Lightweight SDK for the Alexa Skills Kit (Python 3.6)
I felt other solutions were either too clunky, or not quite focused on deployment in AWS Lambda (execution time is money!). That's why echokit has no dependencies!
- Requirements:
Python >= 3.6
(that's it!)
Using pip:
$ pip install echokit
From GitHub:
Clone/download this repo and run this from the echokit/
directory:
$ python setup.py install
A sample skill using echokit can be found at this repo: https://github.com/arcward/echokit-example
More comprehensive documentation can be found on ReadTheDocs:
http://echokit.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
When you configure your Lambda function, you need to specify a handler. And when you configure your skill in the Alexa dev portal, you'll be provided an application ID for your skill. Set these at the top of your module:
import echokit
# Set as your skill's handler in Lambda
handler = echokit.handler
# Set as your application ID from the Alexa dev portal
echokit.application_id = "your_application_id"
If your module is main.py
, in your Lambda configuration, you'd set
main.handler
as your handler.
import echokit
from echokit import Response, PlainTextOutputSpeech, SimpleCard
handler = echokit.handler
echokit.application_id = "my_app_id"
@echokit.on_session_launch
def session_started(request_wrapper):
return echokit.ask('Hello!')
@echokit.on_session_ended
def session_ended(request_wrapper):
# Print statement will log the reason to CloudWatch
print(request_wrapper.request.reason)
@echokit.on_intent('OrderIntent')
@echokit.slot('MenuItem', dest='menu_item')
def order_intent(request_wrapper, menu_item):
print(menu_item)
request = request_wrapper.request
menu_item = request.intent.slots['MenuItem'].value
return echokit.tell(f"You just ordered {menu_item}")\
.simple_card(title="Previous order", content=menu_item)
For reference, see the official docs.
echodist
is a script included to help create ZIP deployment
packages. If you installed via setup.py, you can run it from the command
line (try echodist --help
).
Specify your top-level package directory with --dir
. For example, if
your __init__.py
is located at ~/somepy/somepy/__init__.py
you would
run:
~ & echodist --dir ~/somepy/somepy
This would create somepy.zip
in your home directory (or whever you
ran the command). If you unzip it, you can see it includes the entire
subtree of the directory you specified, as well as an echokit/
directory.
Your ZIP file should be created from within your top-level package (don't
just zip the enclosing directory). You'll need to download/clone echokit
and include echokit/
in in that same top-level directory. So if your
__init__.py
is in ~/my_project/
you should have ~/my_project/echokit
.
See the official docs for more info.