Automatic locale/language management through URLs for Yii 2.
IMPORTANT: If you upgraded from version 1.0.* you have to modify your configuration. Please check the section on Upgrading below.
With this extension you can use URLs that contain a language code like:
/en/some/page
/de/some/page
http://www.example.com/en/some/page
http://www.example.com/de/some/page
You can also configure friendly names if you want:
http://www.example.com/english/some/page
http://www.example.com/deutsch/some/page
The language code is automatically added whenever you create a URL, and read back when a URL is parsed. For best user experience the language is autodetected from the browser settings, if no language is used in the URL. The user can still access other languages, though, simply by calling a URL with another language code.
The last requested language is also persisted in the user session and in a cookie. So if the user tries to access your site without a language code in the URL, he'll get redirected to the language he had used on his last visit.
All the above (and more) is configurable of course.
Install the package through composer:
composer require codemix/yii2-localeurls
And then add this to your application configuration:
<?php
return [
// ...
'components' => [
// ...
// Override the urlManager component
'urlManager' => [
'class' => 'codemix\localeurls\UrlManager',
// List all supported languages here
// Make sure, you include your app's default language.
'languages' => ['en-US', 'en', 'fr', 'de', 'es-*'],
]
// ...
]
];
Now you're ready to use the extension.
Note: You can still configure custom URL rules as usual. Just ignore any
language
parameter in your URL rules as it will get removed before parsing and added after creating a URL.
Note 2: The language code will be removed from the pathInfo.
All created URLs will contain the code of the current application language. So if the
language was detected to be de
and you use:
<?php $url = Url::to(['demo/action']) ?>
<?= Html::a('Click', ['demo/action']) ?>
you'll get URLs like
/de/demo/action
To create a link to switch the application to a different language, you can
explicitly add the language
URL parameter:
<?= $url = Url::to(['demo/action', 'language' => 'fr']) ?>
<?= Html::a('Click', ['demo/action', 'language' => 'fr']) ?>
This will give you a URL like
/fr/demo/action
Note: The URLs may look different if you use custom URL rules. In this case the language parameter is always prepended/inserted to the final relative/absolute URL.
If for some reason you want to use a different name than language
for that URL
parameter you can configure it through the languageParam
option of the urlManager
component.
The default language is configured via the
language
parameter of your application configuration. You always have to include this
language in the $languages
configuration (see below).
By default the URLs for the default language won't contain any language code. For example:
/
/some/page
If the site is accessed with URLs containing the default language code, the visitor gets
redirected to the URLs without language code. For example if default language is fr
:
/fr/ -> Redirect to /
/fr/some/page -> Redirect to /some/page
If enableDefaultLanguageUrlCode
is changed to true
it's vice versa. The default language
is now treated like any other configured language. Requests with URL that don't contain a
language code are no longer accessible:
/fr
/fr/some/page
/ -> Redirect to /fr
/some/page -> Redirect to /fr/some/page
All languages including the default language must be configured in the languages
parameter of the localeUrls
component. You should list more specific language
codes before the similar looking generic ones (i.e. 'en-US' before 'en'):
'languages' => ['en-US', 'en-UK', 'en', 'fr', 'de-AT', 'de'],
Note: If you use country codes, they should always be configured in upper case letters as shown above. The URLs will still always use lowercase codes. If a URL with an uppercase code like
en-US
is used, the user will be redirected to the lowercaseen-us
variant. The application language will always use the correcten-US
code. If you don't want to redirect URLs with lowercase country code, you can set thekeepUppercaseLanguageCode
option totrue
.
If you want your URL to optionally contain any country variant you can also use a wildcard pattern:
'languages' => ['en-*', 'de-*'],
Now any URL that matches en-??
or de-??
could be used, like en-us
or de-at
.
URLs without a country code like en
and de
will also still work:
/en/demo/action
/en-us/demo/action
/en-en/demo/action
/de/demo/action
/de-de/demo/action
/de-at/demo/action
The URLs with a country code will set the full ll-CC
code as Yii language whereas the
URLs with a language code only, will lead to ll
as configured language.
Note: You don't need this if all you want is a fallback of
de-AT
tode
for languages detected from the browser settings. See the section on Language Detection below.
You can also use friendlier names or aliases in URLs, which are configured like so:
'languages' => ['en', 'german' => 'de', 'br' => 'pt-BR'],
<?= Url::to(['demo/action', 'language' => 'de']) ?>
This will give you URLs like
/german/demo/action
/br/demo/action
and set the respective language to de
or pt-PR
if matched.
The last language a visitor has used will be stored in the user session and in a cookie. If the user visits your site again without a language code, he will get redirected to the stored language.
For example, if the user first visits:
/de/some/page
then after some time comes back to one of the following URLs:
/some/page -> Redirect to /de/some/page
/ -> Redirect to /de/
/dk/some/page
In the last case, dk
will be stored as last language.
Persistence is enabled by default and can be disabled by setting enableLanguagePersistence
to false
in the localeUrls
component.
You can modify other persistence settings with:
languageCookieDuration
: How long in seconds to store the language information in a cookie. Set tofalse
to disable the cookie.languageCookieName
: The name of the language cookie. Default is_language
.languageCookieOptions
: Other options to set on the language cookie.languageSessionKey
: The name of the language session key. Default is_language
.
