I have the following code:
class UsersViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
model = Users
permission_classes = (IsAuthenticated,)
def update(self, re
Yes you can by adding annotation See this link for more information there are examples:
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.6/topics/auth/default/#django.contrib.auth.decorators.permission_required
@permission_classes didn't work for class based view. And I tried @detail_route(permission_classes=(permissions.CustomPermissions,)) for update view function, still not work.
so, my solution is:
class MyViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
def update(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
self.methods=('put',)
self.permission_classes = (permissions.CustomPermissions,)
return super(self.__class__, self).update(request, *args, **kwargs)
Have a try. my drf is v3.1.1
For me, get_permissions worked but it did turn out that if you sending in Authorization in your header in your request rest framework will throw an error even if permission is set to AllowAny. If you are going to use both authorization and AllowAny you need to have to take this into consideration.
You can also specify permissions for specific methods in the get_permissions() method:
class MyViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
def get_permissions(self):
if self.action in ('update', 'other_viewset_method'):
self.permission_classes = [permissions.CustomPermissions,]
return super(self.__class__, self).get_permissions()
LATER EDIT
As it seems that DRF decorators don't really work (at least not for me), this is the best solution I could come up with:
def get_permissions(self):
# Your logic should be all here
if self.request.method == 'GET':
self.permission_classes = [DummyPermission, ]
else:
self.permission_classes = [IsAuthenticated, ]
return super(UsersViewSet, self).get_permissions()
This actually works for both cases that you asked, but requires a bit more work. However, I've tested it and it does the job.
ORIGINAL ANSWER BELOW
There is a small mistake in the docs, you should be sending a list to the decorator (not a tuple). So it should be like this:
@permission_classes([IsAuthenticated, AdditionalPermission, ])
def update:
pass
To answer your questions:
how can I add additional Permission only for update method?
First of all, you should know that DRF first checks for global permissions (those from the settings file), then for view permissions (declared in permission_classes -- if these exist, they will override global permissions) and only after that for method permissions (declared with the decorator @permission_classes). So another way to do the above is like this:
@permission_classes([AdditionalPermission, ])
def update:
pass
Since ISAuthenticated is already set on the entire view, it will always be checked BEFORE any other permission.
overwrite permissions only for update method?
Well, this is hard(er), but not impossible. You can:
Good luck.