This sample demonstrates Actions on Google features for use on Google Assistant alongside promises, external API calls, and rich responses (Basic Card) -- using the Java client library and deployed on App Engine.
Required for running this sample This sample uses Firebase Cloud Functions to make an HTTP request to a non-Google service. The free Firebase Spark Plan only allows outbound network calls to Google services. If you plan to run the sample, you will need to temporarily upgrade to a Firebase plan that allows for outbound networking, such as the Blaze Plan, also called Pay as you go.
- Download & install the Google Cloud SDK
- Gradle with App Engine Plugin
- Run
gcloud auth application-default login
with your Gooogle account - Install and update the App Engine component,
gcloud components install app-engine-java
- Update other components,
gcloud components update
- Run
- From the Actions on Google Console, add a new project (this will become your Project ID) > Create project > under More options > Conversational.
- From the top menu under Develop > Actions (left nav) > Add your first action > BUILD (this will bring you to the Dialogflow console) > Select language and time zone > CREATE.
- In Dialogflow, go to Settings ⚙ > Export and Import > Restore from zip.
- Follow the directions to restore from the
agent.zip
file in this repo.
- Follow the directions to restore from the
- Configure the gcloud CLI and set your Google Cloud project to the name of your Actions on Google Project ID, which you can find from the Actions on Google console under Settings ⚙
gcloud init
- Deploy to App Engine using Gradle:
gradle appengineDeploy
OR- From within IntelliJ, open the Gradle tray and run the appEngineDeploy task.
Return to the Dialogflow Console, from the left navigation menu under Fulfillment > Enable Webhook, set the value of URL to https://${YOUR_PROJECT_ID}.appspot.com
> Save.
- From the left navigation menu, click Integrations > Integration Settings under Google Assistant > Enable Auto-preview changes > Test to open the Actions on Google simulator then say or type
Talk to my test app
.
- You can test your Action on any Google Assistant-enabled device on which the Assistant is signed into the same account used to create this project. Just say or type, “OK Google, talk to my test app”.
- You can also use the Actions on Google Console simulator to test most features and preview on-device behavior.
- Questions? Go to StackOverflow, Assistant Developer Community on Reddit or Support.
- For bugs, please report an issue on Github.
- Actions on Google Documentation
- Webhook Boilerplate Template for Actions on Google.
- More info about Gradle & the App Engine Plugin.
- More info about deploying Java apps with App Engine.
Please read and follow the steps in the CONTRIBUTING.md.
See LICENSE.
Your use of this sample is subject to, and by using or downloading the sample files you agree to comply with, the Google APIs Terms of Service.