Generate a secured base32 one time password to authenticate your user!
Django SOTP does just two things, and does them really well.
- One - it is stupidly secured and simple to integrate
- Two - it clears out OTPs at the elapsed time
Installing django-sotp is very easy, you'll be using (I'd recommend you use a virtual environment, so you don't break your system) the command pip.
Here's how to go about it:
pip install django-sotp
Next is, adding the installed packages to your project:
INSTALLED_APPS = [
...
'sotp',
]
Since django-sotp
depends on a particular package to clear out the OTPs at the elapsed time. We'd have to include another package to our installed apps.
INSTALLED_APPS = [
...
'sotp',
'django_apscheduler', # added package ;-)
]
Now you've done it, all you need to do is add the time which you want the generated OTPs to expire:
SOTP_TIME_EXPIRATION = 5 # in minutes
Yesss. Next is to make migrations and migrate to your database and you're good to go!
python manage.py makemigrations && python manage.py migrate
Congratulations! You're all set! Let's jump right into how to start using it.
You've got django-sotp
installed and ready to use, here's how to start using it!
- Step 1: Import the library to the file
(.py)
you want to use:
from sotp.services import GenerateSOTP
- Step 2: Instantiate the class:
otp = GenerateSOTP()
- Step 3: Call the
generate_otp
logic (method) directly in the file, and pass the user's email; since generate_otp requires the user email address to generate the otp code.
# Generates otp code for the user
otp.generate_otp(user_email=user.email)
-
Step 4: A base32 secured token and code has been generated, and saved to the secured_otps table. Oh, let's not forget about the scheduler that has been called to remove the user otp and token after the
SOTP_TIME_EXPIRATION
has elapsed! π€ -
Last Step (maybe?): You can call the function anywhere, anytime.
If you are still finding it difficult to use this package, kindly check the example app I made for reference, or create an issue and state the problem you are experiencing!
If you'd like to test out the package on your django shell..
- Step 1: Run the command:
python manage.py shell
- Step 2: Import the libray directly on the shell:
from sotp.services import GenerateSOTP
- Step 3: Call the generate_otp method, don't forget to add a user email address:
secured_otp = otp.generate_otp(user_email="test@email.com") # email should exist :-)
- Step 4: A Token and OTP is generated, and saved to secured_otps database.
{'totp': '5ZCLA7UQVXFP2B5WL5OZG4QDFDJ4GL65', 'OTP': '957092'}