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Library for creating voice assistant skills for the hermes skill server (hss-server)

Project description

HSS - Skill

Library for creating skills based on the Hermes Skill Server.

A Node.JS library is also available, check out HSS-Skill.

Installation

Simply use pip:

(hss) pi@ceres:~/development/myskill $ pip3 install hss_skill

Overview

The hss_skill package contains tools for fast and easy development of skills for the Hermes Skill Server. The goal is to let skill developers only care about their own skill implementation, while the internal stuff (communication with the skill-server, reading configuration, etc) is provided out-of-the-box by the hss_skill package.

The package provides a base class for skills BaseSkill which does all the incovenient stuff, like communication with the skill server, reading configuration file etc.

Getting started

Your skill implementation must provide the following components:

  • installed hss_skill module
  • main.py file as entrypoint
  • skill.json file containing meta infos about your skill
  • your skill implementation (e.g. myskill.py)
  • requirements.txt file containing python dependencies, at least hss_skill
  • [optional] config.ini.default file containing your skill's configuration (default) parameters

Boilerplate

Your main.py might be sufficient if it looks roughly like this:

import myskill

if __name__ == "__main__":
    skill = myskill.MoodSkill()
    skill.run()

Your requirements.txt could look like:

hss_skill>=0.4.0
certifi
geopy>=1.20.0
requests>=2.22.0

Your skill implementation

When developing skills, a subclass of BaseSkill must implement the coroutine:

async def handle(request, session_id, site_id, intent_name, slots)

A coroutine which is called every time an intent which was registered by your skill is recognized and should be answered.

Usually, the parameters intent_name and slots might be sufficient, however the full original intent is provided in the request parameter, and session_id and site_id can be used to do session- and site-based intent handling.

The implementation of this method should usually return with the execution of either BaseSkill.answer or BaseSkill.followup to finish intent handling (see below).

Contents of skill.json

The skill.json is a mandatory file containing meta info about your skill. It is used both during installation as well as when your skill is run.

It could look like the following:

{
    "platform": "hss-python",
    "type": "weather",
    "name": "hss-s710-mood",
    "version": "1.0.0",
    "author": "Some Dude",
    "intents": ["s710:howAreYou"]
}

Properties explained:

platform (mandatory)

Must be hss-python, stating the skill is a python based HSS skill.

type (mandatory)

Type of skill, e.g. weather. Must be one of:

  • weather
  • calendar
  • music
  • datetime
  • news
  • games
  • fun
  • utility
  • automation

version (mandatory)

The version number of the skill.

author (mandatory)

The name of the author of the skill.

intents (mandatory)

An array of strings containing all intents the skill can handle.

Base class methods

In addition, BaseSkill provides several methods which aid in skill development.

def answer(session_id, site_id, response_message, lang)

The answer-method should be called after the intent has been fully handled. This method also allows to send a response-text, which will then be forwarded to the TTS the your voice assistant.

The parameters session_id and site_id should be the ones provided by handle, while the text parameter shall be the text which shall be asked by the voice assistant.

def followup(session_id, site_id, question, lang, intent_filter = None)

The followup -method should be called when the skill does not yet want to finish handling, but instead needs to ask for additional input. The question-text will be forwarded to the TTS of the voice assistant. In addition, a filter for intents (array of strings) can be given (see hermes protocol docs).

The parameters session_id and site_id should be the ones provided by handle, while the question parameter shall be the text which shall be asked by the voice assistant.

async def say(text, siteId = None, lang = None)

The say coroutine can be used to trigger the voice assistant to say a given text using its TTS. There is no further session- or intent handling involved.

Since say is a coroutine, it must be await-ed.

async def ask(text, siteId = None, lang = None, intent_filter = None)

The ask coroutine can be used to start a new session. This will usually cause the voice assistant to speak the provided text using its TTS, and then listen for intents. Recognized intents may then be processed again.

Optionally, an intent_filter (array of strings) can be given which will be forwarded to the voice assistant (see hermes protocol docs).

Since ask is a coroutine, it must be await-ed.

Timers

The BaseSkill class provides a convenience method for setting up timers, which will execute a given callback function after a given timeout. This might be useful if the skill wants to trigger actions on its own at a given time.

Currently, as a limitation, only one timer can be active at a time. This will most likely change in the future, so that an arbitrary number of timers can be scheduled.

For this, two coroutines are provided:

async def timer(timeout, callback, user = None, reschedule = False)

Schedules a new timer. timeout shall be int and denote the numer of seconds until the provided coroutine callback is executed. If user is given, it will be passed to callback upon execution.

If a timer is already running, new scheduling will fail unless True is given for reschedule. In the latter case, the previous timer will be cancelled before a new timer is scheduled.

async def cancel_timer(strict = True)

Cancels an existing timer. If True is given for strict, an error message will be printed when cancel_timer is called but no timer is running.

Example

    async def handle(self, request, session_id, site_id, intent_name, slots):

        ... # skill handling code

        # schedule timer in 10 seconds

        await self.timer(10, self.do_timer, "Can I ask you a question?", reschedule = True)

        # finish intent handling

        return self.answer(session_id, site_id, response_message)

    async def do_timer(self, text):

        # ask a question

        await self.ask(text, siteId = "default", intent_filter = ["s710:confirm", "s710:reject"])

Example

A minimal example of a skill (myskill.py) might look as:

from hss_skill import hss

class MoodSkill(hss.BaseSkill):
    def __init__(self):
        super().__init__()   # important, call super's constructor

    async def handle(self, request, session_id, site_id, intent_name, slots):
        return self.answer(session_id, site_id, "Thanks, I am fine")

Configuration

If your skill needs its own configuration parameters which must be supplied by the user (e.g. access tokens, ...), you can provide a config.ini.default file.

This file is meant to a) give default values for configuration options and b) contain empty configuration values, which must be filled by the user upon skill installation. See Hermes Skill Server for details about skill installation.

Upon installation config.ini.default will be copied into config.ini, and values will be filled by the user. config.ini.default will remain untouched.

Example

[skill]
confirmation = I am okay, what about you?

In code, you can access the configuration using the BaseSkill's cfg member. It will be a dictionary object resembling your configuration.

    async def handle(self, request, session_id, site_id, intent_name, slots):
        return self.answer(session_id, site_id, self.cfg["skill"]["confirmation"])

Skill installation

Please refer to Hermes Skill Server.

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