Refs #14881 -- Document that User models need to have an integer primary key.
Thanks to Kaloian Minkov for the reminder about this undocumented requirement.
This commit is contained in:
parent
87854b0bdf
commit
91c26eadc9
|
@ -466,11 +466,13 @@ Specifying a custom User model
|
|||
|
||||
Django expects your custom User model to meet some minimum requirements.
|
||||
|
||||
1. Your model must have a single unique field that can be used for
|
||||
1. Your model must have an integer primary key.
|
||||
|
||||
2. Your model must have a single unique field that can be used for
|
||||
identification purposes. This can be a username, an email address,
|
||||
or any other unique attribute.
|
||||
|
||||
2. Your model must provide a way to address the user in a "short" and
|
||||
3. Your model must provide a way to address the user in a "short" and
|
||||
"long" form. The most common interpretation of this would be to use
|
||||
the user's given name as the "short" identifier, and the user's full
|
||||
name as the "long" identifier. However, there are no constraints on
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue