I am attempting to log in the test client using its built in login function. I am trying to unit test views and need to log in to test some of them. I have been trying to do this for too long and need help. A few notes:
create_user() does create a valid user, It has been used in other locations.
From what I have seen about client.login() it returns a boolean, when I ran my tests the failure was "False is not True", so this appears to be correct.
The only way I have successfully logged in is by calling client.post("/my/login/url", {username and password in dict.}) However, for some reason It does not stay logged in for all of my test cases which I find VERY strange.
def setUp(self):
"""
Initializes the test client and logs it in.
"""
self.user = create_user()
self.logged_in = self.client.login(username=self.user.username, password=self.user.password)
def test_valid(self):
self.assertTrue(self.logged_in)
I have changed it to the following:
def setUp(self):
"""
Initializes the test client and logs it in.
"""
self.password = "password"
self.user = create_user(password=self.password)
self.logged_in = self.client.login(username=self.user.username, password=self.password)
It still fails to log in.
create user is in class "Static" and has a user_count initialized as 0, the function is as follows:
def create_user(username=None, password=None, email=None, is_superuser=False):
if username is None:
username = "user%d" % Static.user_count
while User.objects.filter(username=username).count() != 0:
Static.user_count += 1
username = "user%d" % Static.user_count
if password is None:
password = "password"
if email is None:
email="user%[email protected]" % Static.user_count
Static.user_count += 1
user = User.objects.create(username=username, password=password, is_superuser=is_superuser)
You cannot access the password directly. The password
attribute is encrypted. (See Password management in Django.)
For example, here sample output of password.
>>> user = User.objects.create_user(username='asdf', email='[email protected]', password='xxxx')
>>> user.password
'sha1$166e7$4028738f0c0df0e7ec3cec06843c35d2b5a1aae8'
As you can see, user.password
is not xxxx
I given.
I'd modify create_user
to accept optional password parameter. And pass a password both to create_user
, and client.login
as follow:
def setUp(self):
"""
Initializes the test client and logs it in.
"""
password = 'secret'
self.user = create_user(password=password)
self.logged_in = self.client.login(username=self.user.username, password=password)
UPDATE
create_user
should use User.objects.create_user
instead of User.objects.create
. And the created user object should be returned:
def create_user(username=None, password=None, email=None, is_superuser=False):
if username is None:
username = "user%d" % Static.user_count
while User.objects.filter(username=username).count() != 0:
Static.user_count += 1
username = "user%d" % Static.user_count
if password is None:
password = "password"
if email is None:
email="user%[email protected]" % Static.user_count
Static.user_count += 1
user = User.objects.create_user(username=username, password=password)
# ^^^^^^^^^^^
user.is_superuser = is_superuser
user.save()
return user # <---
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