Django Terms and Conditions gives you an configurable way to send users to a T&C acceptance page before they can access the site.
Note that version 2.0+ requires Python 3.7+ and Django 2.2+.
Newer releases have higher version requirements
Creator and Maintainer: - Tim White ([email protected])
Contributors: - Adibo (https://github.com/adibo) - Nathan Swain (https://github.com/swainn)
This module is meant to be as quick to integrate as possible, and thus extensive customization will likely benefit from a fork. That said, a number of options are available. Currently, the app allows for
- terms-and-conditions versioning (via version_number)
- multiple terms-and-conditions allowed (via slug field)
- per-user terms-and-conditions acceptance
- middleware to take care of redirecting to proper terms-and-conditions acceptance page upon the version change
- multi-language support
Note that version 2.0+ of django-termsandconditions only works with Python 3.6+ and Django 2.2+
From pypi:
$ pip install django-termsandconditions
or:
$ easy_install django-termsandconditions
or clone from github:
$ git clone git://github.com/cyface/django-termsandconditions.git
and add django-termsandconditions to the PYTHONPATH
:
$ export PYTHONPATH=$PYTHONPATH:$(pwd)/django-termsandconditions/
or:
$ cd django-termsandconditions
$ sudo python setup.py install
The termsandconditions_demo app is included to quickly let you see how to get a working installation going.
The demo is built as a mobile app using jQueryMobile loaded from the jQuery CDN.
Take a look at the requirements.txt
file in the
termsandconditions_demo
directory for a quick way to use pip to
install all the needed dependencies:
$ pip install -r requirements.txt
The settings_main.py
, file has a working configuration you can crib
from.
The templates in the termsandconditions/templates
, and
termsandconditions_demo/templates
directories give you a good idea of
the kinds of things you will need to do if you want to provide a custom
interface.
Configuration is minimal for termsandconditions itself, A quick guide to a basic setup is below, take a look at the demo app's settings.py for more details.
Some useful settings: : - TERMS_IP_HEADER_NAME Name of header to check for IP address. Defaults to 'REMOTE_ADDR'. You might need to use 'HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR', or other headers in proxy setups. - TERMS_STORE_IP_ADDRESS - True/False whether to store IPs with Terms Acceptance
The app needs django>=2.2
.
Add termsandconditions to installed applications:
INSTALLED_APPS = (
...
'termsandconditions',
)
In your urls.py, you need to pull in the termsandconditions and/or termsandconditions urls:
# Terms and Conditions
url(r'^terms/', include('termsandconditions.urls')),
You will need to set up a Terms and Conditions entry in the admin (or via direct DB load) for users to accept if you want to use the T&C module.
Note that the versions and dates of T&Cs are important. You can create a new version of a T&C with a future date, and once that date is in the past, it will force users to accept that new version of the T&Cs.
If you have included the terms urls under /terms, these URLs would all be prefixed by that (e.g. /terms/accept/).
- / - List all terms that have not been accepted
- /accept/ - List all terms that have not been accepted with accept links
- /accept/<slug>/ - Show page to accept latest version of a specific terms
- /accept/<slug>/<version>/ - Show page to accept a specific version of a specific terms
- /active/ - List all active terms
- /email/ - Show page to email all unaccepted terms
- /email/<slug>/<version>/ - Show page to email specific version of specific terms
- /view/<slug>/ - View the latest version of a specific terms
- /view/<slug>/<version>/ - View a specific version of a specific terms
You can force protection of your whole site by using the T&C middleware. Once activated, any attempt to access an authenticated page will first check to see if the user has accepted the active T&Cs. This can be a performance impact, so you can also use the _TermsAndConditionsDecorator to protect specific views, or the pipeline setup to only check on account creation.
Here is the middleware configuration:
MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = (
...
