page_type | description | products | languages | extensions | contentType | createdDate | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
sample |
This is a sample app with capability to send notification when user creates workitem in [Azure DevOps](https://dev.azure.com) via webhooks. |
|
|
samples |
29-04-2022 00:02:15 |
This is a sample application which demonstrates how to create a webhook on Azure DevOps and connect with Teams bot that creates a group chat and send workitems details.
- Microsoft Teams is installed and you have an account (not a guest account)
- .NET 6.0 SDK.
# determine dotnet version dotnet --version
- ngrok or equivalent tunneling solution
- M365 developer account or access to a Teams account with the appropriate permissions to install an app.
- Azure DevOps access to set up service hooks and add custom field in workitem.
- Teams Admin portal access to upload the manifest.json.
Note these instructions are for running the sample on your local machine, the tunnelling solution is required because the Teams service needs to call into the bot.
- Open ngrok and run command
ngrok http -host-header=rewrite 3978
- Once started you should see URL
https://41ed-abcd-e125.ngrok.io
. Copy it, this is your baseUrl that will used as endpoint for Azure bot and webhook.
- Follow this document- Create Webhooks to service hook.
- Make sure to select trigger as Work item created
- Make sure to add URL as https://{baseUrl}/api/workItem. It will look somethihng as https://41ed-abcd-e125.ngrok.io/api/workItem. Here baseUrl is referred to URL we get in step 1.
- Follow the doc to Add a custom field to an inherited process - Azure DevOps Services.
- Make sure to give name as StakeholderTeam and Type Text (Single line)
- Make sure to Apply the customized process to your project
- Go to Options and check Required and Add.
Register one Azure AD application in your tenant's directory: for the bot and tab app authentication.
-
Log in to the Azure portal from your subscription, and go to the "App registrations" blade here. Ensure that you use a tenant where admin consent for API permissions can be provided.
-
Click on "New registration", and create an Azure AD application.
-
Name: The name of your Teams app - if you are following the template for a default deployment, we recommend "App catalog lifecycle".
-
Supported account types: Select "Accounts in any organizational directory"
-
Leave the "Redirect URL" field blank.
-
Click on the "Register" button.
- When the app is registered, you'll be taken to the app's "Overview" page. Copy the Application (client) ID; we will need it later. Verify that the "Supported account types" is set to Multiple organizations.
-
On the side rail in the Manage section, navigate to the "Certificates & secrets" section. In the Client secrets section, click on "+ New client secret". Add a description for the secret and select Expires as "Never". Click "Add".
-
Once the client secret is created, copy its Value, please take a note of the secret as it will be required later.
-
At this point you have 3 unique values:
- Application (client) ID which will be later used during Azure bot creation
- Client secret for the bot which will be later used during Azure bot creation
- Directory (tenant) ID We recommend that you copy these values into a text file, using an application like Notepad. We will need these values later.
-
Under left menu, navigate to API Permissions, and make sure to add the following permissions of Microsoft Graph API > Application permissions:
- Chat.Create
- TeamsAppInstallation.ReadWriteForChat.All
- AppCatalog.Read.All
- User.Read.All
Click on Add Permissions to commit your changes.
-
If you are logged in as the Global Administrator, click on the Grant admin consent for %tenant-name% button to grant admin consent else, inform your admin to do the same through the portal or follow the steps provided here to create a link and send it to your admin for consent.
-
Global Administrator can grant consent using following link: https://login.microsoftonline.com/common/adminconsent?client_id=<%appId%>
- Create new Azure Bot resource in Azure.
- Select Type of App as "Multi Tenant"
- Select Creation type as "Use existing app registration"
- Use the copied App Id and Client secret from above step and fill in App Id and App secret respectively.
- Click on Create on the Azure bot.
- Go to the created resource, navigate to channels and add "Microsoft Teams".
- Ensure that you've enabled the Teams Channel
- Edit the
manifest.json
contained in the/AppManifest
folder to and fill in MicrosoftAppId (that was created in step 1 and it is the same value of MicrosoftAppId as inappsettings.json
file) everywhere you see the place holder string<<Microsoft-App-Id>>
(depending on the scenario it may occur multiple times in themanifest.json
) - Zip up the contents of the
/AppManifest
folder to create amanifest.zip
- Upload the manifest.zip to Teams (in the Apps view click "Upload a custom app")
-
In a terminal, navigate to
ReleaseManagement
# change into project folder cd # ReleaseManagement
-
Run the bot from a terminal or from Visual Studio, choose option A or B.
A) From a terminal
# run the bot dotnet run
B) Or from Visual Studio
- Launch Visual Studio
- File -> Open -> Project/Solution
- Navigate to
samples/release-management/csharp
folder - Select
ReleaseManagement.csproj
file - Press
F5
to run the project
NOTE: If you are not getting incoming request from Azure DevOps make sure that service webhook is in Enabled state.
To learn more about deploying a bot to Azure, see Deploy your bot to Azure for a complete list of deployment instructions.
- Login into Azure DevOps and open the project where custom process was applied.
- Create a new workitem -> Tasks, provide comma seprated email ids in StakeHolderTeam (NOTE: The email should belong to tenant where we register Application in step 4)
- Save
- Bot will create the group chat with members you added and send the Task details.