Skip to content

Integrating Teams Toolkit with an existing bot project

Zhiyu You edited this page Oct 27, 2023 · 2 revisions

Teams Toolkit can integrate with your existing Teams app project or infrastructure to enable a better development experience.

Prerequisites

  • Teams Toolkit for VSCode v5
  • (or) Teams Toolkit CLI v2

Make sure you have git enabled or some form of back up with your existing project in case errors happen.

Set up

  • Create a new app with Teams Toolkit with bot capability.
  • Your new project has the following project structure.

image

Integrating the debugging process

Update Teams app manifest

  • Move your existing Teams manifest, color icon, and outline icon files into the new project, replacing the default ones. Teams Toolkit scaffolded projects save these files in the appPackage folder. If you choose to move these files to a different location, make sure you update actions in teamsapp.local.yml that reference them.

  • Update your manifest file. You can use ${{MY_VARIABLE_NAME}} as placeholders in manifest.json, Teams Toolkit will replace them with their corresponding value at runtime. For a bot project, you usually need to use placeholders for id, name.short, and bots[].botId. Make sure you save the values into an environment file.

image

image

image

Update environment variables

  • Teams Toolkit scaffolded projects come with 2 predefined environments, local and dev. We will use local for the debug process. More about environments

  • Update env/.env.local with your existing Teams app and bot configurations.

image

  • Update env/.env.local.user with your bot password.

image

Integrate source code

  • Move the source code from your existing project into the new Teams Toolkit project. This includes all the code for your bot to run, any adaptive cards and other necessary config files.
  • Update your source code to reference environment variables, such as bot credentials, configurations, etc. Your can reference environment variables using process.env
  • Update package.json with the dependencies used by your existing project.

Replace Bot Framework with Azure Bot Service in the debugging process

  • Teams Toolkit scaffolded projects use Bot Framework in the debugging process, however many existing projects and samples use Azure Bot Service. We need to update the new Teams Toolkit project to use Azure Bot Service for debugging.
  • Update the provision stage in teamsapp.local.yml. Replace the botFramework/create action with the arm/deploy action
  • arm/deploy reference Azure bicep files. By default, your Teams Toolkit scaffolded bot project generates these bicep files in the infra/ folder. You may need to modify the default bicep files to fit your project. Note, the default bicep files are referenced by teamsapp.yml for provisioning Azure resources. You can use environment variables to separate configurations, or create new copies of the bicep files and reference them in teamsapp.local.yml.
  • Update env/.env.local with environment variables referenced in teamsapp.local.yml.

Now you can run and debug your app with Teams Toolkit.

Learn more about Teams Toolkit's debugging process.

Integrating the remote provision, deploy, and publish process

You can customize Teams Toolkit's remote provision, deploy and publish process with teamsapp.yml.

Update teamsapp.yml

  • Update the provision, deploy, and publish lifecycles with actions that suits your existing application.
  • Note: you can use script action to run any arbitrary commands.

Update environment variables

  • Update the .env.{envName} and .env.{envName}.user files with environment variable values referenced by teamsapp.yml, appPackage/manifest.json, Azure bicep files, and your code.
  • Teams Toolkit scaffolded project use the dev environment for remote by default. You can create new environments. Learn more about Teams Toolkit environments.
Clone this wiki locally