Django hCaptcha provides a simple way to protect your django forms using hCaptcha.
Add "hcaptcha" to your INSTALLED_APPS setting like this:
INSTALLED_APPS = [ ... 'hcaptcha', ]
For development purposes no further configuration is required. By default, django-hCaptcha will use dummy keys.
For production, you'll need to obtain your hCaptcha site key and secret key and add them to you settings:
HCAPTCHA_SITEKEY = '<your sitekey>' HCAPTCHA_SECRET = '<your secret key>'
You can also configure your hCaptcha widget globally (see all options):
HCAPTCHA_DEFAULT_CONFIG = { 'onload': 'name_of_js_function', 'render': 'explicit', 'theme': 'dark', # do not use data- prefix 'size': 'compact', # do not use data- prefix ... }
If you need to, you can also override default hcaptcha endpoints:
HCAPTCHA_JS_API_URL = 'https://hcaptcha.com/1/api.js' HCAPTCHA_VERIFY_URL = 'https://hcaptcha.com/siteverify'
Use proxies:
HCAPTCHA_PROXIES = { 'http': 'http://127.0.0.1:8000', }
Change default verification timeout:
HCAPTCHA_TIMEOUT = 5
Simply add hCaptchaField to your forms:
from hcaptcha.fields import hCaptchaField class Forms(forms.Form): .... hcaptcha = hCaptchaField() ....
In your template, if you need to, you can then use {{ form.hcaptcha }} to access the field.
You can override default config by passing additional arguments:
class Forms(forms.Form): .... hcaptcha = hCaptchaField(theme='dark', size='compact') ....
When a form is submitted by a user, hCaptcha's JavaScript will send two POST parameters to your backend, g-captcha-resposne and h-captcha-response. These will be received by your app and will be used to complete the hcaptcha form field in your backend code.
When your app receives these two values, the following will happen:
- Your backend will send these values to the hCaptcha servers
- Their servers will indicate whether the values in the fields are correct
- If so, your hcaptcha form field will validate correctly
You will need to disable the hCaptcha field in your unit tests, since your tests obviously cannot complete the hCaptcha successfully. One way to do so might be something like:
from unittest.mock import MagicMock, patch
from django.test import TestCase
@patch("hcaptcha.fields.hCaptchaField.validate", return_value=True)
class ContactTest(TestCase):
test_msg = {
"name": "pandora",
"message": "xyz",
"hcaptcha": "xxx", # Any truthy value is fine
}
def test_something(self, mock: MagicMock) -> None:
response = self.client.post("/contact/", self.test_msg)
self.assertEqual(response.status_code, HTTP_302_FOUND)