Contents
See one of the following sections:
Overview of uninstalling language packages
This section discusses how to uninstall one or more language packages, optionally including the language packages’ code from the file system. You can create backups first so you can restore the data at a later time.
This command uninstalls only language packages that are specified in composer.json
; in other words, language packages that are provided as Composer packages. If your language package is not a Composer package, you must uninstall it manually by removing language package code from the file system.
You can restore backups at any time using the magento setup:rollback command.
First steps
-
Log in to the Magento server as, or switch to, a user who has permissions to write to the Magento file system. One way to do this is to switch to the Magento file system owner.
If you use the bash shell, you can also use the following syntax to switch to the Magento file system owner and enter the command at the same time:
su <Magento file system owner> -s /bin/bash -c <command>
-
To run Magento commands from any directory, add
<your Magento install dir>/bin
to your systemPATH
.Because shells have differing syntax, consult a reference like unix.stackexchange.com.
bash shell example for CentOS:
export PATH=$PATH:/var/www/html/magento2/bin
You can also run the commands in the following ways:
cd <your Magento install dir>/bin
and run them as./magento <command name>
php <your Magento install dir>/bin/magento <command name>
<your Magento install dir>
is a subdirectory of your web server's docroot. Need help locating the docroot? Click here.
In addition to the command arguments discussed here, see Common arguments.
Uninstall language packages
Command usage:
magento i18n:uninstall [-b|--backup-code] {language package name} ... {language package name}
The language package uninstall command performs the following tasks:
-
Checks for dependencies; if so, the command terminates.
To work around this, you can either uninstall all dependent language packages at the same time or you can uninstall the depending language packages first.
- If
--backup code
is specified, backs up the Magento file system (excludingvar
andpub/static
directories) tovar/backups/<timestamp>_filesystem.tgz
- Removes language packages files from the codebase using
composer remove
. - Cleans the cache.
For example, if you attempt to uninstall a language package that another language package depends on, the following message displays:
Cannot uninstall vendorname/language-en_us because the following package(s) depend on it:
vendorname/language-en_gb
One alternative is to uninstall both language packages after backing up the Magento codebase:
magento i18n:uninstall vendorname/language-en_us vendorname/language-en_gb --backup-code
Messages similar to the following display:
Code backup is starting...
Code backup filename: 1435261098_filesystem_code.tgz (The archive can be uncompressed with 7-Zip on Windows systems)
Code backup path: /var/www/html/magento2/var/backups/1435261098_filesystem_code.tgz
[SUCCESS]: Code backup completed successfully.
Loading composer repositories with package information
Updating dependencies (including require-dev)
- Removing vendorname/language-en_us (dev-master)
Removing Magento/LanguageEn_us
- Removing vendorname/language-en_br (dev-master)
Removing vendorname/language-en_br (dev-master)
Writing lock file
Generating autoload files
Related topics
- Installing the Magento software using the command line
- Enable or disable modules
- Uninstall modules
- Create the deployment configuration
- Enable or disable maintenance mode
- Create the Magento database schema
- Configure the store
- Create a Magento administrator
- Back up the file system, media, and database
- Uninstall themes
- Uninstall the Magento software
- Update the Magento software
- Reinstall the Magento software
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