An easy-to-use and flexible API for writing Slack bots in .NET, built on top of a comprehensive Slack API client.
There are three NuGet packages available to install, depending on your use case.
- SlackNet: A comprehensive Slack API client for .NET.
- SlackNet.Bot: Easy-to-use API for writing Slack bots.
- SlackNet.AspNetCore: ASP.NET Core integration for receiving requests from Slack.
To use the Web API:
var api = new SlackApiClient("<your OAuth access token here>");
then start calling methods:
var channels = await api.Channels.List();
To use the RTM API:
var rtm = new SlackRtmClient("<your OAuth access token here>");
await rtm.Connect();
rtm.Events.Subscribe(/* handle every event */);
rtm.Messages.Subscribe(/* handle message events */);
var bot = new SlackBot("<your bot token here>");
await bot.Connect();
You can handle messages in a number of ways:
// .NET events
bot.OnMessage += (sender, message) => { /* handle message */ };
// Adding handlers
class MyMessageHandler: IMessageHandler {
public Task HandleMessage(IMessage message) {
// handle message
}
}
bot.AddHandler(new MyMessageHandler());
// Subscribing to Rx stream
bot.Messages.Subscribe(/* handle message */);
The easiest way to reply to messages is by using their ReplyWith
method. Replies will be sent to same channel and thread as the message being replied to.
message.ReplyWith("simple text message");
message.ReplyWith(new BotMessage {
Text = "more complicated message",
Attachments = { new Attachment { Title = "attachments!" } }
});
message.ReplyWith(async () => {
// Show typing indication in Slack while message is build built
var asyncInfo = await SomeAsyncMethod();
return new BotMessage { Text = "async message: " + asyncInfo };
});
SlackNet.Bot includes a simplified API for getting common information from Slack:
var user = await bot.GetUserByName("someuser");
var channels = await bot.GetChannels();
// etc.
Everything is cached, so go nuts getting the information you need. You can clear the cache with bot.ClearCache()
.
In your Startup class:
public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
services.AddSlackNet(c => c.UseApiToken("<your OAuth access token here>"));
}
public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app, IHostingEnvironment env)
{
app.UseSlackNet(c => c.UseSigningSecret("<your signing secret here>"));
}
Add event handler registrations inside the AddSlackNet callback. See the SlackNet.EventsExample
project for more detail.
SlackNet.AspNetCore can be used in Azure Functions as well, although it's a little more manual at the moment.
You'll need to enable dependency injection in your project, then include in your Startup class:
public override void Configure(IFunctionsHostBuilder builder)
{
builder.Services.AddSlackNet(c => c.UseApiToken("<your OAuth access token here>"));
builder.Services.AddSingleton(new SlackEndpointConfiguration()
.UseSigningSecret("<your signing secret here>"));
}
Copy SlackEndpoint.cs into your project. This provides the functions for Slack to call, and delegates request handling the same way the regular ASP.NET integration does, with the same methods for registering event handlers as above.
See the SlackNet.AzureFunctionExample
and SlackNet.EventsExample
projects for more detail.
Contributions are welcome. Currently, changes must be made on a feature branch, otherwise the CI build will fail.
Slack's API is large and changes often, and while their documentation is very good, it's not always 100% complete or accurate, which can easily lead to bugs or missing features in SlackNet. Raising issues or submitting pull requests for these sorts of discrepencies is highly appreciated, as realistically I have to rely on the documentation unless I happen to be using a particular API myself.