I want to serve a Django application that serves multiple web sites by single database but different user sets. Think like a blog application, it will be used by several domains with different themes, but use same database by adding a site field to models.
I use Django's SitesFramework for that job. But the problem is, I couldn't separate user models for different sites. I want to use same user model with a site field and email field that unique per site.
I tried to extend AbstractUser
model like that:
from django.contrib.auth.models import AbstractUser
from django.contrib.sites.models import Site
from django.contrib.sites.managers import CurrentSiteManager
class Member(AbstractUser):
username = None
site = models.ForeignKey(Site)
USERNAME_FIELD = 'email'
REQUIRED_FIELDS = []
on_site = CurrentSiteManager()
class Meta:
unique_together = ('site', 'email')
But gives that error: 'Member.email' must be unique because it is named as the 'USERNAME_FIELD'.
What is the best practice for that issue?
I hope this approach helps to you:
1) Compose username before save:
2) Then overwrite ModelBackend in your custom auth backend:
3) Remember set your custom backend on settings:
4) Include site when authenticate: