This repo contains everything you need to get started building a Facebook bot with Botkit and Botkit Studio.
Botkit is designed to ease the process of designing and running useful, creative bots that live inside messaging platforms. Bots are applications that can send and receive messages, and in many cases, appear alongside their human counterparts as users.
Some bots talk like people, others silently work in the background, while others present interfaces much like modern mobile applications. Botkit gives developers the necessary tools for building bots of any kind! It provides an easy-to-understand interface for sending and receiving messages so that developers can focus on creating novel applications and experiences instead of dealing with API endpoints.
Our goal with Botkit is to make bot building easy, fun, and accessible to anyone with the desire to create a future filled with talking machines!
You have a couple of paths you can use to run your Botkit project:
Botkit Studio is a set tools that adds capabilities to the open source Botkit library by offering hosted GUI interfaces for script management and action trigger definition. Botkit Studio is built by the company that created and maintains the open source Botkit library, Howdy.
While Botkit Studio is not required to build a bot using Botkit, we highly recommend it as your bot will be easier to manage, customize and extend.
Clone this repository:
git clone https://github.com/howdyai/botkit-starter-facebook.git
Install dependencies, including Botkit:
cd botkit-starter-facebook
npm install
Get a Facebook access_token
and verify_token
as described here
Get a Botkit Studio API studio_token
from your Botkit developer account
Update the .env
file with your newly acquired tokens.
Launch your bot application by typing:
node .
Facebook requires your application be available at an SSL-enabled endpoint. To expose an endpoint during development, we recommend using localtunnel.me or ngrok, either of which can be used to temporarily expose your bot to Facebook. Both Glitch and Heroku deployments will provide this to you automatically.
Once stable and published to the real internet, use nginx or another web server to provide an SSL-powered front end to your bot application.
Now comes the fun part of making your bot!
Continue your journey to becoming a champion botmaster by reading the Botkit Studio SDK documentation here.
This starter kit is designed to provide developers a robust starting point for building a custom bot. Included in the code are a set of sample bot "skills" that illustrate various aspects of the Botkit SDK features. Once you are familiar with how Botkit works, you may safely delete all of the files in the skills/
subfolder.
Developers will build custom features as modules that live in the skills/
folder. The main bot application will automatically include any files placed there.
A skill module should be in the format:
module.exports = function(controller) {
// add event handlers to controller
// such as hears handlers that match triggers defined in code
// or controller.studio.before, validate, and after which tie into triggers
// defined in the Botkit Studio UI.
}
Continue your journey to becoming a champion botmaster by reading the Botkit Studio SDK documentation here.
By default, the starter kit uses a simple file-system based storage mechanism to record information about the teams and users that interact with the bot. While this is fine for development, or use by a single team, most developers will want to customize the code to use a real database system.
There are Botkit plugins for all the major database systems which can be enabled with just a few lines of code.
We have enabled our Mongo middleware for starters in this project. To use your own Mongo database, just fill out MONGO_URI
in your .env
file with the appropriate information. For tips on reading and writing to storage, check out these medium posts
You can find full documentation for Botkit on our GitHub page. Botkit Studio users can access the Botkit Studio Knowledge Base for help in managing their account.
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Glitch allows users to ask the community for help directly from the editor! For more information on raising your hand, read this blog post.
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Join our thriving community of Botkit developers and bot enthusiasts at large. Over 4500 members strong, our open Facebook group is the place for people interested in the art and science of making bots.
Come to ask questions, share your progress, and commune with your peers!
- We also host a regular meetup and annual conference called TALKABOT. Come meet and learn from other bot developers!
Full video of our 2016 event is available on Youtube.
Botkit is a product of Howdy and made in Austin, TX with the help of a worldwide community of botheads.