Zanata is a web-based system for translators to translate documentation and software online using a web-browser. It is written in Java and uses modern web technologies like JBoss EAP, CDI, GWT, Hibernate, and a REST API. It currently supports translation of DocBook/Publican documentation through PO files, and a number of other formats. Projects can be uploaded to and downloaded from a Zanata server using a Maven plugin or a command line client.
For developers and writers: By using Zanata for your document translations, you can open up your project for translations without opening your entire project in version control.
For translators: No need to deal with PO files, gettext or a version control system - just log in to the website, join a language team and start translating, with translation memory (history of similar translations) and the ability to see updates from other translators in seconds.
Find out about Zanata here: http://zanata.org/
Zanata is Free software, licensed under the LGPL.
You will need:
- Java SDK 8 (OpenJDK recommended)
- zsh (for the build script)
- npm (optional)
- MySQL or MariaDB (optional)
- JBoss EAP 7 or WildFly 10 (optional)
- Linux or Mac OSX. Windows works too, sometimes.
A full build needs to download and install node, npm, mysql and WildFly/EAP, some of which are platform-dependent.
The build script you need to know about is ./build. It covers all your Zanata-building needs. Disclaimer: may not cover all your Zanata-building needs.
The -h
argument prints the build script's help.
Currently, there is an extra step needed to build Zanata on a Mac.
For ./build
to work, you will need to point to the correct Java directory using
the following command (using the correct JDK version on your Mac):
export JAVA_HOME="/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.X_XX.jdk/Contents/Home"
This JAVA_HOME workaround will not be needed in the next release of the Maven wrapper: io.takari:maven-wrapper:0.1.7.
See takari/maven-wrapper#14 for details.
./build --all
- Builds the entire project (client and server ) fairly
quickly, skipping integration tests and static analysis (checkstyle, etc),
but including unit tests.
NB: If you need to run functional tests later without rebuilding, you should
add -i
to install the war file to your Maven repo after packaging.
./build --server -iQ
- Builds and installs the project as quickly as possible,
skipping all checks and verifications (i.e. tests, checkstyle, etc).
The binaries will be installed to your Maven repo for usage in later (partial) builds and tests.
./build -w
- Builds zanata-war and starts a JBoss/WildFly server using the
cargo plugin. This is intended for starting a Zanata instance with the aim of
running functional tests from an IDE.
For a quick Zanata development environment with Docker, please visit the docker README.
Please note that any references to pull request numbers in commit messages (eg merge nodes) prior to 20 October 2016 are referring to the old repositories (before they were merged into the zanata-platform repository):
- https://github.com/zanata/zanata-api/pulls/
- https://github.com/zanata/zanata-client/pulls/
- https://github.com/zanata/zanata-common/pulls/
- https://github.com/zanata/zanata-parent/pulls/
- https://github.com/zanata/zanata-server/pulls/
GitHub tries to auto-link numbers to pull requests, but such links will generally be incorrect for old commit messages.