Generate in-meeting notifications
Microsoft Teams helps you to generate and interact with in-meeting notifications using a bot.
Key features of in-meeting notifications:
- View agenda items listed in an Adaptive Card.
- Select any option in the given agenda.
- Submit your feedback on either in-meeting notifications or Adaptive Card sent in chat.
- Send targeted notifications to a specific user in a meeting.
Note
In-meeting notifications are available only for Microsoft Entra users and not for anonymous users.
This step-by-step guide helps you to generate in-meeting notifications using a bot in Teams meeting. You'll see the following output:
Prerequisites
The following are the prerequisites:
- Ensure that you have a working knowledge of the CSharp language.
- Ensure that you install the following tools and set up your development environment:
Install | For using... | |
---|---|---|
Microsoft Teams | Microsoft Teams to collaborate with everyone you work with through apps for chat, meetings, and call all in one place. | |
Visual Studio 2022 |
You can install the enterprise version in Visual Studio 2022, and install the workloads. Install one of the following two workloads: • ASP.NET and web development • .NET Core cross-platform development |
|
.NET Core SDK | Customized bindings for local debugging and Azure Functions app deployments. Use the latest version or install the portable version. | |
Dev tunnel | Teams app features (conversational bots, message extensions, and incoming webhooks) need inbound connections. A tunnel connects your development system to Teams. Dev tunnel is a powerful tool to securely open your localhost to the internet and control who has access. Dev tunnel is available in Visual Studio 2022 version 17.7.0 or later. or You can also use ngrok as a tunnel to connect your development system to Teams. It isn't required for apps that only include tabs. This package is installed within the project directory (using npm devDependencies ). |
Note
After downloading ngrok, sign up and install authtoken.
Set up local environment
Open Microsoft-Teams-Samples.
Select Code.
From the dropdown menu, select Open with GitHub Desktop.
Select Clone.
Register Microsoft Entra app
The following steps help you to create and register your bot in Azure portal:
- Create and register your Azure app.
- Create client secret to enable SSO authentication of the bot.
- Add Teams channel to deploy the bot.
- Create a tunnel to your web server's endpoints using dev tunnel (recommended) or ngrok.
- Add messaging endpoint to the dev tunnel that you created.
Add App registration
Go to Azure portal.
Select App registrations.
Select + New registration.
Enter the name of your app.
Select Accounts in any organizational directory (Any Microsoft Entra ID tenant - Multitenant).
Select Register.
Your app is registered in Microsoft Entra ID. The app overview page appears.
Note
Save the app ID from Application (client) ID and Directory (tenant) ID for further use.
Create a tunnel
Open Visual Studio.
Select Create a new project.
In the search box, enter ASP.NET. From the search results, select ASP.NET Core Web App.
Select Next.
Enter Project name and select Next.
Select Create.
An overview window appears.
In the debug dropdown list, select Dev Tunnels (no active tunnel) > Create a Tunnel....
A pop-up window appears.
Update the following details in the pop-up window:
- Account: Enter a Microsoft or GitHub account.
- Name: Enter a name for your tunnel.
- Tunnel Type: From the dropdown list, select Temporary.
- Access: From the dropdown list, select Public.
Select OK.
A pop-up window appears showing that dev tunnel is successfully created.
Select OK.
You can find the tunnel you've created in the debug dropdown list as follows:
Select F5 to run the application in the debug mode.
If a Security Warning dialog appears, select Yes.
A pop-up window appears.
Select Continue.
The dev tunnel home page opens in a new browser window and the dev tunnel is now active.
Go to Visual Studio, select View > Output.
From the Output console dropdown menu, select Dev Tunnels.
The Output console shows the dev tunnel URL.
Add a web authentication
In the left pane, under Manage, select Authentication.
Select Add a platform > Web.
Enter the redirect URI for your app by appending
auth-end
to the fully qualified domain name. For example,https://your-devtunnel-domain/auth-end
orhttps://your-ngrok-domain/auth-end
.Under Implicit grant and hybrid flows, select the Access tokens and ID tokens checkboxes.
Select Configure.
Under Web, select Add URI.
Enter
https://token.botframework.com/.auth/web/redirect
.Select Save.
Create a client secret
In the left pane, under Manage, select Certificates & secrets.
Under Client secrets, select + New client secret.
The Add a client secret window appears.
Enter Description.
Select Add.
Under Value, select Copy to clipboard to save the client secret value for further use.
Add API permission
In the left pane, under Manage, select API permissions.
Select + Add a permission.
Select Microsoft Graph.
Select Delegated permissions.
Select the following permissions:
- OpenId permissions > email, offline_access, openid, profile.
- User > User.Read.
Select Add permissions.
Note
- If an app isn't granted IT admin consent, users must provide consent the first time they use an app.
- Users need to consent to the API permissions only if the Microsoft Entra app is registered in a different tenant.
Add Application ID URI
In the left pane, under Manage, select Expose an API.
Next to Application ID URI, select Add.
Update the Application ID URI in the
api://your-devtunnel-domain/botid-{AppID}
orapi://your-ngrok-domain/botid-{AppID}
format and select Save.The following image shows the domain name:
Add a scope
In the left pane, under Manage, select Expose an API.
