graphene-django/docs/authorization.rst

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Authorization in Django
=======================
There are several ways you may want to limit access to data when
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working with Graphene and Django: limiting which fields are accessible
via GraphQL and limiting which objects a user can access.
Let's use a simple example model.
.. code:: python
from django.db import models
class Post(models.Model):
title = models.CharField(max_length=100)
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content = models.TextField()
published = models.BooleanField(default=False)
owner = models.ForeignKey('auth.User')
Limiting Field Access
---------------------
This is easy, simply use the ``only_fields`` meta attribute.
.. code:: python
from graphene import relay
from graphene_django.types import DjangoObjectType
from .models import Post
class PostNode(DjangoObjectType):
class Meta:
model = Post
only_fields = ('title', 'content')
interfaces = (relay.Node, )
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conversely you can use ``exclude_fields`` meta atrribute.
.. code:: python
from graphene import relay
from graphene_django.types import DjangoObjectType
from .models import Post
class PostNode(DjangoObjectType):
class Meta:
model = Post
exclude_fields = ('published', 'owner')
interfaces = (relay.Node, )
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Queryset Filtering On Lists
---------------------------
In order to filter which objects are available in a queryset-based list,
define a resolve method for that field and return the desired queryset.
.. code:: python
from graphene import ObjectType
from graphene_django.filter import DjangoFilterConnectionField
from .models import Post
class Query(ObjectType):
all_posts = DjangoFilterConnectionField(CategoryNode)
def resolve_all_posts(self, args, info):
return Post.objects.filter(published=True)
User-based Queryset Filtering
-----------------------------
If you are using ``GraphQLView`` you can access Django's request
with the context argument.
.. code:: python
from graphene import ObjectType
from graphene_django.filter import DjangoFilterConnectionField
from .models import Post
class Query(ObjectType):
my_posts = DjangoFilterConnectionField(CategoryNode)
def resolve_my_posts(self, args, context, info):
# context will reference to the Django request
if not context.user.is_authenticated():
return Post.objects.none()
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else:
return Post.objects.filter(owner=context.user)
If you're using your own view, passing the request context into the
schema is simple.
.. code:: python
result = schema.execute(query, context_value=request)
Filtering ID-based node access
------------------------------
In order to add authorization to id-based node access, we need to add a
method to your ``DjangoObjectType``.
.. code:: python
from graphene_django.types import DjangoObjectType
from .models import Post
class PostNode(DjangoObjectType):
class Meta:
model = Post
only_fields = ('title', 'content')
interfaces = (relay.Node, )
@classmethod
def get_node(cls, id, context, info):
try:
post = cls._meta.model.objects.get(id=id)
except cls._meta.model.DoesNotExist:
return None
if post.published or context.user == post.owner:
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return post
return None
Adding login required
---------------------
If you want to use the standard Django LoginRequiredMixin_ you can create your own view, which includes the ``LoginRequiredMixin`` and subclasses the ``GraphQLView``:
.. code:: python
from django.contrib.auth.mixins import LoginRequiredMixin
from graphene_django.views import GraphQLView
class PrivateGraphQLView(LoginRequiredMixin, GraphQLView):
pass
After this, you can use the new ``PrivateGraphQLView`` in ``urls.py``:
.. code:: python
urlpatterns = [
# some other urls
url(r'^graphql', PrivateGraphQLView.as_view(graphiql=True, schema=schema)),
]
.. _LoginRequiredMixin: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.10/topics/auth/default/#the-loginrequired-mixin