"""Translation helper functions.""" import functools import gettext as gettext_module import os import re import sys import warnings from asgiref.local import Local from django.apps import apps from django.conf import settings from django.conf.locale import LANG_INFO from django.core.exceptions import AppRegistryNotReady from django.core.signals import setting_changed from django.dispatch import receiver from django.utils.safestring import SafeData, mark_safe from . import to_language, to_locale # Translations are cached in a dictionary for every language. # The active translations are stored by threadid to make them thread local. _translations = {} _active = Local() # The default translation is based on the settings file. _default = None # magic gettext number to separate context from message CONTEXT_SEPARATOR = "\x04" # Format of Accept-Language header values. From RFC 2616, section 14.4 and 3.9 # and RFC 3066, section 2.1 accept_language_re = re.compile(r''' ([A-Za-z]{1,8}(?:-[A-Za-z0-9]{1,8})*|\*) # "en", "en-au", "x-y-z", "es-419", "*" (?:\s*;\s*q=(0(?:\.\d{,3})?|1(?:\.0{,3})?))? # Optional "q=1.00", "q=0.8" (?:\s*,\s*|$) # Multiple accepts per header. ''', re.VERBOSE) language_code_re = re.compile( r'^[a-z]{1,8}(?:-[a-z0-9]{1,8})*(?:@[a-z0-9]{1,20})?$', re.IGNORECASE ) language_code_prefix_re = re.compile(r'^/(\w+([@-]\w+)?)(/|$)') @receiver(setting_changed) def reset_cache(**kwargs): """ Reset global state when LANGUAGES setting has been changed, as some languages should no longer be accepted. """ if kwargs['setting'] in ('LANGUAGES', 'LANGUAGE_CODE'): check_for_language.cache_clear() get_languages.cache_clear() get_supported_language_variant.cache_clear() class DjangoTranslation(gettext_module.GNUTranslations): """ Set up the GNUTranslations context with regard to output charset. This translation object will be constructed out of multiple GNUTranslations objects by merging their catalogs. It will construct an object for the requested language and add a fallback to the default language, if it's different from the requested language. """ domain = 'django' def __init__(self, language, domain=None, localedirs=None): """Create a GNUTranslations() using many locale directories""" gettext_module.GNUTranslations.__init__(self) if domain is not None: self.domain = domain self.__language = language self.__to_language = to_language(language) self.__locale = to_locale(language) self._catalog = None # If a language doesn't have a catalog, use the Germanic default for # pluralization: anything except one is pluralized. self.plural = lambda n: int(n != 1) if self.domain == 'django': if localedirs is not None: # A module-level cache is used for caching 'django' translations warnings.warn("localedirs is ignored when domain is 'django'.", RuntimeWarning) localedirs = None self._init_translation_catalog() if localedirs: for localedir in localedirs: translation = self._new_gnu_trans(localedir) self.merge(translation) else: self._add_installed_apps_translations() self._add_local_translations() if self.__language == settings.LANGUAGE_CODE and self.domain == 'django' and self._catalog is None: # default lang should have at least one translation file available. raise OSError('No translation files found for default language %s.' % settings.LANGUAGE_CODE) self._add_fallback(localedirs) if self._catalog is None: # No catalogs found for this language, set an empty catalog. self._catalog = {} def __repr__(self): return "" % self.__language def _new_gnu_trans(self, localedir, use_null_fallback=True): """ Return a mergeable gettext.GNUTranslations instance. A convenience wrapper. By default gettext uses 'fallback=False'. Using param `use_null_fallback` to avoid confusion with any other references to 'fallback'. """ return gettext_module.translation( domain=self.domain, localedir=localedir, languages=[self.__locale], fallback=use_null_fallback, ) def _init_translation_catalog(self): """Create a base catalog using global django translations.""" settingsfile = sys.modules[settings.__module__].__file__ localedir = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(settingsfile), 'locale') translation = self._new_gnu_trans(localedir) self.merge(translation) def _add_installed_apps_translations(self): """Merge translations from each installed app.""" try: app_configs = reversed(list(apps.get_app_configs())) except AppRegistryNotReady: raise AppRegistryNotReady( "The translation infrastructure cannot be initialized before the " "apps registry is ready. Check that you don't make non-lazy " "gettext calls at import time.") for app_config in app_configs: localedir = os.path.join(app_config.path, 'locale') if os.path.exists(localedir): translation = self._new_gnu_trans(localedir) self.merge(translation) def _add_local_translations(self): """Merge translations defined in LOCALE_PATHS.""" for localedir in reversed(settings.LOCALE_PATHS): translation = self._new_gnu_trans(localedir) self.merge(translation) def _add_fallback(self, localedirs=None): """Set the GNUTranslations() fallback with the default language.""" # Don't set a fallback for the default language or any English variant # (as it's empty, so it'll ALWAYS fall back to the default language) if self.