'termsandconditions.middleware.TermsAndConditionsRedirectMiddleware',
By default, some pages are excluded from the middleware, you can configure exclusions with these settings:
ACCEPT_TERMS_PATH = '/terms/accept/'
TERMS_EXCLUDE_URL_PREFIX_LIST = {'/admin/',})
TERMS_EXCLUDE_URL_LIST = {'/', '/terms/required/', '/logout/', '/securetoo/'}
TERMS_EXCLUDE_URL_CONTAINS_LIST = {}
TERMS_EXCLUDE_URL_PREFIX_LIST is a list of 'starts with' strings to exclude, while TERMS_EXCLUDE_URL_LIST is a list of explicit full paths to exclude. TERMS_EXCLUDE_URL_CONTAINS_LIST is a list of url fragments to check, if the url 'contains' that string, it is excluded. This can be particularly useful for i18n, where your url could get prepended with a language code.
You can also define a setting TERMS_EXCLUDE_USERS_WITH_PERM to exclude users with a custom permission you create yourself.:
TERMS_EXCLUDE_USERS_WITH_PERM = 'MyModel.can_skip_terms'
This can be useful if you need to run continuous login integration tests or simply exclude specific users from having to accept your T&Cs. Note that we exclude superusers by default from this check due to Django's has_perm() method returning True for any permission check, so adding this permission to a superuser has no effect. If you want to exclude superusers you can set TERMS_EXCLUDE_SUPERUSERS:
TERMS_EXCLUDE_SUPERUSERS = True
- TermsAndConditions.get_active_terms_list() - Returns a list of all active terms (accepted by current user or not)
- TermsAndConditions.get_active_terms_not_agreed_to(<User>)
- Returns a list of terms the specified user has not agreed to
- TermsAndConditions.get_active(<slug>) - Returns the active terms of the specified terms slug
To speed performance, especially for the middleware, the terms and their acceptance are cached.
You can control how long they are cached (or if they are cached at all) with this setting:
TERMS_CACHE_SECONDS = 30
A numeric value is the number of seconds that the terms and their acceptance should be cached (default 30). If set to 0, values will never be cached.
You can protect only specific views with T&Cs using the @terms_required() decorator at the top of a function like this:
from termsandconditions.decorators import terms_required
@login_required
@terms_required
def terms_required_view(request):
...
Note that you can skip @login_required only if you are forcing auth on that view in some other way.
Requiring T&Cs for Anonymous Users is not supported.
Many of the templates extend the 'base.html' template by default. The TERMS_BASE_TEMPLATE setting can be used to specify a different template to extend:
TERMS_BASE_TEMPLATE = 'page.html'
A bare minimum template that can be used is the following:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>[My Title]</title>
{% block styles %}{% endblock %}
<link href='<path-to-my-css>' rel='stylesheet' type='text/css' />
</head>
<body>
<main>
<h2>{% block title %}{% endblock %}</h2>
{% block content %}{% endblock %}
</main>
</body>
</html>
To facilitate support of terms changes without a direct redirection to
the /terms/accept
url, a template tag is supplied for convenience.
Thus, instead of using e.g. the TermsAndConditionsRedirectMiddleware
one can use the template tag. The template tag will take care that a
proper modal is shown to the user informing a user that new terms have
been set and need to be accepted. To use the template tag, do the
following. In your template (for example in base.html), include the
following lines:
{% load terms_tags %}
.... your template here ....
{% show_terms_if_not_agreed %}
Alternatively use:
{% load terms_tags %}
.... your template here ....
{% show_terms_if_not_agreed field='HTTP_REFERER' %}
if you want other than default TERMS_HTTP_PATH_FIELD
to be used (this
can also be controlled via settings, see below). This will ensure that
on every page using the template (that is on each page using base.html
in this case), respective T&C css and js are loaded to take care for
handling the modal.
The modal will show the basic information about the new terms as well as a link to page which enables the user to accept these terms. Please note that a user may wish not to accept terms and close the modal. In such a case, the modal will be shown again as soon as another view with the template including the template tag is called. This simple mechanism allows to nag users with new T&C while still allowing them to use the service, without instant redirections.
The following configuration setting applies for the template tag:
TERMS_HTTP_PATH_FIELD = 'PATH_INFO'
which defaults to PATH_INFO
. When needed (e.g. while using a separate
AJAX view to take care for the modal) this can be changed to
HTTP_REFERER
.
