smskillsdk (Python)
The Skills Python SDK package contains data types for the session and execute endpoints specified within the Skills REST API, along with a range of utility functions for working with the memory data structure.
Installation
This package is intended for use with Python 3.8 and above.
pip install smskillsdk
Usage
Accessing request/response models
The request/response models are implemented with Pydantic, a library which assists with validation and type-checking.
from smskillsdk.models.api import (
SessionRequest,
SessionResponse,
ExecuteRequest,
ExecuteResponse
)
Sub-models used within these request and response models can also be imported using
from smskillsdk.models.api import (
Output,
Intent,
Memory,
Variables
)
In general, a developer should implement separate handler functions for the session and execute endpoints which takes a SessionRequest
or ExecuteRequest
as an argument and returns a SessionResponse
or ExecuteResponse
respectively. These objects can be serialized to JSON and returned within the HTTP response body. An example implementation of a handler function for generating an ExecuteResponse
and a route method is shown below.
def execute_handler(request: ExecuteRequest) -> ExecuteResponse:
variables = Variables(public={ "card": { ... }})
output = Output(
text="",
variables=variables
)
response = ExecuteResponse(
output=output,
memory=[],
endConversation=True,
)
return response
@app.post("/execute", status_code=status.HTTP_200_OK, response_model=ExecuteResponse, response_model_exclude_unset=True)
def execute(request: ExecuteRequest):
return execute_handler(request)
Deserializing requests
Python dictionary objects can be deserialized into models.
raw_request = {
"key": value,
...
}
request = ExecuteRequest(**raw_request)
Pydantic will throw a ValidationError
if any of the keys or value types does not match the expected keys and values.
Serializing responses
Pydantic models can be converted into JSON strings or dictionary objects.
request = ExecuteRequest(**{'text': 1, 'projectId': '111', 'sessionId': '123', 'memory': []})
json_str = request.json()
dict_obj = request.dict()
Working with memory
The memory field within the request and response models of the session/execute endpoints can be used to persist state between conversation turns and share information between skills within a single session.
The data structure is comprised of an array of Memory
objects
class Memory(BaseModel):
name: str
value: Any
session_id: Optional[str]
scope: Optional[MemoryScope] = None
where the name
field acts as a key. The optional session_id
field can be used to differentiate between objects having the same name
value, while the optional scope
field can be used to control whether objects are shared between skills or remain private to a single skill (the default scope is MemoryScope.PRIVATE
). Setting scope: MemoryScope.PUBLIC
will mean that this particular memory object will be viewable and editable by all skills within a particular session.
Note that memory objects with the same name but different session ID/scope will be treated as unique.
We offer a range of utility functions to work with the memory data structure which can be imported from smskillsdk.utils.memory
serialize_memory(data: dict, session_id: Union[str, None] = None, scope: MemoryScope = MemoryScope.PRIVATE) -> List[Memory]
Converts a Python dict into a list of Memory objects with an optional session ID and scope.
Arguments:
data: dict
: A Python dictionary to be converted; keys should be stringssession_id: str
: An optional session ID to be assigned to each Memory
objectscope: MemoryScope
: An optional scope to determine if the memory objects should be able to be shared with other skills within the session (default: MemoryScope.PRIVATE
)
Returns:
List[Memory]
: A list of Memory
objects
deserialize_memory(memories: List[Memory], session_id: Union[str, None] = None, scope: Union[MemoryScope, None] = None) -> Dict[str, Any]
Converts a list of Memory
objects into a Python dict, filtered using an optional session ID or scope value. If there are multiple valid memory objects with the same name, the value closest to the end of the memories
list will be returned.
Arguments:
memories: List[Memory]
: A list of Memory
objects to be convertedsession_id: str
: If provided, will only deserialize Memory
objects with a matching session IDscope: MemoryScope
: If provided, will only deserialize memory objects with a matching scope (otherwise all memory objects will be treated as valid)
Returns:
set_memory_value(memories: List[Memory], key: str, value: Any, session_id: Union[str, None] = None, scope: MemoryScope = MemoryScope.PRIVATE) -> None
Sets a value in a list of Memory
objects corresponding to a key and optional session ID or scope. If an object with a matching key/session ID/scope exists, its value will be overwritten.
Arguments:
memories: List[Memory]
: The list of Memory
objects which will be operated onkey: str
: The key to search forvalue: Any
: The value to setsession_id: str
: If provided, only Memory
objects with a matching session ID will be considered; if none are found, a new memory object with a session ID will be createdscope: MemoryScope
: If provided, only memory objects with a matching scope will be considered (defaults to MemoryScope.PRIVATE
)
Returns:
- No return value, the list of
Memory
objects is modified in-place
get_memory_value(memories: List[Memory], key: str, session_id: Union[str, None] = None, scope: Union[MemoryScope, None] = None) -> Tuple[bool, Any]
Retrieves a value from a list of Memory
objects corresponding to a key and optional session ID or scope value.
Arguments:
memories: List[Memory]
: The list of Memory
objects to be searchedkey: str
: The key to search forsession_id: str
: If provided, only Memory
objects with a matching session ID will be consideredscope: MemoryScope
: If provided, only memory objects with a matching scope will be considered (otherwise all objects will be considered)
Returns:
Tuple[bool, Any]
: A flag indicating whether the key/value pair was found, and the corresponding value; this can be unpacked as shown below
found, value = getMemoryValue(memories, "key", "session_id")
Common session memory values
We have defined two memory objects which can be used to share information in a common format between skills:
class UserIdentity(BaseModel):
firstName: Optional[str] = None
lastName: Optional[str] = None
preferredName: Optional[str] = None
id: Optional[str] = None
class UserLocation(BaseModel):
city: Optional[str] = None
country: Optional[str] = None
Users may define their own objects to work across their skills, or to expose information to other skills. These values can be set and retrieved from a memory array using the following helper functions:
set_user_identity(memories: List[Memory], *, first_name: Optional[str] = None, last_name: Optional[str] = None, preferred_name: Optional[str] = None, id: Optional[str] = None) -> None
get_user_identity(memories: List[Memory]) -> Optional[UserIdentity]
set_user_location(memories: List[Memory], *, city: Optional[str] = None, country: Optional[str] = None) -> None
get_user_location(memories: List[Memory]) -> Optional[UserLocation]
The classes and helper functions can be accessed from the smskillsdk.utils.memory_values
namespace.