helsinki-profile-gdpr-api 0.2.0

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Description:

helsinkiprofilegdprapi 0.2.0

Helsinki profile GDPR API



Django app for implementing Helsinki profile GDPR API.
This library will allow a service using Helsinki profile to implement the GDPR
functionality required by open-city-profile
backend.
Installation

pip install helsinki-profile-gdpr-api

Usage


Authentication needs to be configured for the required django-heluser


Model which is to be used for GDPR operations should inherit SerializableMixin and
include the required serialize_fields property.


Define the following settings in your Django configuration.



Setting
Example
Description




GDPR_API_MODEL
"youths.YouthProfile"
GDPR profile model in the form app_label.model_name. model_name is case-insensitive.


GDPR_API_QUERY_SCOPE
"jassariapi.gdprquery"
API scope required for the query operation.


GDPR_API_DELETE_SCOPE
"jassariapi.gdprdelete"
API scope required for the delete operation.





Add the GDPR API urls into your url config:
urlpatterns = [
...
path("gdpr-api/", include("helsinki_gdpr.urls")),
]



Configurability
The configuration above is the minimum needed. With those the app uses the default behaviour.
The app can also be configured in various ways if the default behaviour is not appropriate.
Setting the URL pattern
If GDPR API URLs are setup as explained in the Usage section above, the GDPR URL pattern is
gdpr-api/v1/profiles/<uuid:pk>. The first part (gdpr-api/) can be set freely in the URL config. The
rest (v1/profiles/<uuid:pk>) can be controlled with the GDPR_API_URL_PATTERN setting. It can be set to
for example users/<uuid:user_id>/gdpr. There needs to be exactly one named parameter in the URL
pattern. Its type needs to be uuid, name can be chosen freely.
Searching the model instance
By default the GDPR_API_MODEL is searched with its primary key, something like this:
from django.apps import apps
from django.conf import settings

model = apps.get_model(settings.GDPR_API_MODEL)
# The `id` is extracted from the request's URL
obj = model.objects.get(pk=id)

If pk is not the correct field lookup to use, set the setting GDPR_API_MODEL_LOOKUP to the correct
value, for example user__uuid.
If changing the field lookup that way doesn't solve the model instance searching, it's also possible to
set the GDPR_API_MODEL_LOOKUP setting to an import path to a function, for example
myapp.gdpr.get_model_instance. The function gets called whenever the GDPR API is accessed and the model
instance is needed. The function gets two arguments, the model class specified by the GDPR_API_MODEL
setting and the id from the GDPR API request's path. The function must return an instance of the model
specified by the GDPR_API_MODEL setting, if an instance is found. If no instance is found, then the
function must either return None or raise a DoesNotExist exception of the model.
Obtaining a User model instance
It's required that a User model instance can be obtained from the GDPR API model instance specified by
the GDPR_API_MODEL setting. By default the GDPR API model instance's user attribute is tried. If that
doesn't work, it's possible to configure a function that will provide the User instance. This is
achieved by setting the import path of the function to the GDPR_API_USER_PROVIDER setting, for example
myapp.gdpr.get_user. The function gets the GDPR API model instance as an argument.
Controlling how data deletion is performed
By default the GDPR delete operation deletes the GDPR_API_MODEL instance and the related User
instance. If that procedure isn't sufficient for the project, it's possible to override the data deletion
operation. This is achieved by setting the GDPR_API_DELETER setting to an import path to a function, for
example myapp.gdpr.delete_data. The function gets two arguments, the GDPR_API_MODEL instance and a
boolean value indicating if this is a dry run or not.
The function gets called within a database transaction, which gets automatically rolled back if it's a dry
run operation. Thus the function is free to do database modifications even in the dry run case. All
changes get rolled back afterwards. If it's not a dry run case, then the transaction is committed and all
changes to the database are persisted.
If the data deletion isn't allowed, the function has two ways to indicate this:

Return a helsinki_gdpr.types.ErrorResponse instance. This allows also communicating the reasons
why the deletion isn't allowed.
Raise a django.db.DatabaseError exception.

Development
It's good to use a Python virtual environment:
$> python -m venv venv
$> source ./venv/bin/activate

Install development dependencies:
$> pip install -r requirements-dev.txt

Run tests:
$> pytest

Code format
This project uses
black,
flake8 and
isort
for code formatting and quality checking. Project follows the basic black config, without any modifications.
Basic black commands:

To let black do its magic: black .
To see which files black would change: black --check .

pre-commit can be used to install and run all the formatting tools as git hooks
automatically before a commit.

License:

For personal and professional use. You cannot resell or redistribute these repositories in their original state.

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