__language == settings.LANGUAGE_CODE or self.__language.startswith('en'): return if self.domain == 'django': # Get from cache default_translation = translation(settings.LANGUAGE_CODE) else: default_translation = DjangoTranslation( settings.LANGUAGE_CODE, domain=self.domain, localedirs=localedirs ) self.add_fallback(default_translation) def merge(self, other): """Merge another translation into this catalog.""" if not getattr(other, '_catalog', None): return # NullTranslations() has no _catalog if self._catalog is None: # Take plural and _info from first catalog found (generally Django's). self.plural = other.plural self._info = other._info.copy() self._catalog = other._catalog.copy() else: self._catalog.update(other._catalog) if other._fallback: self.add_fallback(other._fallback) def language(self): """Return the translation language.""" return self.__language def to_language(self): """Return the translation language name.""" return self.__to_language def translation(language): """ Return a translation object in the default 'django' domain. """ global _translations if language not in _translations: _translations[language] = DjangoTranslation(language) return _translations[language] def activate(language): """ Fetch the translation object for a given language and install it as the current translation object for the current thread. """ if not language: return _active.value = translation(language) def deactivate(): """ Uninstall the active translation object so that further _() calls resolve to the default translation object. """ if hasattr(_active, "value"): del _active.value def deactivate_all(): """ Make the active translation object a NullTranslations() instance. This is useful when we want delayed translations to appear as the original string for some reason. """ _active.value = gettext_module.NullTranslations() _active.value.to_language = lambda *args: None def get_language(): """Return the currently selected language.""" t = getattr(_active, "value", None) if t is not None: try: return t.to_language() except AttributeError: pass # If we don't have a real translation object, assume it's the default language. return settings.LANGUAGE_CODE def get_language_bidi(): """ Return selected language's BiDi layout. * False = left-to-right layout * True = right-to-left layout """ lang = get_language() if lang is None: return False else: base_lang = get_language().split('-')[0] return base_lang in settings.LANGUAGES_BIDI def catalog(): """ Return the current active catalog for further processing. This can be used if you need to modify the catalog or want to access the whole message catalog instead of just translating one string. """ global _default t = getattr(_active, "value", None) if t is not None: return t if _default is None: _default = translation(settings.LANGUAGE_CODE) return _default def gettext(message): """ Translate the 'message' string. It uses the current thread to find the translation object to use. If no current translation is activated, the message will be run through the default translation object. """ global _default eol_message = message.replace('\r\n', '\n').replace('\r', '\n') if eol_message: _default = _default or translation(settings.LANGUAGE_CODE) translation_object = getattr(_active, "value", _default) result = translation_object.gettext(eol_message) else: # Return an empty value of the corresponding type if an empty message # is given, instead of metadata, which is the default gettext behavior. result = type(message)('') if isinstance(message, SafeData): return mark_safe(result) return result def pgettext(context, message): msg_with_ctxt = "%s%s%s" % (context, CONTEXT_SEPARATOR, message) result = gettext(msg_with_ctxt) if CONTEXT_SEPARATOR in result: # Translation not found result = message elif isinstance(message, SafeData): result = mark_safe(result) return result def gettext_noop(message): """ Mark strings for translation but don't translate them now. This can be used to store strings in global variables that should stay in the base language (because they might be used externally) and will be translated later. """ return message def do_ntranslate(singular, plural, number, translation_function): global _default t = getattr(_active, "value", None) if t is not None: return getattr(t, translation_function)(singular, plural, number) if _default is None: _default = translation(settings.LANGUAGE_CODE) return getattr(_default, translation_function)(singular, plural, number) def ngettext(singular, plural, number): """ Return a string of the translation of either the singular or plural, based on the number. """ return do_ntranslate(singular, plural, number, 'ngettext') def npgettext(context, singular, plural, number): msgs_with_ctxt = ("%s%s%s" % (context, CONTEXT_SEPARATOR, singular), "%s%s%s" % (context, CONTEXT_SEPARATOR, plural), number) result = ngettext(*msgs_with_ctxt) if CONTEXT_SEPARATOR in result: # Translation not found result = ngettext(singular, plural, number) return result def all_locale_paths(): """ Return a list of paths to user-provides languages files. """ globalpath = os.path.join( os.path.dirname(sys.modules[settings.