Skip to content

A PHP package that retrieves the preferred language from an HTTP Accept-Language request-header field.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

kudashevs/accept-language

Repository files navigation

Accept-Language test workflow

This PHP package retrieves a preferred language from the HTTP Accept-Language request-header field. It can be used with any web app to identify the visitors' language of preference. The retrieved language might be used to make various decisions (e.g. set a locale, redirect a user to the specific page, etc.).

Features

By default, the preferred language comes in a format pretty similar to the Unicode Locale Identifier. It consists of a mandatory 2-/3-letter primary language subtag and a region subtag separated with an underscore (e.g., en_GB). The format of the language and the set of included subtags are customizable and can be changed by using various options.

Main package features:

  • it can use the default language value set by the default_language option
  • it can return a default language value when a client accepts any language (e.g., Accept-Language: *)
  • it can retrieve only the languages that are listed in the accepted_languages option and their derivatives
  • it can retrieve only the languages that match exactly the accepted_languages by setting the exact_match_only option
  • it can retrieve only the two-letter language codes by setting the two_letter_only option
  • it can include extlang, script, and region subtags by setting the use_<subtag-name>_subtag options
  • it can set the default separator value by providing the separator option
  • it can log its activity for further examination by setting the log_activity option
  • it can log its activity at the specific log level by providing the log_level option
  • it can log only the events that are listed in the log_only option

The package goes with the built-in Laravel framework support. For more information see Laravel usage section.

Installation

You can install the package via composer:

composer require kudashevs/accept-language

Usage

To retrieve a preferred language you need to instantiate the AcceptLanguage class and call a process method on the instance. It is best to do it somewhere before the place where you want the user's preferred language (for example, in a front controller or in a middleware). If you don't call the process method, the values will remain empty.

use \Kudashevs\AcceptLanguage\AcceptLanguage;

$service = new AcceptLanguage();
$service->process();

Note! The AcceptLanguage class at the moment of creation can throw a few exceptions: InvalidOptionType, InvalidOptionValue, InvalidLogEventName, InvalidLogLevelName. All of these exceptions extend a common built-in InvalidArgumentException class, so they are easy to deal with.

Once obtained, the preferred language value can be accessed in any part of your application by using one of these methods:

$service->getPreferredLanguage();   # Returns the user's preferred language
$service->getLanguage();            # An alias of the getPreferredLanguage()

If you need the original HTTP Accept-Language header, it is available via the getHeader method.

$service->getHeader();

Options

The class accepts some configuration options:

'http_accept_language'      # A string with a custom HTTP Accept-Language header.
'default_language'          # A string with a default preferred language value (default is 'en')¹.
'accepted_languages'        # An array with a list of accepted languages (default is [])².
'exact_match_only'          # A boolean defines whether to retrieve only languages that match exactly a supported languages (default is false).
'two_letter_only'           # A boolean defines whether to retrieve only two-letter primary subtags (default is true).
'use_extlang_subtag'        # A boolean defines whether to include an extlang subtag in the result (default is false).
'use_script_subtag'         # A boolean defines whether to include a script subtag in the result (default is false).
'use_region_subtag'         # A boolean defines whether to include a region subtag in the result (default is true).
'separator'                 # A string with a character that will be used as a separator in the result (default is '_')³.
'log_activity'              # A boolean defines whether to log the activity of the package or not (default if false).
'log_level'                 # A string with a PSR-3 compatible log level (default is 'info').
'log_only'                  # An array with a list of log events to log (default is []).

1 - the default_language option should contain a valid Language Tag (it will be formatted according to the settings)
2 - the accepted_languages option should include valid Language Tags only (the primary subtags are limited to 2-/3-letters for now)
3 - the separator can accept any string value, however it is recommended to use the URL Safe Alphabet.

Notes

Some options require additional explanations:

  • the default_language option should contain a valid Language Tag. This default value may be written in any case (as the standard says). Different separators may be used too (for example, ['en-GB', 'en-CA'] may be written as ['en_GB', 'en_ca']).

Important note! the package supports the - and _ separators by default. If you want to use any other separator, use the separator option.

  • the accepted_languages option should include valid Language Tags only. These values may be written in any case (as the standard says). Different separators may be used too (for example, ['en-GB', 'en-CA'] may be written as ['en_GB', 'en_ca']). If the accepted_languages is empty, the package will retrieve a return the first valid language from an HTTP Accept-Language header as a preferred language.

Important note! the values of the accepted_languages option will be formatted according to the settings. Therefore, if you want to retrieve languages including script subtags you should enable the use_script_subtag option.

