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I've read the documentation, but there doesn't seem to be a conclusive tutorial that has the entire process where someone logs in, and their session is maintained via beaker or the default session system then logs out(or I haven't found it). From my understanding so far:

if 'form.submit' in request.POST:
    usr = request.params['username']
    pw = request.params['password']

/*** verify username/password logic ***/

    headers = remember(request, usr_id)
    return HTTPFound(location = welcome_screen, headers = headers)

headers() basically creates a cookie that identifies the session right? After that, I can access said session via beaker like so?:

request.session['usr_id'] 

... and to log out and invalidate the session I use:

headers = forget(request, usr)
return HTTPFound(location = logout_screen, headers = headers)

I'm just trying to create a very simple app that allows someone to log in and logout; im not using a db backend; the username and passwords are held in a global variable and will not change(this is just something im playing with to learn sessions and authentication).

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  • You need a datastore because your global variable will be released back into the memory everytime response is sent. You can simply use a text file if you want but you can't use memory on a web app in the same way you use it in a regular app.
    – Dan
    Sep 17, 2014 at 17:33
  • You mix up Authentication & Authorization with sessioning stuff. Oct 8, 2014 at 17:10

2 Answers 2

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Here is simple app that allows login and logout:

@view_config(route_name='main', renderer='main.mako')                          
def main_view(request):                                                        
    return {}                                                                  


@view_config(route_name='login', renderer='login.mako')                        
def login_view(request):                                                       
    login = request.params.get('login')                                        
    password = request.params.get('password')                                  
    if request.method == 'POST':                                               
        if login and USERS.get(login) == password:                             
            headers = remember(request, login)                                 
            return HTTPFound('/', headers=headers)                             
    return {}                                                                  


@view_config(route_name='logout')                                              
def logout(request):                                                           
    headers = forget(request)                                                  
    return HTTPFound(location='/', headers=headers)                            


if __name__ == '__main__':                                                     
    # configuration settings                                                   
    settings = {}                                                              
    settings['mako.directories'] = os.path.join(here, 'templates')             
    authn_policy = AuthTktAuthenticationPolicy('sosecret', hashalg='sha512')   
    authz_policy = ACLAuthorizationPolicy()                                    
    config = Configurator(settings=settings)                                   
    config.include('pyramid_mako')                                             
    config.add_static_view('static', os.path.join(here, 'static'))             
    config.set_authentication_policy(authn_policy)                             
    config.set_authorization_policy(authz_policy)                              
    config.add_route('main', '/')                                              
    config.add_route('login', '/login')                                        
    config.add_route('logout', '/logout')                                      
    config.scan()                                                              
    app = config.make_wsgi_app()                                               
    server = make_server('0.0.0.0', 8080, app)                                 
    server.serve_forever()        

Full code here.

headers() basically creates a cookie that identifies the session right? After that, I can access said session via beaker like so?

Yes you are almost right. It creates cookie that identifies user, session use other cookie. You can access to user_id via request.authenticated_userid. AuthTktAuthenticationPolicy is backend that uses signed cookie, when you call remember(request, user) it returns headers with cookie signed by your secret key. When you call forget(request) is just return headers that would remove this cookie. Note: if user would know your secret key, than he can authenticate as any user.

Also you may create your own auth backend that would be using other methods (maybe http basic authentication). With pyramid also bundled some other auth backends. If you want change cookie life time you can set max_age param of AuthTktAuthenticationPolicy backend. For more info see class docs.

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  • thanks this is very clear, but I don't get how the session is created and canceled in relation to the user being authenticated? how do i start and then later invalidate the users session cookie? Just create it when the user is authenticated, and clear it when they log out? And what about the max_life for the session cookie?
    – Jaigus
    Sep 17, 2014 at 18:52
  • To change cookie life time you may set max_age param of AuthTktAuthenticationPolicy Sep 17, 2014 at 19:18
  • 1
    Pay attention to calls using remember and forget. This is what triggers authentication state. Oct 8, 2014 at 17:12
  • @SaschaGottfried Your attempted edit proposes to change far too much of Slava's answer here. Please add specific comments as to how it should be changed, or update your answer with the information you want to include. Editing an answer should not alter its intent.
    – admdrew
    Oct 8, 2014 at 18:40
1

For reference purposes: A simple google search for pyramid remember forget will show a lot of website explaining the topic and share sample code. A concise example is listed within Pyramid Quick Tutorial.

Lots of official pyramid tutorials a featuring auth-related topics as well

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