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How might I go about adding a Google+ API sign-in to my Django website?

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  • How to do sign-out using Google oauth in python?
    – Menu
    Jul 21, 2017 at 9:21

2 Answers 2

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+50

First you must create OAuth credentials for Google+.

  1. Go to the Google Developer Console
  2. Create a new project.
  3. Go to "APIs and authentication" -> "Authorization screen" and give your product a name. Click "Save".
  4. Go to "APIs and authentication" -> "Credentials". Under "OAuth", click "Create New Client ID". Add "http://localhost:8000/soc/complete/google-oauth2/" should be listed as a callback URL. This will only work for testing, make sure to put in your actual domain when in production.

Now let's add python-social-auth to your Django app.

  1. Install python-social-auth with pip
  2. Set the appropriate Django settings:

    • Add 'social.apps.django_app.default' to INSTALLED_APPS:
    • Add the SOCIAL_AUTH_GOOGLE_OAUTH2_KEY and SOCIAL_AUTH_GOOGLE_OAUTH2_SECRET settings with the client key and secret you created earlier. The client key is the "Client ID" listed in the "Credentials" screen in the Google developer console, the one which ends in ".apps.googleusercontent.com". Only take the part before the dot. The secret is listed as "Client secret".
    • Make sure you have the AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS setting explicitly defined, and that it contains 'social.backends.google.GoogleOAuth2'. An example would be:

      AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS = (
          'social.backends.google.GoogleOAuth2',
          'django.contrib.auth.backends.ModelBackend')
      
    • Define the SOCIAL_AUTH_PIPELINE setting as detailed in the python-social-auth documentation. What every setting does is listed in that page.

    If you have something to do with the information you get from Google+, I recommend defining a function:

        def save_profile(backend, user, response, *args, **kwargs):
            if backend.name == "google-oauth2":
               # do something
    

    where user is a django.contrib.auth.models.User object, and response is a dictionary. Then add that function to the SOCIAL_AUTH_PIPELINE using the full module path, after create_user.

    If you don't want to do anything with that information you can leave the default pipeline as-is.

Finally, you'll want to add the python-social-auth urls to your site's urlpatterns:

from django.conf.urls import include 
url("^soc/", include("social.apps.django_app.urls", namespace="social"))

And that should do it! It's time for testing. First, ./manage.py makemigrations for the required migrations of python-social-auth, and then ./manage.py migrate, as explained here. Then, you can run the development server, and go to http://localhost:8000/soc/login/google-oauth2/?next=/ .

Hopefully I did not skip explaining any step and it will work. Feel free to ask more questions and read the docs. Also, here is a working example that you should check out.

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  • 2
    i have followed all steps, its working as the user login using social auth but my user is not getting created , its just login , though i see a new record is created in table "social_auth_usersocialauth" but the no new user is created in User table. i am extending the AbstractBaseUser and created my custom user domain. any help would be appreciated
    – roanjain
    Apr 28, 2016 at 7:14
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    I wish I could up vote this answer many times... I've read 3 tutorials and only after reading this I got it working.
    – OMRY VOLK
    May 14, 2016 at 13:24
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    Also make sure to add the Google+ API to the list of enabled APIs on the Google Developer Console (under APIs), otherwise you'll get a 403
    – spg
    Sep 23, 2016 at 16:19
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    include comes from django.conf.urls. docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.10/ref/urls
    – rhaps0dy
    Jan 18, 2017 at 10:56
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    Note that at some point after this answer was posted python-social-auth was changed over to a new library structure; it is now social-auth-core, with dedicated apps for specific frameworks, so in this case social-auth-app-django. Apr 27, 2017 at 18:21
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@rhaps0dy's answer is correct, but python-social-auth is now deprecated and migrated as social-auth-app-django. So this is what I made different from @rhaps0dy guidelines.

  1. Instead of python-social-auth, I installed social-auth-app-django,
  2. 'social.apps.django_app.default' becomes 'social_django'
  3. 'social.backends.google.GoogleOAuth2' is now 'social_core.backends.google.GoogleOAuth2'
  4. url("^soc/", include("social.apps.django_app.urls", namespace="social")) becomes url("^soc/", include("social_django.urls", namespace="social"))
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  • 3
    thanks for sharing, with the previous values it crashed everywhere
    – ignivs
    Jan 3, 2017 at 14:16
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    Thank you both! Pretty clean answer and it's working with modifications mentioned by georgi Apr 20, 2017 at 14:41
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    Thanks very much! It really helps me a lot!
    – Eric Zhang
    Jul 4, 2017 at 0:52

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