Instead of changing the models save method you should override the AdminSites save_model method. There you'll have the request object and can access the logged in user data as you already pointed out.

Have a look at this chapter of the docs: Django ModelAdmin documentation save_model

8
28

I found a way to do that, it involves declaring a MiddleWare, though. Create a file called get_username.py inside your app, with this content:

from threading import current_thread

_requests = {}

def get_username():
    t = current_thread()
    if t not in _requests:
         return None
    return _requests[t]

class RequestMiddleware(object):
    def process_request(self, request):
        _requests[current_thread()] = request

Edit your settings.py and add it to the MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES:

MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = (
    ...
    'yourapp.get_username.RequestMiddleware',
)

Now, in your save() method, you can get the current username like this:

from get_username import get_username

...

def save(self, *args, **kwargs):
    req = get_username()
    print "Your username is: %s" % (req.user)
3
  • 7
    It may create memory issue over the period of time if threads are being killed and being created again and again. You should actually add current_thread().user = user and should access the property in that manner. Once the thread will be killed, memory will be released as well. Aug 22, 2017 at 12:22
  • Hrishabh Gupta => if you have a better and complete answer then why don't you write it in full? This empty comment didn't help me at all, it only caused more doubts. Nov 6, 2022 at 18:04
  • Error in Django 4: RequestMiddleware() takes no arguments. Edit: Adding MiddlewareMixin fixes this
    – Michael
    Jan 30, 2023 at 18:16
12

The solution proposed by @nKn is good starting point, but when I tried to implemented today, I faced two issues:

  1. In the current Django version middleware created as plain object doesn't work.
  2. Unittests are failing (since they usually run in single thread, so your 'request' will can be sticked between two consequent tests if the first test has HTTP-request and the second hasn't).

Here is my updated middleware code, which works with Django 1.10 and doesn't break unittests:

from threading import current_thread

from django.utils.deprecation import MiddlewareMixin


_requests = {}


def current_request():
    return _requests.get(current_thread().ident, None)


class RequestMiddleware(MiddlewareMixin):

    def process_request(self, request):
        _requests[current_thread().ident] = request

    def process_response(self, request, response):
        # when response is ready, request should be flushed
        _requests.pop(current_thread().ident, None)
        return response

    def process_exception(self, request, exception):
        # if an exception has happened, request should be flushed too
         _requests.pop(current_thread().ident, None)
2
  • Do you have an example for your test? In my test always comes AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'user'? Thanks!
    – Sascha Rau
    Sep 4, 2017 at 16:00
  • @Sascha Rau unfortunately, only tests from my commercial code, with some cohesion to my project structure. The behavior you describe is totally OK if you try to reach request in the code where the request wasn't actually made. To be safe, try somethins like request = current_request() ; if request is not None: ... Sep 5, 2017 at 19:35
8

The correct way is to use threading.local, instead of using a dictionary with threading.current_thread, since it will lead to a memory leak, since the old values will stay there for as long the application is running:

import threading

request_local = threading.local()

def get_request():
    return getattr(request_local, 'request', None)

class RequestMiddleware():
    def __init__(self, get_response):
        self.get_response = get_response

    def __call__(self, request):
        request_local.request = request
        return self.get_response(request)

    def process_exception(self, request, exception):
        request_local.request = None

    def process_template_response(self, request, response):
        request_local.request = None
        return response

If you want to access the user instead of the request, you can do get_request().user, or save the user instead of the request on __call__

2
  • Shall this middleware be as soon or as last as possible in the list? Or it does not matter at all?
    – karlosss
    Apr 9, 2019 at 17:11
  • @karlosss it doesn't really matters, since you already have access to the request object inside of middlewares, so you won't use get_request there, and it doesn't modifies requests
    – Francisco
    Apr 10, 2019 at 19:00
7

I don't think that save_model method override is the best option. Imagine, for instance, that you want to save the user info or validate the model based on user info and that save() does not come from a view or the adminsite itself.

What people are asking are constructions like those one:

def save(..)
    self.user = current_user()

or

def save(..)
    user = current_user()
    if user.group == 'XPTO':
        error('This user cannot edit this record')

The best approach I found so far is:

https://bitbucket.org/q/django-current-user/overview

2
4

Have you tried using the following library:

https://pypi.org/project/django-currentuser/

Snippet of how it is used from the website:

from django_currentuser.middleware import (get_current_user, get_current_authenticated_user)
# As model field:
from django_currentuser.db.models import CurrentUserField
class Foo(models.Model):
    created_by = CurrentUserField()
1
  • 2
    It doesn't work for django version 4 onwards, at least not as of today. Nov 6, 2022 at 16:36

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