Internationalization Support (i18n)

Internationalization support in Sling consists of four methods in the SlingHttpServletRequest interface:

  • getLocale() -- Returns the primary Locale for the current request. This method is inherited from the javax.servlet.ServletRequest interface.
  • getLocales() -- Returns the Locale instances for the current request. This method is inherited from the javax.servlet.ServletRequest interface.
  • getResourceBundle(Locale) -- Returns a ResourceBundle for the given Locale. This method is specific to Sling.
  • getResourceBundle(String, Locale) -- Returns a ResourceBundle of a given base name for the given Locale. This method is specific to Sling.

These methods have a default implementation in the org.apache.sling.core bundle and an extended and extensible implementation in the org.apache.sling.i18n bundle.

Default Implementation in the org.apache.sling.engine Bundle

The default implementation of the above mentioned four methods in the Sling Engine bundle is contained in the bundle-private class org.apache.sling.engine.impl.SlingHttpServletRequestImpl which is the primary implementation of the SlingHttpServletRequest interface:

  • getLocale() -- Returns the Locale from the request object of the servlet container in which Sling is running. As per the Servlet API specification, this is either the primary Locale of the Accept-Language request header or the server default locale.
  • getLocales() -- Returns the Enumeration from the request object of the servlet container in which Sling is running. As per the Servlet API specification, this is either based on the Accept-Language request header or just the server default locale.
  • getResourceBundle(Locale) -- Returns a ResourceBundle whose getString(String key) method returns the key as the message and whose getKeys() method returns an empty Enumeration.
  • getResourceBundle(String, Locale) -- Returns a ResourceBundle whose getString(String key) method returns the key as the message and whose getKeys() method returns an empty Enumeration.

NOTE: Unlike the default implementations of the ResourceBundle abstract class in the Java Runtime -- PropertyResourceBundle and ListResourceBundle -- the ResourceBundle returned by the default implementation of the getResourceBundle(Locale) and getResourceBundle(String, Locale) always returns a string message for any key, which is the key itself. This prevents throwing MissingResourceException.

Extensible Implementation in the org.apache.sling.i18n Bundle

The org.apache.sling.i18n Bundle implements a request level Filter providing extensible implementations of the above mentioned three methods. Extensibility is attained by defining two service interfaces:

  • LocaleResolver -- The LocaleResolver interface defines a method which may be implemented by a service outside of the sling.i18n bundle. If no such service is registered the default behaviour is as described above for the sling.core bundle. The service described by this interface is used to implement the getLocale() and getLocales() method.

  • ResourceBundleProvider -- The ResourceBundleProvider interface defines two methods to acquire a ResourceBundle for any Locale and an optional base name. This service interface is not intended to be implemented outside of the sling.i18n bundle: A JCR Repository based implementation is contained in the sling.i18n bundle. The ResourceBundleProvider service is not only used within the sling.i18n bundle to implement the SlingHttpServletRequest.getResourceBundle(Locale) and SlingHttpServletRequest.getResourceBundle(String, Locale) methods. The service may also be used by Sling applications to acquire ResourceBundle instances without having a request object by getting the service and calling its getResourceBundle(Locale) or getResourceBundle(String, Locale) method directly.

JCR Repository based ResourceBundleProvider

The sling.i18n Bundle provides the implementation of the ResourceBundleProvider interface, which may also be used outside of Sling requests for service tasks. This implementation gets the messages from a JCR Repository stored below nodes of the mixin node type mix:language. These language nodes have a jcr:language property naming the language of the resources. In the context of the JCR based ResourceBundleProvider this is of course expected to be the string value of respective Locale. The format may either be the format as described in Locale.toString or as described in BCP 47, while for the latter you may only provide ISO 3166-1 country codes (for the region) and ISO 639-1 alpha 2 language codes (for the language). Both formats are also accepted in lower-case.

The exact location of these nodes is not relevant as the ResourceBundleProvider finds them by applying a JCR search.

Two different types of storage formats are supported for the individual dictionaries

sling:MessageEntry based

The (direct) child nodes of the mix:language node must have the jcr:primaryType set to sling:MessageEntry and must contain two special properties naming the key string and the message:

  • sling:key -- The sling:key property is a string property being the key for which the node contains the message(s). This property is optional. If it is not set the key is determined by the name of this sling:messageEntry resource.
  • sling:message -- The sling:message property represents the resource for the key.

It is only required that the message nodes are located below mix:language nodes. Such structures may also be scattered in the repository to allow storing message resources next to where they are most likely used, such as request scripts.