Select + Add a scope.
Enter access_as_user as the Scope name.
Under Who can consent?, select Admins and users.
Update the values for the rest of the fields as follows:
Enter Teams can access the user’s profile as Admin consent display name.
Enter Allows Teams to call the app’s web APIs as the current user as Admin consent description.
Enter Teams can access the user profile and make requests on the user’s behalf as User consent display name.
Enter Enable Teams to call this app’s APIs with the same rights as the user as User consent description.
Ensure that State is set to Enabled.
Select Add scope.
The following image shows the fields and the values:
Note
The Scope name must match with the Application ID URI with
/access_as_user
appended at the end.
Add client application
In the left pane, under Manage, select Expose an API.
Under Authorized client applications, identify the applications that you want to authorize for your app’s web application.
Select + Add a client application.
Add Teams mobile or desktop and Teams web application.
For Teams mobile or desktop: Enter the Client ID as
1fec8e78-bce4-4aaf-ab1b-5451cc387264
.For Teams web: Enter the Client ID as
5e3ce6c0-2b1f-4285-8d4b-75ee78787346
.
Select the Authorized scopes checkbox.
Select Add application.
The following image displays the Client Id:
Create your bot
Create an Azure bot resource
Note
If you're already testing your bot in Teams, sign out of this app and Teams. To see this change, sign in again.
Go to Home.
Select + Create a resource.
In the search box, enter Azure Bot.
Select Enter.
Select Azure Bot.
Select Create.
Enter the bot name in Bot handle.
Select your Subscription from the dropdown list.
Select your Resource group from the dropdown list.
If you don't have an existing resource group, you can create a new resource group. To create a new resource group, follow these steps:
- Select Create new.
- Enter the resource name and select OK.
- Select a location from New resource group location dropdown list.
Under Pricing, select Change plan.
Select FO Free > Select.
Under Microsoft App ID, select Type of App as Multi Tenant.
In the Creation type, select Use existing app registration.
Enter the App ID.
Note
You can't create more than one bot with the same Microsoft App ID.
Select Review + create.
After the validation passes, select Create.
The bot takes a few minutes to provision.
Select Go to resource.
You've successfully created your Azure bot.
Add a Teams channel
In the left pane, select Channels.
Under Available Channels, select Microsoft Teams.
Select the checkbox to accept the Terms of Service.
Select Agree.
Select Apply.
To add a messaging endpoint
Use the dev tunnel URL in the Output console as the messaging endpoint.
In the left pane, under Settings, select Configuration.
Update the Messaging endpoint in the format
https://your-devtunnel-domain/api/messages
.Select Apply.
You've successfully set up a bot in Azure Bot service.
Note
If the Application Insights Instrumentation key shows an error, update with App ID.
Set up app settings
Go to the appsettings.json file in cloned repository.
Open the appsettings.json file and update the following information:
- Set
"MicrosoftAppId"
to your bot's Microsoft App ID. - Set
"MicrosoftAppPassword"
to your bot's client secret Value. - Set
"BaseUrl"
to the qualifieddev tunnel
orngrok
domain name.
- Set
Set up manifest file
Go to the manifest.json file in cloned repository.
Open the manifest.json file and update the following information:
- Set
ID
to Microsoft App ID. - Set
botId
to Microsoft App ID. - Set
webApplicationInfo id
to Microsoft App ID. - Set
validDomains
to Web App Domain Name.
Note
WebAppDomain
is your devtunnel or ngrok domain. If the ngrok ID ends with*.ngrok-free.app
valid domain is optional.- Set
Build and run the service
To build and run the service using Visual Studio.
Open Visual Studio.
Go to File > Open > Project/Solution....
Open the InMeetingNotifications.sln file in Visual Studio.
Press F5 to run the project.
A webpage opens with a message Your bot is ready!.
Add in-meeting notifications app to Teams
In your cloned repository, go to csharp > InMeetingNotifications > Manifest.
Create a .zip file with the following files that are present in the Manifest folder:
- manifest.json
- outline.png
- color.png
Create a meeting with a few presenters and attendees.
Join the meeting.
After the meeting has started, select + Apps to add an app.
In the pop-up window, select Manage apps.
Select Upload an app > Upload a custom app.
Select the .zip file you've created in the Manifest folder and select Open.
Select Add.
Search and select the required scope or select a chat or meeting from the list, and move through the dialog to select Go.
The Manage apps section displays the list of applications.
Go to the meeting chat.
You can send a targeted notification or an in-meeting notification as follows:
To send a targeted notification, follow these steps:
In the chat, @mention the In-Meeting Notification bot and select
SendTargetedNotification
.Select Send.
The bot sends an Adaptive Card in Teams with the list of participants in the meeting.
Select a specific participant you want to send the notification to.
Select Send Notification.
The targeted participant receives a pop-up notification in the meeting window.
Complete challenge
Did you come up with something like this?
The following image is an example of a targeted notification:
Congratulations!
You have successfully completed this tutorial.
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