Provides an interface for classes to implement their own flush()
functionality. This function gets called early in a request on
all implementations of Flushable when flush=1|all is requested in the
URL.
This fix came out of an issue where Requirements combined files were not
being cleaned up after dev/build?flush=1, due to the fact that flush
would only occur when you called it while on a page that used those
combined files, but not in any other contexts. This will now call flush
on any implementors of Flushable regardless of the context of where
flush was called.
This will resolve issues in cases where the site locale may be assigned a value that does not have an explicit translation. E.g. if the locale is en_NZ (and it's appropriate for this to be the assigned locale), Afrikaans will no longer be the default selected locale when creating members. Now en_US is chosen as a better fallback default.
This is a minor ease of use fix that means fewer CMS users can be accidentally created in Afrikaans within NZ based sites.
Test cases included.
The motivation for this was to allow module developers to change what parser is used to parse SilverStripe templates.
This change enables people to compile their own version of the SilverStripe template parser and use it without modifying core files.
The "project" module (normally mysite) is considered with the highest priority. Yet, the project's i18n is loaded first and cannot overwrite existing translations. I've added a array_reverse(), so the iteration keeps the translation of the module with the highest priority.
Old $sortedModules: mysite, (other_modules,) cms, admin, framework.
New $sortedModules: framework, admin, cms, (other_modules,) mysite.
Due to the recent change of translations to transifex, some
locales changed their names, which prompted a fix to
i18n::get_available_translations() (see 00ffe7294).
This caused a regression where short locales are determined
from the YAML file names (e.g. "en"), but weren't matched up
with fully qualified locales from get_available_translations() (e.g. "en_US").
Since this list is used in the admin/myprofile dropdown for the Member.Locale value,
it didn't match up with any entries and defaulted to the first one ("Africaans").
Note that the behaviour of admin/myprofile is still a bit weird:
It defaults the locale on new members to the one set for the current administrator.
So if a site defaults to en_US in _config.php, but the admin happens to view
his backend in de_DE, all members he creates default to de_DE as well.
Thanks to @tractorcow for contributing and peer reviewing!
- Based on new (last) translation download from getlocalization.com
- Removed untranslated strings. Getlocalization started including those at some point
which is highly annoying, unnecessary and breaks the new transfix system,
since it'll mark all of the english strings as actual translations
- Avoid dots in entities. It confuses the Transifex YML parser
- Removed some locales unknown to Transifex which didn't have any translations anyway
- Removed "lolcat" locale, uses custom notation (en@lolcal)
which SilverStripe's i18n system can't handle
(needs mapping from SS naming to Zend naming)
- Renamed "Te Reo/Maori" locale from "mi_NZ" to "mi" (Transifex/CLDR notation)
- Namespaced all entities used in templates (deprecated usage)
- Converted dots to underscores where template filenames are used for namespaces,
since Transifex YML parsing handles them as separate YML keys otherwise
- Removed whitespace in entity names, SilverStripe i18n can't handle it
- Only allow selection of locales registered through i18n::$all_locales to avoid
issues with unknown locales in Zend's CLDR database
This is a necessity for any further 3.1 pushes of master files to getlocalization.
Because we'd otherwise remove existing master strings for CTF etc,
which means we can no longer backport new translations to 3.0
(and there's no way for users to contribute translations to 3.0 via getlocalization).
It's still a very monolithic class, but at least I've refactored it to return
all collected strings without writing it to files (for easier testing).
Priority for translations was hardcoded, and hardcoded the project name as "mysite".
This takes the order from a configuration property "module_prority". You can
use standard config fragment before and after rules to make a module less or
more important than anything else, with these tweaks:
- Unless it has it's order explicitly defined, the "project" module (normally mysite)
will be considered highest priority
- There is an "other_modules" value in the order list which will be replaced by
all the modules (except the project module) that don't have their order
explicitly defined.
They are now accessed via the Config API, and contain associative rather than indexed arrays.
Before: `array('de_DE' => array('German', 'Deutsch'))`, after: `array('de_DE' => array('name' => 'German', 'native' => 'Deutsch'))`.
Also fixed a i18n.js_i18n config accessor
API Added Convert::nl2os function to normalise end of line characters across systems with tests
BUG Fixed i18n unit tests in non-unix systems constantly failing
BUG Fixed problems with HTMLCleaner tests failing in non-unix systems