  • the exact_match_only option instructs the matching algorithm to retrieve only the languages that exactly match the languages listed in the accepted_languages option. By default, the matching algorithm is more flexible and retrieves a language and its derivatives.

  • the two_letter_only option is set to true by default. When set to true, it orders the instance to retrieve only the languages with the two-letter primary subtag. This option has a higher priority than the accepted_languages option. Thus, if you want to accept languages with three-letter primary subtag (by listing them in the accepted_languages), don't forget to disable this option.

Logging

There is the possibility to log information gathered throughout the execution process. To start logging set the configuration option log_activity to true and provide an instance of Psr\Log\LoggerInterface implementation through the useLogger method.

use \Kudashevs\AcceptLanguage\AcceptLanguage;

$service = new AcceptLanguage([
    'log_activity' => true,
]);
$service->useLogger(new PsrCompatibleLogger());
$service->process();

Log events

To distinguish the stages of the execution process the package introduces the log events. If you want to log only specific events, please add these events to the log_only option. If the log_only set to empty, the package logs all known events.

  • retrieve_header occurs after retrieving an HTTP Accept-Language header. It logs a raw Accept-Language header value.
  • retrieve_default_language occurs when it returns the default language without further processing (the default language case).
  • retrieve_raw_languages occurs after retrieving raw languages from the header value. It logs the raw languages and their correctness.
  • retrieve_normalized_languages occurs after applying the normalization process to the raw languages. It logs the normalized languages.
  • retrieve_preferred_languages occurs after applying the matching algorithm to the normalized languages. It logs the found preferred languages.
  • retrieve_preferred_language occurs after the preferred language was or was not found. It logs the preferred language.

Usage example

Let's imaging that we have a web application that uses three different languages: American, British, and Canadian English. We want to redirect users according to their HTTP Accept-Language header settings to specific sections: en_US, en_GB, en_CA. All routes are set correctly, and we just want to retrieve the preferred language, if user has any, to redirect them.

To work properly, the package requires us to provide two initial options: default_language let's give it the value en_US accepted_languages let's give it the value ['en_US', 'en_GB', 'en_CA']

$service = new AcceptLanguage([
    'default_language' => 'en_US',
    'accepted_languages' => ['en_US', 'en_GB', 'en_CA'],
]);
$service->process();

These options instruct the package to retrieve only the values that are listed in the accepted_languages option. If one of the language tags in an HTTP Accept-Language header matches any of these values, it will be retained for the further processing. If none of them matches the listed values, the default language will be returned.

Laravel integration

If you don't use auto-discovery just add a ServiceProvider to the config/app.php file.

'providers' => [
    Kudashevs\AcceptLanguage\Providers\AcceptLanguageServiceProvider::class,
];

Once added, the AcceptLanguageServiceProvider will instantiate the AcceptLanguage class, apply some initial configuration settings, and call the process method. After finishing the setup process, it binds the instance into the Laravel service container. Thus, the instance becomes accessible through a dependency injection mechanism or an alias (e.g app('acceptlanguage')).

If you want to add a Laravel Facade just add it to the aliases array in the config/app.php file.

'aliases' => [
    'AcceptLanguage' => Kudashevs\AcceptLanguage\Facades\AcceptLanguage::class,
];

All of the available configuration settings are located in the config/accept-language.php file.

'default_language' => 'string'      # Set the `default_language` option value (default is `en`)
'accepted_languages' => []          # Set the `accepted_languages` option value (default is [])
'exact_match_only' => bool,         # Set the `exact_match_only` option value (default is `false`)
'use_extlang_subtag' => bool,       # Set the `use_extlang_subtag` option value (default is `false`)
'use_script_subtag' => bool,        # Set the `use_script_subtag` option value (default is `false`)
'use_region_subtag' => bool,        # Set the `use_region_subtag` option value (default is `true`)
'log_activity' => bool              # Set the `log_activity` option value (default is `false`)

for more information about different options, please refer to the Options section

If you want to change the defaults, don't forget to publish the configuration file.

php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Kudashevs\AcceptLanguage\Providers\AcceptLanguageServiceProvider"

Testing

If you want to make sure that everything works as expected, you can run unit tests provided with the package.

composer test

References

Contributing

Pull requests are welcome. For major changes, please open an issue first to discuss what you would like to change.

Please make sure to update tests as appropriate.

License

The MIT License (MIT). Please see the License file for more information.

About

A PHP package that retrieves the preferred language from an HTTP Accept-Language request-header field.

Topics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Languages