Azure Mgmt Botservice Dotnet
Azure Mgmt Botservice Dotnet is an code AI skill with a core value of |. It
helps developers solve real-world problems in the code domain, boosting
efficiency, automating repetitive tasks, and optimizing workflows.
|
Quick Facts
mkdir -p ./skills/azure-mgmt-botservice-dotnet && curl -sfL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sickn33/antigravity-awesome-skills/main/skills/azure-mgmt-botservice-dotnet/SKILL.md -o ./skills/azure-mgmt-botservice-dotnet/SKILL.md Run in terminal / PowerShell. Requires curl (Unix) or PowerShell 5+ (Windows).
Skill Content
# Azure.ResourceManager.BotService (.NET)
Management plane SDK for provisioning and managing Azure Bot Service resources via Azure Resource Manager.
Installation
dotnet add package Azure.ResourceManager.BotService
dotnet add package Azure.Identity**Current Versions**: Stable v1.1.1, Preview v1.1.0-beta.1
Environment Variables
AZURE_SUBSCRIPTION_ID=<your-subscription-id>
# For service principal auth (optional)
AZURE_TENANT_ID=<tenant-id>
AZURE_CLIENT_ID=<client-id>
AZURE_CLIENT_SECRET=<client-secret>Authentication
using Azure.Identity;
using Azure.ResourceManager;
using Azure.ResourceManager.BotService;
// Authenticate using DefaultAzureCredential
var credential = new DefaultAzureCredential();
ArmClient armClient = new ArmClient(credential);
// Get subscription and resource group
SubscriptionResource subscription = await armClient.GetDefaultSubscriptionAsync();
ResourceGroupResource resourceGroup = await subscription.GetResourceGroups().GetAsync("myResourceGroup");
// Access bot collection
BotCollection botCollection = resourceGroup.GetBots();Resource Hierarchy
ArmClient
└── SubscriptionResource
└── ResourceGroupResource
└── BotResource
├── BotChannelResource (DirectLine, Teams, Slack, etc.)
├── BotConnectionSettingResource (OAuth connections)
└── BotServicePrivateEndpointConnectionResourceCore Workflows
1. Create Bot Resource
using Azure.ResourceManager.BotService;
using Azure.ResourceManager.BotService.Models;
// Create bot data
var botData = new BotData(AzureLocation.WestUS2)
{
Kind = BotServiceKind.Azurebot,
Sku = new BotServiceSku(BotServiceSkuName.F0),
Properties = new BotProperties(
displayName: "MyBot",
endpoint: new Uri("https://mybot.azurewebsites.net/api/messages"),
msaAppId: "<your-msa-app-id>")
{
Description = "My Azure Bot",
MsaAppType = BotMsaAppType.MultiTenant
}
};
// Create or update the bot
ArmOperation<BotResource> operation = await botCollection.CreateOrUpdateAsync(
WaitUntil.Completed,
"myBotName",
botData);
BotResource bot = operation.Value;
Console.WriteLine($"Bot created: {bot.Data.Name}");2. Configure DirectLine Channel
// Get the bot
BotResource bot = await resourceGroup.GetBots().GetAsync("myBotName");
// Get channel collection
BotChannelCollection channels = bot.GetBotChannels();
// Create DirectLine channel configuration
var channelData = new BotChannelData(AzureLocation.WestUS2)
{
Properties = new DirectLineChannel()
{
Properties = new DirectLineChannelProperties()
{
Sites =
{
new DirectLineSite("Default Site")
{
IsEnabled = true,
IsV1Enabled = false,
IsV3Enabled = true,
IsSecureSiteEnabled = true
}
}
}
}
};
// Create or update the channel
ArmOperation<BotChannelResource> channelOp = await channels.CreateOrUpdateAsync(
WaitUntil.Completed,
BotChannelName.DirectLineChannel,
channelData);
Console.WriteLine("DirectLine channel configured");3. Configure Microsoft Teams Channel
var teamsChannelData = new BotChannelData(AzureLocation.WestUS2)
{
Properties = new MsTeamsChannel()
{
Properties = new MsTeamsChannelProperties()
{
IsEnabled = true,
EnableCalling = false
}
}
};
await channels.CreateOrUpdateAsync(
WaitUntil.Completed,
BotChannelName.MsTeamsChannel,
teamsChannelData);4. Configure Web Chat Channel
var webChatChannelData = new BotChannelData(AzureLocation.WestUS2)
{
Properties = new WebChatChannel()
{
Properties = new WebChatChannelProperties()
{
Sites =
{
new WebChatS🎯 Best For
- Claude users
- Software engineers
- Development teams
- Tech leads
💡 Use Cases
- Code quality improvement
- Best practice enforcement
📖 How to Use This Skill
- 1
Install the Skill
Copy the install command from the Terminal tab and run it. The SKILL.md file downloads to your local skills directory.
- 2
Load into Your AI Assistant
Open Claude and reference the skill. Paste the SKILL.md content or use the system prompt tab.
- 3
Apply Azure Mgmt Botservice Dotnet to Your Work
Open your project in the AI assistant and ask it to apply the skill. Start with a small module to verify the output quality.
- 4
Review and Refine
Review AI suggestions before committing. Run tests, check for regressions, and iterate on the skill output.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Is Azure Mgmt Botservice Dotnet compatible with Cursor and VS Code?
Yes — this skill works with any AI coding assistant including Cursor, VS Code with Copilot, and JetBrains IDEs.
Do I need specific dependencies for Azure Mgmt Botservice Dotnet?
Check the install command and Works With section. Most code skills only require the AI assistant and your codebase.
How do I install Azure Mgmt Botservice Dotnet?
Copy the install command from the Terminal tab and run it. The skill downloads to ./skills/azure-mgmt-botservice-dotnet/SKILL.md, ready to use.
Can I customize this skill for my team?
Absolutely. Edit the SKILL.md file to add team-specific instructions, examples, or workflows.
⚠️ Common Mistakes to Avoid
Skipping validation
Always test AI-generated code changes, even for simple refactors.
Missing dependency updates
Check if the skill requires updated dependencies or new packages.