postContent method
Sends user input (text or speech) to Amazon Lex. Clients use this API to send text and audio requests to Amazon Lex at runtime. Amazon Lex interprets the user input using the machine learning model that it built for the bot.
The PostContent
operation supports audio input at 8kHz and
16kHz. You can use 8kHz audio to achieve higher speech recognition
accuracy in telephone audio applications.
In response, Amazon Lex returns the next message to convey to the user. Consider the following example messages:
-
For a user input "I would like a pizza," Amazon Lex might return a
response with a message eliciting slot data (for example,
PizzaSize
): "What size pizza would you like?". - After the user provides all of the pizza order information, Amazon Lex might return a response with a message to get user confirmation: "Order the pizza?".
- After the user replies "Yes" to the confirmation prompt, Amazon Lex might return a conclusion statement: "Thank you, your cheese pizza has been ordered.".
message
, Amazon
Lex provides additional context about the message in the response that you
can use to enhance client behavior, such as displaying the appropriate
client user interface. Consider the following examples:
-
If the message is to elicit slot data, Amazon Lex returns the following
context information:
-
x-amz-lex-dialog-state
header set toElicitSlot
-
x-amz-lex-intent-name
header set to the intent name in the current context -
x-amz-lex-slot-to-elicit
header set to the slot name for which themessage
is eliciting information -
x-amz-lex-slots
header set to a map of slots configured for the intent with their current values
-
-
If the message is a confirmation prompt, the
x-amz-lex-dialog-state
header is set toConfirmation
and thex-amz-lex-slot-to-elicit
header is omitted. -
If the message is a clarification prompt configured for the intent,
indicating that the user intent is not understood, the
x-amz-dialog-state
header is set toElicitIntent
and thex-amz-slot-to-elicit
header is omitted.
sessionAttributes
. For more information, see Managing
Conversation Context.
May throw NotFoundException. May throw BadRequestException. May throw LimitExceededException. May throw InternalFailureException. May throw ConflictException. May throw UnsupportedMediaTypeException. May throw NotAcceptableException. May throw RequestTimeoutException. May throw DependencyFailedException. May throw BadGatewayException. May throw LoopDetectedException.
Parameter botAlias
:
Alias of the Amazon Lex bot.
Parameter botName
:
Name of the Amazon Lex bot.
Parameter contentType
:
You pass this value as the Content-Type
HTTP header.
Indicates the audio format or text. The header value must start with one of the following prefixes:
-
PCM format, audio data must be in little-endian byte order.
- audio/l16; rate=16000; channels=1
- audio/x-l16; sample-rate=16000; channel-count=1
- audio/lpcm; sample-rate=8000; sample-size-bits=16; channel-count=1; is-big-endian=false
-
Opus format
- audio/x-cbr-opus-with-preamble; preamble-size=0; bit-rate=256000; frame-size-milliseconds=4
-
Text format
- text/plain; charset=utf-8
Parameter inputStream
:
User input in PCM or Opus audio format or text format as described in the
Content-Type
HTTP header.
You can stream audio data to Amazon Lex or you can create a local buffer that captures all of the audio data before sending. In general, you get better performance if you stream audio data rather than buffering the data locally.
Parameter userId
:
The ID of the client application user. Amazon Lex uses this to identify a
user's conversation with your bot. At runtime, each request must contain
the userID
field.
To decide the user ID to use for your application, consider the following factors.
-
The
userID
field must not contain any personally identifiable information of the user, for example, name, personal identification numbers, or other end user personal information. - If you want a user to start a conversation on one device and continue on another device, use a user-specific identifier.
- If you want the same user to be able to have two independent conversations on two different devices, choose a device-specific identifier.
- A user can't have two independent conversations with two different versions of the same bot. For example, a user can't have a conversation with the PROD and BETA versions of the same bot. If you anticipate that a user will need to have conversation with two different versions, for example, while testing, include the bot alias in the user ID to separate the two conversations.
Parameter accept
:
You pass this value as the Accept
HTTP header.
The message Amazon Lex returns in the response can be either text or
speech based on the Accept
HTTP header value in the request.
-
If the value is
text/plain; charset=utf-8
, Amazon Lex returns text in the response. -
If the value begins with
audio/
, Amazon Lex returns speech in the response. Amazon Lex uses Amazon Polly to generate the speech (using the configuration you specified in theAccept
header). For example, if you specifyaudio/mpeg
as the value, Amazon Lex returns speech in the MPEG format. -
If the value is
audio/pcm
, the speech returned isaudio/pcm
in 16-bit, little endian format. -
The following are the accepted values:
- audio/mpeg
- audio/ogg
- audio/pcm
- text/plain; charset=utf-8
- audio/* (defaults to mpeg)
Parameter activeContexts
:
A list of contexts active for the request. A context can be activated when
a previous intent is fulfilled, or by including the context in the
request,
If you don't specify a list of contexts, Amazon Lex will use the current list of contexts for the session. If you specify an empty list, all contexts for the session are cleared.
