On Boarding a Localyzer Project

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Before On Boarding an LRM project

To on-board a project, a number of basic information is needed:

Code Repository Location

Users

  • The list of translation requesters. Those members to add to Jenkins so they have permission to trigger the Prep Kit job: username1@company.org, username2@companyname.com
  • The list of emails to be notified of the LRM actions: username1@company.org, username2@companyname.com, username3@companyname.com Note: All emails will also be used as Dashboard user identifiers.

Locales

  • The locale of the files created by developers and to be translated
  • The list of target translation locales
  • The pseudo-locale

Resource File types

  • Files types (for instance .properties, .resx, etc.). For more information on Resource file types and what is supported, please see Resource Files
  • Naming convention for the base file: for instance <filename>_en.properties or <filename>.properties
  • The directory structure for the resource files.
  • Translated file naming convention: for instance <filename>_fr_FR.properties
  • The files or directories which follow the above convention but should NOT be translated. For instance **/config*.properties

Localization Vendor

  • Who is the translation management system and how are the resource files going to be transferred to them?
  • Lingoport supports Local vendors, FTP and SFTP, and WorldServer and Lingotek and also other vendors.

On Boarding the LRM Automation Job

Jenkins

Create the Jenkins job

To begin the on-boarding process, go to Jenkins, and select the 1-Automation Tab, and New Item

Automation tab new item.jpg

  • Make a copy of Lingoport.SampleLRM
  • Set the name of the new job to <groupname>.<projectname>
  • Make sure Add to current view is checked and select OK

Configure the Jenkins job

General

GeneralTab.png

  • General section: Select the GitHub project and fill in the Project url
  • Throttle Current Builds should be checked.
  • LRM Throttle should be checked.

Source Code Management

Source code management.jpg

Source Code Management section: Set up the Repository, Credentials, and Branch

Build Triggers

BuildTriggers.png

These are left unchecked by default, but the Build Periodically can be set to build on a repeating basis.

Build Environment

BuildEnvironment.png

Leave these unchecked.

Build

Build1.png

  • The Top Level Directory is defaulted to look at the whole repository. If the resource files are located under a resources directory, this can be changed to $WORKSPACE/resources .
  • Locales are defaulted to common values. Remove and add locales to get the appropriate translation languages. Pseudo locale defaults to 'eo'.
  • Copy Settings: Use this if you have a project already set up with a similar configuration. This can save configuration time. If there is no other project, just leave it unfilled.
  • Check the Send Unique File Names if you want the prep kit files to have unique file names. The default is not to send unique file names. If you have multiple file names that have the same name you may want to check the box. For more information see LRM Unique File Names.
  • Advanced: Detect Errors: It is unlikely you need to change the default settings.
    • Missed Translation Error: (Default: Unchecked) If you check this box, when a string is returned back from translation with the same text as the original one, an error will be raised. Be cautious with this check: Population for instance is the same word in English and in French.
    • Parameter Mismatch Error: (Default: Checked) Keep this check if you'd like to make sure that when a parameter(s) is (are) sent in a text, say "Hello {userName}", the same parameter(s) is (are) sent back untranslated. If the French translation is "Bonjour {nom d'utilisateur}", the 'userName' variable cannot be replaced at run time in the application.


Build2.png

  • You can have more than one file extension. For example, you may have .json file and .properties files in the same repository. For each file extension, fill in or modify the following fields:
    • Extension: the resource file extension, for instance properties (without the '.'), json, resx, etc.
    • Filename Pattern:
      • The * (star) character represents the filename without the extension or the locales;
      • l represents the locale's language, for instance 'fr' for French
      • c represents the locale's country, for instance 'FR' for France
      • v represents the locale's variant. That's less frequent. is the variant.
    • A few examples may help:
      • *_l_c_v: If a target locale is fr_FR and messages_en.properties needs to be translated, the French file will be message_fr_FR.properties
      • *.l-c-v: If a target locale is fr_FR and messages.resx needs to be translated, the French file will be messages.fr-FR.resx
      • *-l-c-v: If a target locale is fr_FR and messages-en.json needs to be translated, the French file will be messages-fr-FR.json
  • The sample at the bottom shows what the system is going to look for resource files. Verify that the resource files look like the example, otherwise errors could occur.
  • For the other entries, leave them defaulted unless told to change them.

Build3.png

  • Directories: Which directories and files to include and which ones to exclude as resource files.
  • Emails: Who will be receiving emails for which notification

Build4.png

  • The L10n Vendor can be configured in Jenkins, Manage Jenkins or in the project. Also a project can have a different value than other projects in the same group.

Post Build Actions

  • Nothing needs to be modified in this section

Select the Save button. Enable the project and Build Now. The Jenkins project should run and push the results to the Lingoport Dashboard.

For more information, see Project Configuration Files

Verifying the Automation Job

The Jenkins job should complete successfully and populate the Lingoport Dashboard.

To check if it completed successfully, select the project and look at the Build History

BuildHistory.jpg

The indicator should look like a blue ball. If it is a red ball, select it to go to Console Output and look for errors.


DashboardwFiles.png

If the indicator is blue, then login to the Lingoport Dashboard and verify that the project is on the Dashboard. When you hover over the Next Send Translation Content, a list of files to be translated will come up. Verify that they are the correct files to be translated.

If there are problems at this point, please contact support@lingoport.com for assistance.

Set up the "send to translate" URL on the Dashboard

Finally, if this is the first project on the Dashboard, the URL for Jenkins needs to be configured.

  1. Select Administration on the top of the Dashboard.
  2. Select Lingoport in the left side menu
  3. Scroll down to Resource Manager and Jenkins URL
  4. Enter the URL for Jenkins and Save.

JenkinsURL.png


Returning to the Resource Manager page, the Send to translate button should be populated in the Next Send Translation Content area. If there are "no files to prep and send for translation", the button will not appear.

JenkinsURLSendToTranslate.png

Next Steps

The following are optional helper jobs for LRM projects.

The Nightly job, checks the status of projects on a nightly basis and sends out notifications.

The PrepKit job will send the projects files to be translated. This can also be done from the Dashboard.