The Localizely CLI is a command line tool that helps you sync localization files between your project and the Localizely platform.
Localizely is a translation management platform that helps you translate texts in your app for targeting multilingual market.
The Localizely CLI can be installed on all major platforms (MacOS, Linux, and Windows).
You can find more details about the installation below.
Download the binary for your platform, unzip it, and place the executable in the path. That's it.
Run the Localizely CLI from Docker.
docker run --rm localizely/localizely-cliNote: This requires you to have Docker installed on your system.
Clone the repo and build from the source.
Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/localizely/localizely-cli.gitMove to the project directory
cd localizely-cliDownload project dependencies
go mod downloadBuild the project
go buildAfter successfully completing the above steps, you should see the executable for your platform in the root of the project.
Note: This requires you to have Go installed on your system.
Below you can find a brief description of the available commands.
Configure your Localizely client.
This command offers two modes: interactive and template. The first one will guide you through the configuration of your Localizely client. The second one will generate a template file that needs to be updated with your config data.
After executing this command, a configuration file (localizely.yml) will be created for you.
The interactive mode
localizely-cli initThe template mode
localizely-cli init --mode templateNote: API token entered through interactive mode is saved in the ~/.localizely/credentials.yaml file.
Pull localization files from Localizely.
Depending on your workflow, you can use this command by relying on the external configuration (the localizely.yml file), or by passing your configuration through flags.
Rely on the external configuration
localizely-cli pullPass configuration through flags
localizely-cli pull \
--api-token 0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef \
--project-id 01234567-abcd-abcd-abcd-0123456789ab \
--file-type json \
--files "file[0]=lang/en.json","locale_code[0]=en","file[1]=lang/de_DE.json","locale_code[1]=de-DE" \
--export-empty-as empty \
--include-tags new,updated \
--exclude-tags removedPush localization files to Localizely.
Depending on your workflow, you can use this command by relying on the external configuration (the localizely.yml file), or by passing your configuration through flags.
Rely on the external configuration
localizely-cli pushPass configuration through flags
localizely-cli push \
--api-token 0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef0123456789abcdef \
--project-id 01234567-abcd-abcd-abcd-0123456789ab \
--files "file[0]=lang/en.json","locale_code[0]=en","file[1]=lang/de_DE.json","locale_code[1]=de-DE" \
--overwrite \
--reviewed=false \
--tag-added new,new-feat-x \
--tag-updated updated,updated-feat-x \
--tag-removed removedUpdate Localizely CLI to the latest version.
This command checks if there is a newer version of the localizely-cli available. If there is, you will be prompted to confirm the update.
localizely-cli updateIf anything feels off, or you would like to propose some functionality, feel free to do it through GitHub Issue Tracker.