Parameter requestAttributes
:
You pass this value as the x-amz-lex-request-attributes
HTTP
header.
Request-specific information passed between Amazon Lex and a client
application. The value must be a JSON serialized and base64 encoded map
with string keys and values. The total size of the
requestAttributes
and sessionAttributes
headers
is limited to 12 KB.
The namespace x-amz-lex:
is reserved for special attributes.
Don't create any request attributes with the prefix
x-amz-lex:
.
For more information, see Setting Request Attributes.
Parameter sessionAttributes
:
You pass this value as the x-amz-lex-session-attributes
HTTP
header.
Application-specific information passed between Amazon Lex and a client
application. The value must be a JSON serialized and base64 encoded map
with string keys and values. The total size of the
sessionAttributes
and requestAttributes
headers
is limited to 12 KB.
For more information, see Setting Session Attributes.
Implementation
Future<PostContentResponse> postContent({
required String botAlias,
required String botName,
required String contentType,
required Uint8List inputStream,
required String userId,
String? accept,
Object? activeContexts,
Object? requestAttributes,
Object? sessionAttributes,
}) async {
ArgumentError.checkNotNull(botAlias, 'botAlias');
ArgumentError.checkNotNull(botName, 'botName');
ArgumentError.checkNotNull(contentType, 'contentType');
ArgumentError.checkNotNull(inputStream, 'inputStream');
ArgumentError.checkNotNull(userId, 'userId');
_s.validateStringLength(
'userId',
userId,
2,
100,
isRequired: true,
);
final headers = <String, String>{
'Content-Type': contentType.toString(),
if (accept != null) 'Accept': accept.toString(),
if (activeContexts != null)
'x-amz-lex-active-contexts':
base64Encode(utf8.encode(jsonEncode(activeContexts))),
if (requestAttributes != null)
'x-amz-lex-request-attributes':
base64Encode(utf8.encode(jsonEncode(requestAttributes))),
if (sessionAttributes != null)
'x-amz-lex-session-attributes':
base64Encode(utf8.encode(jsonEncode(sessionAttributes))),
};
final response = await _protocol.sendRaw(
payload: inputStream,
method: 'POST',
requestUri:
'/bot/${Uri.encodeComponent(botName)}/alias/${Uri.encodeComponent(botAlias)}/user/${Uri.encodeComponent(userId)}/content',
headers: headers,
exceptionFnMap: _exceptionFns,
);
return PostContentResponse(
audioStream: await response.stream.toBytes(),
activeContexts: _s.extractHeaderJsonValue(
response.headers, 'x-amz-lex-active-contexts'),
alternativeIntents: _s.extractHeaderJsonValue(
response.headers, 'x-amz-lex-alternative-intents'),
botVersion: _s.extractHeaderStringValue(
response.headers, 'x-amz-lex-bot-version'),
contentType:
_s.extractHeaderStringValue(response.headers, 'Content-Type'),
dialogState: _s
.extractHeaderStringValue(response.headers, 'x-amz-lex-dialog-state')
?.toDialogState(),
inputTranscript: _s.extractHeaderStringValue(
response.headers, 'x-amz-lex-input-transcript'),
intentName: _s.extractHeaderStringValue(
response.headers, 'x-amz-lex-intent-name'),
message:
_s.extractHeaderStringValue(response.headers, 'x-amz-lex-message'),
messageFormat: _s
.extractHeaderStringValue(
response.headers, 'x-amz-lex-message-format')
?.toMessageFormatType(),
nluIntentConfidence: _s.extractHeaderJsonValue(
response.headers, 'x-amz-lex-nlu-intent-confidence'),
sentimentResponse:
_s.extractHeaderStringValue(response.headers, 'x-amz-lex-sentiment'),
sessionAttributes: _s.extractHeaderJsonValue(
response.headers, 'x-amz-lex-session-attributes'),
sessionId:
_s.extractHeaderStringValue(response.headers, 'x-amz-lex-session-id'),
slotToElicit: _s.extractHeaderStringValue(
response.headers, 'x-amz-lex-slot-to-elicit'),
slots: _s.extractHeaderJsonValue(response.headers, 'x-amz-lex-slots'),
);
}