__module__].__file__), 'locale') app_paths = [] for app_config in apps.get_app_configs(): locale_path = os.path.join(app_config.path, 'locale') if os.path.exists(locale_path): app_paths.append(locale_path) return [globalpath, *settings.LOCALE_PATHS, *app_paths] @functools.lru_cache(maxsize=1000) def check_for_language(lang_code): """ Check whether there is a global language file for the given language code. This is used to decide whether a user-provided language is available. lru_cache should have a maxsize to prevent from memory exhaustion attacks, as the provided language codes are taken from the HTTP request. See also . """ # First, a quick check to make sure lang_code is well-formed (#21458) if lang_code is None or not language_code_re.search(lang_code): return False return any( gettext_module.find('django', path, [to_locale(lang_code)]) is not None for path in all_locale_paths() ) @functools.lru_cache() def get_languages(): """ Cache of settings.LANGUAGES in a dictionary for easy lookups by key. """ return dict(settings.LANGUAGES) @functools.lru_cache(maxsize=1000) def get_supported_language_variant(lang_code, strict=False): """ Return the language code that's listed in supported languages, possibly selecting a more generic variant. Raise LookupError if nothing is found. If `strict` is False (the default), look for a country-specific variant when neither the language code nor its generic variant is found. lru_cache should have a maxsize to prevent from memory exhaustion attacks, as the provided language codes are taken from the HTTP request. See also . """ if lang_code: # If 'fr-ca' is not supported, try special fallback or language-only 'fr'. possible_lang_codes = [lang_code] try: possible_lang_codes.extend(LANG_INFO[lang_code]['fallback']) except KeyError: pass generic_lang_code = lang_code.split('-')[0] possible_lang_codes.append(generic_lang_code) supported_lang_codes = get_languages() for code in possible_lang_codes: if code in supported_lang_codes and check_for_language(code): return code if not strict: # if fr-fr is not supported, try fr-ca. for supported_code in supported_lang_codes: if supported_code.startswith(generic_lang_code + '-'): return supported_code raise LookupError(lang_code) def get_language_from_path(path, strict=False): """ Return the language code if there's a valid language code found in `path`. If `strict` is False (the default), look for a country-specific variant when neither the language code nor its generic variant is found. """ regex_match = language_code_prefix_re.match(path) if not regex_match: return None lang_code = regex_match.group(1) try: return get_supported_language_variant(lang_code, strict=strict) except LookupError: return None def get_language_from_request(request, check_path=False): """ Analyze the request to find what language the user wants the system to show. Only languages listed in settings.LANGUAGES are taken into account. If the user requests a sublanguage where we have a main language, we send out the main language. If check_path is True, the URL path prefix will be checked for a language code, otherwise this is skipped for backwards compatibility. """ if check_path: lang_code = get_language_from_path(request.path_info) if lang_code is not None: return lang_code lang_code = request.COOKIES.get(settings.LANGUAGE_COOKIE_NAME) if lang_code is not None and lang_code in get_languages() and check_for_language(lang_code): return lang_code try: return get_supported_language_variant(lang_code) except LookupError: pass accept = request.META.get('HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE', '') for accept_lang, unused in parse_accept_lang_header(accept): if accept_lang == '*': break if not language_code_re.search(accept_lang): continue try: return get_supported_language_variant(accept_lang) except LookupError: continue try: return get_supported_language_variant(settings.LANGUAGE_CODE) except LookupError: return settings.LANGUAGE_CODE @functools.lru_cache(maxsize=1000) def parse_accept_lang_header(lang_string): """ Parse the lang_string, which is the body of an HTTP Accept-Language header, and return a tuple of (lang, q-value), ordered by 'q' values. Return an empty tuple if there are any format errors in lang_string. """ result = [] pieces = accept_language_re.split(lang_string.lower()) if pieces[-1]: return () for i in range(0, len(pieces) - 1, 3): first, lang, priority = pieces[i:i + 3] if first: return () if priority: priority = float(priority) else: priority = 1.0 result.append((lang, priority)) result.sort(key=lambda k: k[1], reverse=True) return tuple(result)