Skip to content

pombredanne/django-sslify

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

django-sslify

Do you want to force HTTPs across your Django site? You're in the right place!

django-sslify Release

django-sslify Downloads

django-sslify Build

Guardian Sketch

Meta

Purpose

Enabling SSL on your Django site should be easy, easy as in one-line-of-code easy. That's why I wrote django-sslify!

The goal of this project is to make it easy for people to force HTTPS on every page of their Django site, API, web app, or whatever you're building. Securing your site shouldn't be hard.

Installation

To install django-sslify, simply run:

$ pip install django-sslify

This will install the latest version of the library automatically.

If you're using Heroku, you should add django-sslify>=0.2 to your requirements.txt file:

$ echo 'django-sslify>=0.2.0' >> requirements.txt

Once you've done this, the next time you push your code to Heroku this library will be installed for you automatically.

Usage

To use this library, and force SSL across your Django site, all you need to do is modify your settings.py file, and prepend sslify.middleware.SSLifyMiddleware to your MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES setting:

# settings.py

MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = (
    'sslify.middleware.SSLifyMiddleware',
    # ...
)

Note

Make sure sslify.middleware.SSLifyMiddleware is the first middleware class listed, as this will ensure that if a user makes an insecure request (over HTTP), they will be redirected to HTTPs before any actual processing happens.

If you're using Heroku, you should also add the following settings to your Django settings file:

SECURE_PROXY_SSL_HEADER = ('HTTP_X_FORWARDED_PROTO', 'https')

This ensures that Django will be able to detect a secure connection properly.

Using a Custom SSL Port

If your site is running on a non-standard SSL port, you can change django-sslify's default redirection behavior by setting a special variable in your settings.py file:

SSLIFY_PORT = 999

Disabling SSLify

If you'd like to disable SSLify in certain environments (for local development, or running unit tests), the best way to do it is to modify your settings file and add the following:

SSLIFY_DISABLE = True

Note

django-sslify is automatically disabled if settings.DEBUG is True.

Notes

This code was initially taken from this StackOverflow thread.

This code has been adopted over the years to work on Heroku, and non-Heroku platforms.

If you're using Heroku, and have no idea how to setup SSL, read this great article which talks about using the new SSL endpoint addon (which totally rocks!).

Contributing

This project is only possible due to the amazing contributors who work on it!

If you'd like to improve this library, please send me a pull request! I'm happy to review and merge pull requests.

The standard contribution workflow should look something like this:

  • Fork this project on Github.
  • Make some changes in the master branch (this project is simple, so no need to complicate things).
  • Send a pull request when ready.

Also, if you're making changes, please write tests for your changes -- this project has a full test suite you can easily modify / test.

To run the test suite, you can use the following commands:

$ cd django-sslify
$ python setup.py develop
$ python manage.py test sslify

Change Log

All library changes, in descending order.

Version 0.2.4

Released on November 23, 2014.

  • Adding the ability to specify a custom SSL port.
  • Totally revamping docs.
  • Changing project logo / mascot thingy ^^
  • Adding new tests for custom SSL ports.

About

Force SSL on your Django site.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 100.0%