Django allauth social login: automatically linking social site profiles using the registered email

StackOverflow https://stackoverflow.com/questions/19354009

Question

I aim to create the easiest login experience possible for the users of my Django site. I imagine something like:

  1. Login screen is presented to user
  2. User selects to login with Facebook or Google
  3. User enter password in external site
  4. User can interact with my site as an authenticated user

Ok, this part is easy, just have to install django-allauth and configure it.

But I also want to give the option to use the site with a local user. It would have another step:

  1. Login screen is presented to user
  2. User selects to register
  3. User enter credentials
  4. Site sends a verification email
  5. User clicks in email link and can interact with my site as an authenticated user

Ok, both the default authentication and allauth can do it. But now is the million dollars question.

If they change how they do the login, how do I automatically associate their Google, FB and local accounts?

See that any way they login, I have their email address. Is it possible to do it using django-allauth? I know I can do it with user intervention. Today the default behavior is to refuse the login saying that the email is already registered.

If it isn't possible to do just with configuration, I'll accept the answer that gives me some orientation about which modifications should I make in allauth code to support this workflow.

There are a lot of reasons to do this. The users will forget which method they used to authenticate, and will sometimes use Google, sometimes FB and sometimes the local user account. We already have a lot of local user accounts and social accounts will be a new feature. I want the users to maintain their identity. I envision the possibility to ask for the user friends list, so if they logged using Google, I'd like to also have their FB account.

It is a hobby site, there isn't great security requirements, so please don't answer that this isn't a wise security implementation.

Later, I'd create a custom user model to have just the email as the login id. But I'll be happy with an answer that just let me automatically associate a accounts of the default user model that has a required username.

I'm using Django==1.5.4 and django-allauth==0.13.0

Was it helpful?

Solution 2

You will need to override the sociallogin adapter, specifically, the pre_social_login method, which is called after authentication with the social provider, but before this login is processed by allauth.

In my_adapter.py, do something like this

from django.contrib.auth.models import User

from allauth.account.models import EmailAccount
from allauth.exceptions import ImmediateHttpResponse
from allauth.socialaccount.adapter import DefaultSocialAccountAdapter


class MyAdapter(DefaultSocialAccountAdapter):
    def pre_social_login(self, request, sociallogin):
        # This isn't tested, but should work
        try:
            user = User.objects.get(email=sociallogin.email)
            sociallogin.connect(request, user)
            # Create a response object
            raise ImmediateHttpResponse(response)
        except User.DoesNotExist:
            pass

And in your settings, change the social adapter to your adapter

SOCIALACCOUNT_ADAPTER = 'myapp.my_adapter.MyAdapter`

And you should be able to connect multiple social accounts to one user this way.

OTHER TIPS

Note (2018-10-23): I'm not using this anymore. Too much magic happening. Instead I enabled SOCIALACCOUNT_EMAIL_REQUIRED and 'facebook': { 'VERIFIED_EMAIL': False, ... }. So allauth will redirect social logins on a social signup form to enter a valid email address. If it's already registered an error shows up to login first and then connect the account. Fair enough for me atm.


I'm trying to improve this kind of use case and came up with the following solution:

from allauth.account.models import EmailAddress
from allauth.socialaccount.adapter import DefaultSocialAccountAdapter

class SocialAccountAdapter(DefaultSocialAccountAdapter):
    def pre_social_login(self, request, sociallogin):
        """
        Invoked just after a user successfully authenticates via a
        social provider, but before the login is actually processed
        (and before the pre_social_login signal is emitted).

        We're trying to solve different use cases:
        - social account already exists, just go on
        - social account has no email or email is unknown, just go on
        - social account's email exists, link social account to existing user
        """

        # Ignore existing social accounts, just do this stuff for new ones
        if sociallogin.is_existing:
            return

        # some social logins don't have an email address, e.g. facebook accounts
        # with mobile numbers only, but allauth takes care of this case so just
        # ignore it
        if 'email' not in sociallogin.account.extra_data:
            return

        # check if given email address already exists.
        # Note: __iexact is used to ignore cases
        try:
            email = sociallogin.account.extra_data['email'].lower()
            email_address = EmailAddress.objects.get(email__iexact=email)

        # if it does not, let allauth take care of this new social account
        except EmailAddress.DoesNotExist:
            return

        # if it does, connect this new social login to the existing user
        user = email_address.user
        sociallogin.connect(request, user)

As far as I can test it, it seems to work well. But inputs and suggestions are very welcome!

