decorator to set attributes of function

rich tier picture rich tier · Apr 3, 2013 · Viewed 9.7k times · Source

I want different functions to be executable only if the logged in user has the required permission level.

To make my life more complexly simply I want to use decorators. Below I attempy to set attribute permission on 'decorated' functions - as shown below.

def permission(permission_required):
    def wrapper(func):
        def inner(*args, **kwargs):
            setattr(func, 'permission_required', permission_required)
            return func(*args, **kwargs)
        return inner
    return wrapper

@permission('user')
def do_x(arg1, arg2):

    ...

@permission('admin')
def do_y(arg1, arg2):
    ...

But when I do:

fn = do_x
if logged_in_user.access_level == fn.permission_required:
    ...

I get an error 'function' object has no attribute 'permission_required'

What am I missing?

Answer

Martijn Pieters picture Martijn Pieters · Apr 3, 2013

You are checking the attribute on the inner (wrapper) function, but set it on the original (wrapped) function. But you need a wrapper function at all:

def permission(permission_required):
    def decorator(func):
        func.permission_required = permission_required
        return func
    return decorator

Your decorator needs to return something that'll replace the original function. The original function itself (with the attribute added) will do fine for that, because all you wanted to do is add an attribute to it.

If you still need a wrapper, then set the attribute on the wrapper function instead:

from functools import wraps

def permission(permission_required):
    def decorator(func):
        @wraps(func)
        def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
            # only use a wrapper if you need extra code to be run here
            return func(*args, **kwargs)
        wrapper.permission_required = permission_required
        return wrapper
    return decorator

After all, you are replacing the wrapped function with the wrapper returned by the decorator, so that's the object you'll be looking for the attribute on.

I also added the @functools.wraps() decorator to the wrapper, which copied across important identifying information and other helpful things from func to the wrapper, making it much easier to work with.