Creates a new session or modifies an existing session with an Amazon Lex bot. Use this operation to enable your application to set the state of the bot.
See https://www.paws-r-sdk.com/docs/lexruntimeservice_put_session/ for full documentation.
lexruntimeservice_put_session(
botName,
botAlias,
userId,
sessionAttributes = NULL,
dialogAction = NULL,
recentIntentSummaryView = NULL,
accept = NULL,
activeContexts = NULL
)
[required] The name of the bot that contains the session data.
[required] The alias in use for the bot that contains the session data.
[required] The ID of the client application user. Amazon Lex uses this to identify a user's conversation with your bot.
Map of key/value pairs representing the session-specific context information. It contains application information passed between Amazon Lex and a client application.
Sets the next action that the bot should take to fulfill the conversation.
A summary of the recent intents for the bot. You can use the intent summary view to set a checkpoint label on an intent and modify attributes of intents. You can also use it to remove or add intent summary objects to the list.
An intent that you modify or add to the list must make sense for the bot. For example, the intent name must be valid for the bot. You must provide valid values for:
intentName
slot names
slotToElict
If you send the recentIntentSummaryView
parameter in a
put_session
request, the contents of
the new summary view replaces the old summary view. For example, if a
get_session
request returns three
intents in the summary view and you call
put_session
with one intent in the
summary view, the next call to
get_session
will only return one
intent.
The message that Amazon Lex returns in the response can be either text or speech based depending on the value of this field.
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 in the
configuration that you specify. For example, if you specify
audio/mpeg
as the value, Amazon Lex returns speech in the MPEG
format.
If the value is audio/pcm
, the speech is returned as audio/pcm
in 16-bit, little endian format.
The following are the accepted values:
audio/mpeg
audio/ogg
audio/pcm
audio/*
(defaults to mpeg)
text/plain; charset=utf-8
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.