As per babus comment on this related thread, the proposed answers posted before this one (1, 2) introduce a big security hole, documented in allauth docs:

"It is not clear from the Facebook documentation whether or not the fact that the account is verified implies that the e-mail address is verified as well. For example, verification could also be done by phone or credit card. To be on the safe side, the default is to treat e-mail addresses from Facebook as unverified."

Saying so, I can signup in facebook with your email ID or change my email to yours in facebook and login to the website to get access to your account.

So taking this into consideration, and building on @sspross answer, my approach is to redirect the user to the login page, and notify her/him of the duplicate, and inviting him to log in with her/his other account, and link them once they are logged in. I acknowledge that differs from the original question, but in doing so, no security hole is introduced.

Thus, my adapter looks like:

from django.contrib.auth.models import User
from allauth.account.models import EmailAddress
from allauth.exceptions import ImmediateHttpResponse
from django.shortcuts import redirect
from django.contrib import messages
from allauth.socialaccount.adapter import DefaultSocialAccountAdapter

class MyAdapter(DefaultSocialAccountAdapter):
    def pre_social_login(self, request, sociallogin):
        """
        Invoked just after a user successfully authenticates via a
        social provider, but before the login is actually processed
        (and before the pre_social_login signal is emitted).

        We're trying to solve different use cases:
        - social account already exists, just go on
        - social account has no email or email is unknown, just go on
        - social account's email exists, link social account to existing user
        """

        # Ignore existing social accounts, just do this stuff for new ones
        if sociallogin.is_existing:
            return

        # some social logins don't have an email address, e.g. facebook accounts
        # with mobile numbers only, but allauth takes care of this case so just
        # ignore it
        if 'email' not in sociallogin.account.extra_data:
            return

        # check if given email address already exists.
        # Note: __iexact is used to ignore cases
        try:
            email = sociallogin.account.extra_data['email'].lower()
            email_address = EmailAddress.objects.get(email__iexact=email)

        # if it does not, let allauth take care of this new social account
        except EmailAddress.DoesNotExist:
            return

        # if it does, bounce back to the login page
        account = User.objects.get(email=email).socialaccount_set.first()
        messages.error(request, "A "+account.provider.capitalize()+" account already exists associated to "+email_address.email+". Log in with that instead, and connect your "+sociallogin.account.provider.capitalize()+" account through your profile page to link them together.")       
        raise ImmediateHttpResponse(redirect('/accounts/login'))

I've just found this comment in the source code:

        if account_settings.UNIQUE_EMAIL:
            if email_address_exists(email):
                # Oops, another user already has this address.  We
                # cannot simply connect this social account to the
                # existing user. Reason is that the email adress may
                # not be verified, meaning, the user may be a hacker
                # that has added your email address to his account in
                # the hope that you fall in his trap.  We cannot check
                # on 'email_address.verified' either, because
                # 'email_address' is not guaranteed to be verified.

so, it is impossible to do by design.

If they change how they do the login, how do I automatically associate their Google, FB and local accounts?

It is possible, but you have to be careful about security issues. Check scenario:

  1. User create account via email and password on your site. User does not have Facebook.
  2. Attacker creates account on Facebook with user email. (Hypothetic scenario, but you do not control if social network verify email).
  3. Attacker login to your site with Facebook and automatically get access to user original account.

But you can fix it. I describe solution to ticket https://github.com/pennersr/django-allauth/issues/1149

Happy scenario should be:

  1. User create account via email and password on your site. User logged out.
  2. User forget about his account and try to login via his Facebook.
  3. System authenticate user via Facebook and find out, he already created account via other method (emails are same). System redirect user to normal login page with message "You already create your account using the email and password. Please log in this way. After you log in, you will be able to use and login using Facebook."
  4. User login via email and password.
  5. System automatically connect his Facebook login with his account. Next time user can use Facebook login or email and password.
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