If you happen to use termsandconditions which text field includes some
template tags (e.g. {% url 'you-url' %}
), you may want to render its
content, before including it into your template. To achieve this goal,
use include
with the as_template
filter, i.e.:
{% load terms_tags %}
.... your template here ....
{% include terms|as_template %}
Note, that you need to modify the default termsandconditions templates, as the default ones use terms as template variable.
You can force T&C acceptance when a new user account is created using the django-socialauth pipeline:
SOCIAL_AUTH_PIPELINE = (
'social_auth.backends.pipeline.social.social_auth_user',
'social_auth.backends.pipeline.associate.associate_by_email',
'social_auth.backends.pipeline.user.get_username',
'social_auth.backends.pipeline.user.create_user',
'social_auth.backends.pipeline.social.associate_user',
'social_auth.backends.pipeline.social.load_extra_data',
'social_auth.backends.pipeline.misc.save_status_to_session',
'termsandconditions.pipeline.user_accept_terms',
)
Note that the configuration above also prevents django-socialauth from updating profile data from the social backends once a profile is created, due to:
'social_auth.backends.pipeline.user.update_user_details'
...not being included in the pipeline. This is wise behavior when you are letting users update their own profile details.
This pipeline configuration will send users to the '/terms/accept' page right before sending them on to whatever you have set SOCIAL_AUTH_NEW_USER_REDIRECT_URL to. However, it will not, without the middleware or decorators described above, check that the user has accepted the latest T&Cs before letting them continue on to viewing the site.
You can use the various T&C methods in concert depending on your needs.
In case you are in need of your termsandconditions
objects to handle
multiple languages, we recommend to use
django-modeltranslation <https://github.com/deschler/django-modeltranslation>
(or similar) module. In case of django-modeltranslation the setup is
rather straight forward, but needs several steps. Here they are.
In your settings.py
file, you need to specify the LANGUAGES
and set
MIGRATION_MODULES
to point to a local migration directory for the
termsandconditions
module (the migration due to modeltranslation will
live there):
LANGUAGES = (
('en', 'English'),
('pl', 'Polish'),
)
MIGRATION_MODULES = {
# local path for migration for the termsandconditions
'termsandconditions': 'your_app.migrations.migrations_termsandconditions',
}
Don't forget to create the respective directory and the __init__.py
file there! Please note that migrations_termsandconditions
directory
name is used to avoid confusion with the T&C app name.
You will also need to add modeltranslation
to INSTALLED_APPS
in your
settings.py
. You also need to ensure the module that you added your translations.py file to is in INSTALLED_APPS
.
As we switch to the local migration for the termsandconditions
module,
we need to execute initial migration for the module (as a starting
point). Thus:
python manage.py makemigrations termsandconditions
The relevant initial migration file should now be in
your_app/migrations/migrations_termsandconditions
directory. Now, just
execute the migration:
python manage.py migrate termsandconditions
To translate terms-and-conditions model to other languages (as specified
in settings.py
), create a translation.py
file in your project, with
the following content:
from modeltranslation.translator import translator, TranslationOptions
from termsandconditions.models import TermsAndConditions
class TermsAndConditionsTranslationOptions(TranslationOptions):
fields = ('name', 'text', 'info')
translator.register(TermsAndConditions, TermsAndConditionsTranslationOptions)
This assumes you want to have 3 most relevant model fields translated. After that you just need to make migrations again (to account for new fields due to modeltranslation):
python manage.py makemigrations termsandconditions
python manage.py migrate termsandconditions
Your model is now ready to cover the translations! Just as
hint we suggest to also include some data migration in order to populate
newly created, translated fields (i.e. name_en
, name_pl
, etc.) with
the initial data (e.g. by copying the content of the base field, i.e.
name
, etc.)
In order to prevent redirect loops, if you are using internationalized URLs, you will need to add add:
TERMS_EXCLUDE_URL_CONTAINS_LIST = {'/terms/', '/i18n/setlang/', }
to your settings.py
to prevent redirect loops with the language-code-prepended URLs (e.g. /en/terms/
)