Sample Resources

Content for dictionaries in this format might look like this:

   /libs/languages
           +-- English (nt:folder, mix:language)
           |    +-- jcr:language = en
           |    +-- m1 (sling:MessageEntry)
           |    |    +-- sling:key = "msg001"
           |    |    +-- sling:message = "This is a message"
           |    +-- m2 (sling:MessageEntry)
           |         +-- sling:key = "msg002"
           |         +-- sling:message = "Another message"
           +-- Deutsch (nt:folder, mix:language)
                +-- jcr:language = de
                +-- m1 (sling:MessageEntry)
                |    +-- sling:key = "msg001"
                |    +-- sling:message = "Das ist ein Text"
                +-- m2 (sling:MessageEntry)
                     +-- sling:key = "msg002"
                     +-- sling:message = "Ein anderer Text"

   /apps/myApp
           +-- English (nt:folder, mix:language)
           |    +-- jcr:language = en
           |    +-- mx (sling:MessageEntry)
           |         +-- sling:key = "msgXXX"
           |         +-- sling:message = "An Application Text"
           +-- Deutsch (nt:folder, mix:language)
                +-- jcr:language = de
                +-- mx (sling:MessageEntry)
                     +-- sling:key = "msgXXX"
                     +-- sling:message = "Ein Anwendungstext"

This content defines two languages en and de with three messages msg001, msg002 and msgXXX each. The names of the respective resources have no significance (in case the sling:key is set).

JSON-file based

Since Version 2.4.2 the i18n bundle supports dictionaries in JSON-format (SLING-4543). Since loading such dictionaries is much faster than loading the ones based on sling:MessageEntrys this format should be used preferably. This format is assumed if the mix:language resource name is ending with the extension .json. The parser will take any "key":"value" pair in the JSON file, including those in nested objects or arrays. Normally, a dictionary will be just a single json object = hash map though.

Sample Resources

Content for this format might look like this:

   /libs/languages
           +-- english.json (nt:file, mix:language)
           |    +-- jcr:language = en
           |    +-- jcr:content (nt:resource)
           |         + jcr:data (containing the actual JSON file)
           +-- deutsch.json (nt:file, mix:language)
                +-- jcr:language = de
                +-- jcr:content (nt:resource)
                    + jcr:data (containing the actual JSON file)

JCR Node Types supporting the JCR Repository based ResourceBundleProvider

The sling.i18n bundle asserts the following node types:

[mix:language]
    mixin
  - jcr:language (string)

The mix:language mixin node type allows setting the jcr:language property required by the ResourceBundleProvider implementation to identify the message Locale.

[sling:Message]
    mixin
  - sling:key (string)
  - sling:message (undefined)

[sling:MessageEntry] > nt:hierarchyNode, sling:Message  

The sling:Message and sling:MessageEntry are helper node types. The latter must be used to create the nodes for the sling:MessageEntry based format.

ResourceBundle with base names

Similar to standard Java ResourceBundle instances, Sling ResourceBundle instances may be created for base names through any of the getResourceBundle(String, Locale) methods. These methods use the base name parameter as a selector for the values of the sling:basename property of the mix:language nodes.

The base name argument can take one three values:

Value ResourceBundle selection
null Selects messages of mix:language nodes ignoring the existence or absence of sling:basename properties
Empty String Selects messages of mix:language nodes which have sling:basename properties, ignoring the actual values
Any other Value Selects messages of mix:language nodes whose sling:basename properties has any value which matches the base name string

The sling:basename property may be multi-valued, that is the messages of a mix:language nodes may belong to multiple base names and thus ResourceBundle instances.

ResourceBundle hierarchies

The dictionary entries for one JcrResourceBundle are always ordered like the resource resolver search paths, so usually

  1. dictionary entries below /apps
  2. dictionary entries below /libs
  3. dictionary entries anywhere else (outside the search path)

That means that the message for the same key in /apps overwrites the one in /libs (if both are for the same locale and base name). Within those categories the order is non-deterministic, so if there is more than one entry for the same key in /apps/... (for the same locale and base name), any of those entries may be used.

The resource bundles of the same base name with different locales also form a hierarchy. Each key is looked up recursively first in the current resource bundle and then in its parent resource bundle. The parent resource bundle is the one having the same base name but the parent locale.

The locale hierarchy is ordered like this:

  1. <Language> <Country> <Variant>
  2. <Language> <Country>
  3. <Language>
  4. <Default Locale>, usually en

So for the locale de-DE-MAC the fallback order would be

  1. de-DE-MAC
  2. de-DE
  3. de
  4. en

In case there is a resource bundle requested for a locale without country or variant, there is only 1 fallback (i.e. the default locale). The last resort (root resource bundle in all hierarchies) is always the bundle which returns the requested key as the value.

Locate non JCR based ResourceBundle resources

Since version 2.5.16 the i18n bundle supports locating ResourceBundle resources that exist outside of the JCR repository. A new osgi.extender technique can be utilized so that a bundle can declare certain paths that should be traversed to locate ResourceBundle resources.

For example, the bundle providing the ResourceBundle resources can define something like this:

Require-Capability: osgi.extender;filter:="(&(osgi.extender=org.apache.sling.i18n.resourcebundle.locator.registrar)(version<=1.0.0)(!(version>=2.0.0)))"

Provide-Capability: org.apache.sling.i18n.resourcebundle.locator;paths="/libs/i18n/path123";depth=1

The "Provide-Capability" instruction defines which (csv) resource paths to traverse via the "paths" clause and how deep to drill down via the optional "depth" clause (depth=1 by default) looking for candidates.

- ( Internationalization Support (i18n) )