Version control integration¶
Weblate currently supports Git (with extended support for GitHub, Gerrit and Subversion) and Mercurial as version control backends.
Accessing repositories¶
The VCS repository you want to use has to be accessible to Weblate. With a
publicly available repository you just need to enter the correct URL (for
example https://github.com/WeblateOrg/weblate.git
), but for private
repositories or for push URLs the setup is more complex and requires
authentication.
Accessing repositories from Hosted Weblate¶
For Hosted Weblate there is a dedicated push user registered on GitHub, Bitbucket, Codeberg and GitLab (with username weblate named Weblate push user). You need to add this user as a collaborator and give it appropriate permission to your repository (read only is okay for cloning, write is required for pushing). Depending on service and your organization settings, this happens immediately or requires confirmation from Weblate side.
The invitations on GitHub are accepted automatically within five minutes, on other services manual processing might be needed, so please be patient.
Once the weblate user is added, you can configure
Source code repository and Repository push URL using SSH protocol (for example
git@github.com:WeblateOrg/weblate.git
).
SSH repositories¶
The most frequently used method to access private repositories is based on SSH. Authorize the public Weblate SSH key (see Weblate SSH key) to access the upstream repository this way.
Warning
On GitHub, each key can be added to only one repository, see GitHub repositories and Accessing repositories from Hosted Weblate.
Weblate also stores the host key fingerprint upon first connection, and fails to connect to the host should it be changed later (see Verifying SSH host keys).
In case adjustment is needed, do so from the Weblate admin interface:

Weblate SSH key¶
The Weblate public key is visible to all users browsing the About page.
Admins can generate or display the public key currently used by Weblate in the connection (from SSH keys) on the admin interface landing page.
Note
The corresponding private SSH key can not currently have a password, so make sure it is well protected.
Hint
Make a backup of the generated private Weblate SSH key.
Verifying SSH host keys¶
Weblate automatically remembers the SSH host keys on first access and remembers them for further use.
In case you want to verify them before connecting to the repository, verify the
SSH host keys of the servers you are going to access in Add host
key, from the same section of the admin interface. Enter the hostname you are
going to access (e.g. gitlab.com
), and press Submit. Verify
its fingerprint matches the server you added. They are shown in the
confirmation message:

GitHub repositories¶
Access via SSH is possible (see SSH repositories), but in case you need to access more than one repository, you will hit a GitHub limitation on allowed SSH key usage (since one key can be used only for one repository).
In case the Push branch is not set, the project is forked and changes pushed through a fork. In case it is set, changes are pushed to the upstream repository and chosen branch.
For smaller deployments, use HTTPS authentication with a personal access token and your GitHub account, see Creating an access token for command-line use.
For bigger setups, it is usually better to create a dedicated user for Weblate, assign it the public SSH key generated in Weblate (see Weblate SSH key) and grant it access to all the repositories you want to translate. This approach is also used for Hosted Weblate, there is dedicated weblate user for that.
Weblate internal URLs¶
To share one repository between different components you can use a special URL
like weblate://project/component
. This way, the component will share the
VCS repository configuration with the referenced component
(project/component
in the example).
Weblate automatically adjusts repository URL when creating component when it finds component with matching repository setup. You can override this in last step of component configuration.
Reasons to use this:
Saves disk space on the server, the repository is stored just once.
Makes the updates faster, only one repository is updated.
There is just single exported repository with Weblate translations (see Git exporter).
Some addons can operate on more components sharing single repository, for example Squash Git commits.
HTTPS repositories¶
To access protected HTTPS repositories, include the username and password in the URL. Don’t worry, Weblate will strip this info when the URL is shown to users (if even allowed to see the repository URL at all).
For example the GitHub URL with authentication added might look like:
https://user:your_access_token@github.com/WeblateOrg/weblate.git
.
Note
If your username or password contains special characters, those have to be
URL encoded, for example
https://user%40example.com:%24password%23@bitbucket.org/…
.
Using proxy¶
If you need to access HTTP/HTTPS VCS repositories using a proxy server, configure the VCS to use it.
This can be done using the http_proxy
, https_proxy
, and all_proxy
environment variables, (as described in the cURL documentation)
or by enforcing it in the VCS configuration, for example:
git config --global http.proxy http://user:password@proxy.example.com:80
Note
The proxy configuration needs to be done under user running Weblate (see
also Filesystem permissions) and with HOME=$DATA_DIR/home
(see
DATA_DIR
), otherwise Git executed by Weblate will not use it.
See also
Git¶
See also
See Accessing repositories for info on how to access different kinds of repositories.
