Riddick
Friendly GUI for managing your I18n translations.
I18n + Redis + GUI = Riddick
By default it uses Redis as I18n backend for translations, but you can add your own key-value backend.
Installation
Bundle Riddick gem:
# Gemfile
gem 'riddick'
Mount Riddick server:
# config/routes.rb
require 'riddick/server'
MyApp::Application.routes.draw do
mount Riddick::Server.new, at: 'riddick', as: 'riddick'
end
Add a link to the GUI:
# app/views/layouts/application.html.erb
<%= link_to t('.translations'), :riddick %>
Tell I18n to use key-value-backend (if you haven't already):
# config/initializers/i18n.rb
I18n.backend = I18n::Backend::Chain.new I18n::Backend::KeyValue.new(Redis.new), I18n.backend
Configuration & Customization
Localizing the Riddick GUI
You can also change the translations of Riddick GUI. Following keys can be changed:
riddick:
head:
title: 'Welcome to Riddick!'
nav:
brand: 'Riddick'
all: 'All translations'
my: 'My translations'
default: 'Default translations'
form:
select:
placeholder: 'en.greeting'
button: 'Change'
textarea:
placeholder: 'Hello World!'
table:
header:
path: 'Path'
translation: 'Translation'
actions: 'Actions'
popover:
my: 'My translation'
default: 'Default translation'
edit:
my: 'Edit'
default: 'Edit'
delete: 'Delete'
confirm: 'Are you sure?'
notice:
empty: 'You have no translations yet.'
set:
success: 'Translation successfully stored!'
error: 'Error: either path or translation is empty!'
del:
success: 'Translation successfully deleted!'
error: 'Error: no such key or key empty!'
truncation: '...'
For example to change the page title of the GUI on the German page:
# config/locales/riddick.de.yml
de:
riddick:
head:
title: 'Willkommen bei Riddick!'
Changing backends
By default Riddick will try to guess which backends to use, assuming your using a chained backend.
For the key-value backend it will ask the chain backend for it's backends with I18n.backend.backends
and will use the first one of type I18n::Backends::KeyValue
.
For the fallback backend it will ask the chain backend for it's backends with I18n.backend.backends
and will use the first one of type I18n::Backends::Simple
.
You can change this behavior by setting one or both backends (or even the chain explicitely):
# config/initializers/riddick.rb
Riddick::Backends.chain = MyChainBackend
Riddick::Backends.simple = MySimpleBackend
Riddick::Backends.key_value = MyKeyValueBackend
MyChainBackend
can be any backend which is kind ofI18n::Backend::Chain
.MySimpleBackend
can be any backend which is kind ofRiddick::Backends::Simple
.MyKeyValueBackend
can be any backend which is kind ofRiddick::Backends::KeyValue
.
Example:
MySimpleBackend = Riddick::Backends::Simple.new I18n.backend
MyKeyValueBackend = Riddick::Backends::KeyValue.new I18n::Backend::KeyValue.new(Redis.new)
You can also write your own backends by subclassing apropriate backend from Riddick and adding to it needed methods (see RDoc for details).
WARNING: Custom backends feature is still under development. You should NOT use it unless you want to help me to develop it.
Example:
class MyRedisBackend < Riddick::Backends::Redis
def delete_translation(k)
Rails.logger.info "Translation #{k} deleted"
super
end
end
If you want to write a completely different backend, you can subclass Riddick::Backends::KeyValue
.
In this case you can also implement the appropriate Value
class if needed (see RDoc for details).
Example:
class ActiveRecordBackend < Riddick::Backends::KeyValue
def delete_translation(k)
MyModel.find_by_key(k).destroy
end
def translations
hash = {}
MyModel.all.pluck(:key, :value).map { |k, v| hash[k] = ActiveRecordBackend::Value.new v }
hash
end
class Value < Riddick::Backends::KeyValue::Value
def initialize(string)
@object = MultiJson.decode string
end
def to_s
@object.inspect
end
end
end
Troubleshooting
JSON decoding errors
We recommend you to switch to YAJL gem:
# Gemfile
gem 'yajl-ruby', require: 'yajl/json_gem'
Details: I18n uses MultiJson gem internally to encode / decode translation objects in key-value-backends. Unfortunately the default JSON gem is too strict about this and doesn't allow to decode plain strings, which is essential for a key-value-based backend.
No assets in production environment
Just copy assets from Riddick to you app's public directory:
# config/deploy.rb:
after :deploy do
target = File.join %W[#{release_path} public riddick]
run "cp -r `cd #{release_path} && bundle show riddick`/lib/riddick/public #{target}"
end
Details: Normally your using a proxy server like NGinx or Apache in front of your app.
Unfortunately the assets from a mounted Sinatra app will not be served because
they aren't in the public
directory of your app.
You are using redis not only for storing translations
If your are using redis to store other stuff you can separate your I18n translations in namespace. Please use redis-namespace gem.
# Gemfile
gem 'redis-namespace'
Change your configuration in i18n.rb
# config/initializers/i18n.rb
I18n.backend = I18n::Backend::Chain.new I18n::Backend::KeyValue.new(Redis::Namespace.new(:riddick)), I18n.backend
Your I18n translations will be stored in riddick
namespace.
Internals
Take a look at http://railscasts.com/episodes/256-i18n-backends
License
Copyright (c) 2012 Kostiantyn Kahanskyi
MIT License
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.