Index: openacs-4/packages/acs-core-docs/www/update-translations.html =================================================================== RCS file: /usr/local/cvsroot/openacs-4/packages/acs-core-docs/www/update-translations.html,v diff -u -r1.4.2.1 -r1.4.2.2 --- openacs-4/packages/acs-core-docs/www/update-translations.html 5 Jul 2004 19:47:33 -0000 1.4.2.1 +++ openacs-4/packages/acs-core-docs/www/update-translations.html 20 Oct 2004 17:56:21 -0000 1.4.2.2 @@ -1,5 +1,18 @@ -
- Update the translation server. (Approach 1: upgrade to the last release; approach 2: upgrade to head or to an alpha or beta release.) Use CVS up. -
This approach puts the translation server at risk. An alternate approach would be to create a whole new checkout on the appropriate branch (such as oacs-5-0), point that at the live production database, import keys (which is safe because keys on the translation server take precedence), then export keys back, and then commit. This gets the keys committed to the right branch without changing the code running on the production site. Updating the production site can then be a seperate exercise.Go to ACS Lang admin page and click "Import All Messages"
Resolve conflicts, if any, on the provided page. -
Back on the admin page, click the export link. If there are conflicts, the messages will be exported anyway and any errors will be shown in the web interface.
From the packages dir, run the acs-lang/bin/check-catalog.sh script. (This checks for keys no longer in use and some other things. Until it is rolled into the UI, do it manually and check the results and take whatever steps you can intuit you should do.) -
CVS commit the catalog files. Done
Identify any new locales that have been created. + For each new locale, check the parameters, especially that + the locale is in the format [two-letter code for + language, lower-case]_[TWO-LETTER CODE FOR COUNTRY, + UPPER-CASE], and create a sql command. A + example sql command for creating a locale is:
insert into ad_locales + (locale, label, language, country, nls_language, nls_territory, + nls_charset, mime_charset, default_p, enabled_p) + values ('fa_IR', 'Farsi (IR)', 'fa', 'IR', 'FARSI', 'IRAN', 'AL24UTFFSS', + 'windows-1256', 't', 'f');
Put this command into the following four files. For the + upgrade files, the correct file name will depend on the + exact version.
/packages/acs-lang/sql/postgresql/ad-locales.sql
/packages/acs-lang/sql/postgresql/upgrade/upgrade-current-version.sql
/packages/acs-lang/sql/oracle/ad-locales.sql
/packages/acs-lang/sql/oracle/upgrade/upgrade-current-version.sql
Make a backup of the production database. Restore it as a new database. For example, if upgrading from OpenACS 5.1.1, and the site name/database name is translate-511, create translate-512b1.
Check out the latest code on the release branch (e.g., oacs-5-1) as a new site, using the new site name (e.g., /var/lib/aolserver/translate-512b1. Copy over any local settings - usually, /etc/config.tcl and /etc/daemontools/run and modify appropriately. Also, copy over several translation-server-only files: +
...TBD +
+
Shut down the production site and put up a notice (no procedure on how to do this yet.)
Start the new site, and upgrade it.
Go to ACS Lang admin page and click "Import All Messages"
Resolve conflicts, if any, on the provided page. +
Back on the admin page, click the export link. If there are conflicts, the messages will be exported anyway and any errors will be shown in the web interface.
Commit the message catalogs to cvs.
From the packages dir, run the acs-lang/bin/check-catalog.sh script. (This checks for keys no longer in use and some other things. Until it is rolled into the UI, do it manually and check the results and take whatever steps you can intuit you should do.) +
CVS commit the catalog files. Done
If everything went well, reconfigure the new site to take over the role of the old site (/etc/config.tcl and /etc/daemontools/run). Otherwise, bring the old site back up while investigating problems, and then repeat. +