Git with force push¶
This behaves exactly like Git itself, the only difference being that it always force pushes. This is intended only in the case of using a separate repository for translations.
Warning
Use with caution, as this easily leads to lost commits in your upstream repository.
Customizing Git configuration¶
Weblate invokes all VCS commands with HOME=$DATA_DIR/home
(see
DATA_DIR
), therefore editing the user configuration needs to be done
in DATA_DIR/home/.git
.
Git remote helpers¶
You can also use Git remote helpers for additionally supporting other version control systems, but be prepared to debug problems this may lead to.
At this time, helpers for Bazaar and Mercurial are available within separate
repositories on GitHub: git-remote-hg and git-remote-bzr.
Download them manually and put somewhere in your search path
(for example ~/bin
). Make sure you have the corresponding version control
systems installed.
Once you have these installed, such remotes can be used to specify a repository in Weblate.
To clone the gnuhello
project from Launchpad using Bazaar:
bzr::lp:gnuhello
For the hello
repository from selenic.com using Mercurial:
hg::http://selenic.com/repo/hello
Warning
The inconvenience of using Git remote helpers is for example with Mercurial, the remote helper sometimes creates a new tip when pushing changes back.
GitHub¶
New in version 2.3.
This adds a thin layer atop Git using the Github API to allow pushing translation changes as pull requests, instead of pushing directly to the repository.
Git pushes changes directly to a repository, while GitHub creates pull requests. The latter is not needed for merely accessing Git repositories.
See also
Pushing changes to GitHub as pull requests¶
If not wanting to push translations to a GitHub repository, they can be sent as either one or many pull requests instead.
You need to configure API credentials to make this work.
See also
GitLab¶
New in version 3.9.
This just adds a thin layer atop Git using the GitLab API to allow pushing translation changes as merge requests instead of pushing directly to the repository.
There is no need to use this to access Git repositories, ordinary Git works the same, the only difference is how pushing to a repository is handled. With Git changes are pushed directly to the repository, while GitLab creates merge request.
See also
Pushing changes to GitLab as merge requests¶
If not wanting to push translations to a GitLab repository, they can be sent as either one or many merge requests instead.
You need to configure API credentials to make this work.
See also
Pagure¶
New in version 4.3.2.
This just adds a thin layer atop Git using the Pagure API to allow pushing translation changes as merge requests instead of pushing directly to the repository.
There is no need to use this to access Git repositories, ordinary Git works the same, the only difference is how pushing to a repository is handled. With Git changes are pushed directly to the repository, while Pagure creates merge request.
See also
Pushing changes to Pagure as merge requests¶
If not wanting to push translations to a Pagure repository, they can be sent as either one or many merge requests instead.
You need to configure API credentials to make this work.
See also
Gerrit¶
New in version 2.2.
Adds a thin layer atop Git using the git-review tool to allow pushing translation changes as Gerrit review requests, instead of pushing them directly to the repository.
The Gerrit documentation has the details on the configuration necessary to set up such repositories.
Mercurial¶
New in version 2.1.
Mercurial is another VCS you can use directly in Weblate.
Note
It should work with any Mercurial version, but there are sometimes incompatible changes to the command-line interface which breaks Weblate integration.
See also
See Accessing repositories for info on how to access different kinds of repositories.
Subversion¶
New in version 2.8.
Weblate uses git-svn to interact with subversion repositories. It is a Perl script that lets subversion be used by a Git client, enabling users to maintain a full clone of the internal repository and commit locally.
Note
Weblate tries to detect Subversion repository layout automatically - it supports both direct URLs for branch or repositories with standard layout (branches/, tags/ and trunk/). More info about this is to be found in the git-svn documentation. If your repository does not have a standard layout and you encounter errors, try including the branch name in the repository URL and leaving branch empty.
Changed in version 2.19: Before this, there was only support for standard layout repositories.
Subversion credentials¶
Weblate expects you to have accepted the certificate up-front and if needed, your credentials. It will look to insert them into the DATA_DIR directory. Accept the certificate by using svn once with the $HOME environment variable set to the DATA_DIR:
# Use DATA_DIR as configured in Weblate settings.py, it is /app/data in the Docker
HOME=${DATA_DIR}/home svn co https://svn.example.com/example
See also
Local files¶
New in version 3.8.
Weblate can also operate without a remote VCS. The initial translations are imported by uploading them. Later you can replace individual files by file upload, or add translation strings directly from Weblate (currently available only for monolingual translations).
In the background Weblate creates a Git repository for you and all changes are tracked in. In case you later decide to use a VCS to store the translations, you already have a repository within Weblate can base your integration on.