Installing on SUSE and openSUSE

Hardware requirements

Weblate should run on any contemporary hardware without problems, the following is the minimal configuration required to run Weblate on a single host (Weblate, database and webserver):

  • 2 GB of RAM

  • 2 CPU cores

  • 1 GB of storage space

The more memory the better - it is used for caching on all levels (filesystem, database and Weblate).

Many concurrent users increases the amount of needed CPU cores. For hundreds of translation components at least 4 GB of RAM is recommended.

The typical database storage usage is around 300 MB per 1 million hosted words. Storage space needed for cloned repositories varies, but Weblate tries to keep their size minimal by doing shallow clones.

Bemerkung

Actual requirements for your installation of Weblate vary heavily based on the size of the translations managed in it.

Installation

Systemvoraussetzungen

Install the dependencies needed to build the Python modules (see Software-Anforderungen):

zypper install \
   libxslt-devel libxml2-devel freetype-devel libjpeg-devel zlib-devel \
   libyaml-devel libffi-devel cairo-devel pango-devel \
   gobject-introspection-devel libacl-devel python3-pip python3-virtualenv \
   python3-devel git

Install wanted optional dependencies depending on features you intend to use (see Optional dependencies):

zypper install tesseract-ocr tesseract-devel leptonica-devel
zypper install libldap2-devel libsasl2-devel
zypper install libxmlsec1-devel

Optionally install software for running production server, see Running server, Database setup for Weblate, Background tasks using Celery. Depending on size of your installation you might want to run these components on dedicated servers.

The local installation instructions:

# Web server option 1: NGINX and uWSGI
zypper install nginx uwsgi uwsgi-plugin-python3

# Web server option 2: Apache with ``mod_wsgi``
zypper install apache2 apache2-mod_wsgi

# Caching backend: Redis
zypper install redis-server

# Database server: PostgreSQL
zypper install postgresql postgresql-contrib

# SMTP server
zypper install postfix

Python modules

Hinweis

We’re using virtualenv to install Weblate in a separate environment from your system. If you are not familiar with it, check virtualenv User Guide.

  1. Create the virtualenv for Weblate:

    virtualenv ~/weblate-env
    
  2. Activate the virtualenv for Weblate:

    . ~/weblate-env/bin/activate
    
  3. Install Weblate including all optional dependencies:

    # Install Weblate with all optional dependencies
    pip install "Weblate[all]"
    

    Please check Optional dependencies for fine-tuning of optional dependencies.

    Bemerkung

    On some Linux distributions running Weblate fails with libffi error:

    ffi_prep_closure(): bad user_data (it seems that the version of the libffi library seen at runtime is different from the 'ffi.h' file seen at compile-time)
    

    This is caused by incompatibility of binary packages distributed via PyPI with the distribution. To address this, you need to rebuild the package on your system:

    pip install --force-reinstall --no-binary :all: cffi
    

Configuring Weblate

Bemerkung

Following steps assume virtualenv used by Weblate is active (what can be done by . ~/weblate-env/bin/activate). In case this is not true, you will have to specify full path to weblate command as ~/weblate-env/bin/weblate.

  1. Copy the file ~/weblate-env/lib/python3.9/site-packages/weblate/settings_example.py to ~/weblate-env/lib/python3.9/site-packages/weblate/settings.py.

  2. Passen Sie die Werte in der neuen Datei settings.py nach Ihren Wünschen an. Sie müssen zumindest die Datenbank-Zugangsdaten und den geheimen Django-Schlüssel angeben, aber Sie werden mehr Änderungen für die Produktionseinrichtung benötigen, siehe Adjusting configuration.

  3. Create the database and its structure for Weblate (the example settings use PostgreSQL, check Database setup for Weblate for production ready setup):

    weblate migrate
    
  4. Create the administrator user account and copy the password it outputs to the clipboard, and also save it for later use:

    weblate createadmin
    
  5. Collect static files for web server (see Running server and Serving static files):

    weblate collectstatic
    
  6. Compress JavaScript and CSS files (optional, see Compressing client assets):

    weblate compress
    
  7. Start Celery workers. This is not necessary for development purposes, but strongly recommended otherwise. See Background tasks using Celery for more info:

    ~/weblate-env/lib/python3.9/site-packages/weblate/examples/celery start
    
  8. Start the development server (see Running server for production setup):

    weblate runserver
    

After installation

Congratulations, your Weblate server is now running and you can start using it.

  • You can now access Weblate on http://localhost:8000/.

  • Sign in with admin credentials obtained during installation or register with new users.

  • You can now run Weblate commands using weblate command when Weblate virtualenv is active, see Management commands.

  • You can stop the test server with Ctrl+C.

  • Review potential issues with your installation either on /manage/performance/ URL (see Verwaltungsoberfläche) or using weblate check --deploy, see Production setup.

Adding translation

  1. Open the admin interface (http://localhost:8000/create/project/) and create the project you want to translate. See Project configuration for more details.

    All you need to specify here is the project name and its website.

  2. Create a component which is the real object for translation - it points to the VCS repository, and selects which files to translate. See Component configuration for more details.

    The important fields here are: Name der Komponente, Quellcode-Repository, and Dateimaske for finding translatable files. Weblate supports a wide range of formats including GNU gettext, Android string resources, Apple iOS strings, Java properties, Stringsdict-Format or Fluent-Format, see Supported file formats for more details.

  3. Once the above is completed (it can be lengthy process depending on the size of your VCS repository, and number of messages to translate), you can start translating.