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Use Direct Line Speech in your bot

APPLIES TO: SDK v4

Direct Line Speech uses a new WebSocket based streaming capability of Bot Framework to exchange messages between the Direct Line Speech channel and your bot. After enabling the Direct Line Speech channel in the Azure portal, you'll need to update your bot to listen for and accept these WebSocket connections. These instructions explain how to do this.

Upgrade to the latest version of the SDK

For Direct Line Speech ensure you're using the latest version of Bot Builder SDK.

Update your .NET Core bot if it uses AddBot and UseBotFramework

If you created a bot using v4 of the Bot Builder SDK prior to version 4.3.2, your bot likely doesn't include a BotController but instead uses the AddBot() and UseBotFramework() methods in the Startup.cs file to expose the POST endpoint where the bot receives messages. To expose the new streaming endpoint, you'll need to add a BotController and remove the AddBot() and UseBotFramework() methods. These instructions walk through the changes that need to be made. If you already have these changes, continue to the next step.

Add a new MVC controller to your bot project by adding a file called BotController.cs. Add the controller code to this file:

[Route("api/messages")]

[ApiController]

public class BotController : ControllerBase
{
    private readonly IBotFrameworkHttpAdapter _adapter;
    private readonly IBot _bot;
    public BotController(IBotFrameworkHttpAdapter adapter, IBot bot)
    {
        _adapter = adapter;

        _bot = bot;
    }

    [HttpPost, HttpGet]
    public async Task ProcessMessageAsync()
    {
        await _adapter.ProcessAsync(Request, Response, _bot);
    }
}

In the Startup.cs file, locate the Configure method. Remove the UseBotFramework() line and make sure you have these lines to UseWebSockets:

public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app, IHostingEnvironment env)
{
    ...
    app.UseDefaultFiles();
    app.UseStaticFiles();
    app.UseWebSockets();
    app.UseMvc();
    ...
}

Also in the Startup.cs file, locate the ConfigureServices method. Remove the AddBot() line and make sure you have lines for adding your IBot and a BotFrameworkHttpAdapter:

public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
    services.AddMvc().SetCompatibilityVersion(CompatibilityVersion.Version_2_1);
    services.AddSingleton<ICredentialProvider, ConfigurationCredentialProvider>();
    services.AddSingleton<IChannelProvider, ConfigurationChannelProvider>();

    // Create the Bot Framework Adapter.
    services.AddSingleton<IBotFrameworkHttpAdapter, BotFrameworkHttpAdapter>();

    // Create the bot as a transient. In this case the ASP Controller is expecting an IBot.
    services.AddTransient<IBot, EchoBot>();
}

The remainder of your bot code stays the same!

Ensure WebSockets are enabled

When you create a new bot from the Azure portal using one of the templates, such as EchoBot, you'll get a bot that includes an ASP.NET MVC controller that exposes a GET and POST endpoint and will also use WebSockets. These instructions explain how to add these elements to your bot when you upgrade or don't use a template.

Open BotController.cs under the Controllers folder in your solution

Find the PostAsync method in the class and update its decoration from [HttpPost] to [HttpPost, HttpGet]:

[HttpPost, HttpGet]
public async Task PostAsync()
{
    await _adapter.ProcessAsync(Request, Response, _bot);
}

Save and close BotController.cs

Open Startup.cs in the root of your solution.

In Startup.cs, navigate to the bottom of the Configure method. Before the call to app.UseMvc(), add a call to app.UseWebSockets(). This is important as the order of these use calls matters. The end of the method should look something like this:

public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app, IHostingEnvironment env)
{
    ...
    app.UseDefaultFiles();
    app.UseStaticFiles();
    app.UseWebSockets();
    app.UseMvc();
    ...
}

The remainder of your bot code stays the same!

Optionally set the Speak field on activities

By default, all messages sent through Direct Line Speech to the user will be spoken.

You can optionally customize how the message is spoken by setting the Speak field of any Activity sent from the bot:

public IActivity Speak(string message)
{
    var activity = MessageFactory.Text(message);
    string body = @"<speak version='1.0' xmlns='https://www.w3.org/2001/10/synthesis' xml:lang='en-US'>

        <voice name='Microsoft Server Speech Text to Speech Voice (en-US, JessaRUS)'>" +
        $"{message}" + "</voice></speak>";

    activity.Speak = body;
    return activity;
}

The following snippet shows how to use the previous Speak function:

protected override async Task OnMessageActivityAsync(ITurnContext<IMessageActivity> turnContext, CancellationToken cancellationToken)
{
    await turnContext.SendActivityAsync(Speak($"Echo: {turnContext.Activity.Text}"), cancellationToken);
}

Additional information