You'll notice, that there's one problem, if enableDefaultLanguageUrlCode
is false
(which
is the default) and the user has e.g. stored de
as last language. How can we now
access the site in the default language? Because if we try /
we'd be redirected
to /de/
.
The answer is simple: To create a reset URL, you explicitly include the language code
for the default language in the URL. For example if default language is fr
:
<?= Url::to(['demo/action', 'language' => 'fr']) ?>
/fr/demo/action -> Redirect to /demo/action
In this case, fr
will first be stored as last used language before the user is redirected.
If you explicitely need to create a URL to the default language without any language code, you can also pass an empty string as language:
<?= Url::to(['demo/action', 'language' => '']) ?>
This will give you:
/demo/action
If a user visits your site for the first time and there's no language stored in session or cookie (or persistence is turned off), then the language is detected from the visitor's browser settings. If one of the preferred languages matches your language, it will be used as application language (and also persisted if persistence is enabled).
To disable this, you can set enableLanguageDetection
to false
. It's enabled by default.
If the browser language contains a country code like de-AT
and you only have de
in your
$languages
configuration, it will fall back to that language. Only if you've used a wildcard
like de-*
or have explicitly configured de-AT
or an alias like 'at' => 'de-AT'
, the
browser language including the country code will be used.
Let's look at an example configuration to better understand, how the $languages
configuration
affects language detection and the created URLs.
'languages' => [
'en',
'at' => 'de-AT',
'de',
'pt-*'
],
Now say a user visits your site for the first time. Depending on his browser settings, he will be directed to different URLs.
Accept-Language Header | Resulting URL code | Resulting Yii language |
---|---|---|
en , en-us , en-US , ... |
/en |
en |
de-at , de-AT |
/at |
de-AT |
de , de-de , de-DE , de-ch , ... |
/de |
de |
pt-BR , pt-br |
/pt-br |
pt-BR |
pt-PT , pt-pt |
/pt-pt |
pt-PT |
Any other pt-CC code |
/pt-cc |
pt-CC |
pt |
/pt |
pt |
You may want to disable the language processing for some routes and URLs with the
$ignoreLanguageUrlPatterns
option:
<?php
'ignoreLanguageUrlPatterns' => [
// route pattern => url pattern
'#^site/(login|register)#' => '#^(signin|signup)#',
'#^api/#' => '#^api/#',
],
Both, keys and values are regular expressions. The keys are patterns that match routes to exclude from language processing during URL creation, whereas the values are patterns for pathInfo that should be excluded during URL parsing.
Note: Keys and values don't necessarily have to relate to each other. It's just for convenience, that the configuration is combined into a single option.
There's no widget for language selection included, because there are simply too many options for the markup and behavior of such a widget. But it's very easy to build. Here's the basic idea:
<?php
use Yii;
use yii\bootstrap\Dropdown;
class LanguageDropdown extends Dropdown
{
private static $_labels;
private $_isError;
public function init()
{
$route = Yii::$app->controller->route;
$appLanguage = Yii::$app->language;
$params = $_GET;
$this->_isError = $route === Yii::$app->errorHandler->errorAction;
array_unshift($params, '/' . $route);
foreach (Yii::$app->urlManager->languages as $language) {
$isWildcard = substr($language, -2) === '-*';
if (
$language === $appLanguage ||
// Also check for wildcard language
$isWildcard && substr($appLanguage, 0, 2) === substr($language, 0, 2)
) {
continue; // Exclude the current language
}
if ($isWildcard) {
$language = substr($language, 0, 2);
}
$params['language'] = $language;
$this->items[] = [
'label' => self::label($language),
'url' => $params,
];
}
parent::init();
}
public function run()
{
// Only show this widget if we're not on the error page
if ($this->_isError) {
return '';
} else {
return parent::run();
}
}
public static function label($code)
{
if (self::$_labels === null) {
self::$_labels = [
'de' => Yii::t('language', 'German'),
'fr' => Yii::t('language', 'French'),
'en' => Yii::t('language', 'English'),
];
}
return isset(self::$_labels[$code]) ? self::$_labels[$code] : null;
}
}
If you upgrade from a 1.0.* version you'll have to modify your configuration. There no
longer is a localeUrls
component now. Instead everything was merged into our custom
urlManager
component. So you should move any configuration for the localeUrls
component
into the urlManager
component.
Two options also have been renamed for more clarity:
enableDefaultSuffix
is nowenableDefaultLanguageUrlCode
enablePersistence
is nowenableLanguagePersistence
So if your configuration looked like this before:
<?php
return [
'bootstrap' => ['localeUrls'],
'components' => [
'localeUrls' => [
'languages' => ['en-US', 'en', 'fr', 'de', 'es-*'],
'enableDefaultSuffix' => true,
'enablePersistence' => false,
],
'urlManager' => [
'class' => 'codemix\localeurls\UrlManager',
]
]
];
you should now change it to:
<?php
return [
'components' => [
'urlManager' => [
'class' => 'codemix\localeurls\UrlManager',
'languages' => ['en-US', 'en', 'fr', 'de', 'es-*'],
'enableDefaultLanguageUrlCode' => true,
'enableLanguagePersistence' => false,
]
]
];