Use this SDK to build Watson-powered applications in Unity.
As of this major release, 6.0.0, the Tone Analyzer API has been removed in preparation for deprecation. If you wish to continue using this sdk to make calls to Tone Analyzer until its final deprecation, you will have to use a previous version. On 24 February 2022, IBM announced the deprecation of the Tone Analyzer service. The service will no longer be available as of 24 February 2023. As of 24 February 2022, you will not be able to create new instances. Existing instances will be supported until 24 February 2023.
As an alternative, we encourage you to consider migrating to the Natural Language Understanding service on IBM Cloud. With Natural Language Understanding, tone analysis is done by using a pre-built classifications model, which provides an easy way to detect language tones in written text. For more information, see Migrating from Watson Tone Analyzer Customer Engagement endpoint to Natural Language Understanding.
As of this major release, 6.0.0, the NLC API has been removed in preparation for deprecation. If you wish to continue using this sdk to make calls to NLC until its final deprecation, you will have to use a previous version. On 9 August 2021, IBM announced the deprecation of the Natural Language Classifier service. The service will no longer be available from 8 August 2022. As of 9 September 2021, you will not be able to create new instances. Existing instances will be supported until 8 August 2022. Any instance that still exists on that date will be deleted.
As an alternative, we encourage you to consider migrating to the Natural Language Understanding service on IBM Cloud that uses deep learning to extract data and insights from text such as keywords, categories, sentiment, emotion, and syntax, along with advanced multi-label text classification capabilities, to provide even richer insights for your business or industry. For more information, see Migrating to Natural Language Understanding.
Watson API endpoint URLs at watsonplatform.net are changing and will not work after 26 May 2021. Update your calls to use the newer endpoint URLs. For more information, see https://cloud.ibm.com/docs/watson?topic=watson-endpoint-change.
Ensure that you have the following prerequisites:
- Change the build settings in Unity (File > Build Settings) to any platform except for web player/Web GL. The IBM Watson SDK for Unity does not support Unity Web Player.
- If using Unity 2018.2 or later you'll need to set Scripting Runtime Version and Api Compatibility Level in Build Settings to .NET 4.x equivalent. We need to access security options to enable TLS 1.2.
Updating MacOS to Mojave may disable microphone for Unity. If you are running into this issue please see these guidelines to configure microphone for Mojave.
You can get the latest SDK release by clicking here. You will also need to download the latest release of the IBM Unity SDK Core by clicking here.
Move the unity-sdk
and unity-sdk-core
directories into the Assets
directory of your Unity project. Optional: rename the SDK directory from unity-sdk
to Watson
and the Core directory from unity-sdk-core
to IBMSdkCore
.
To create instances of Watson services and their credentials, follow the steps below.
Note: Service credentials are different from your IBM Cloud account username and password.
- Determine which services to configure.
- If you have configured the services already, complete the following steps. Otherwise, go to step 3.
- Log in to IBM Cloud at https://cloud.ibm.com.
- Click the service you would like to use.
- Click Service credentials.
- Click View credentials to access your credentials.
- If you need to configure the services that you want to use, complete the following steps.
- Log in to IBM Cloud at https://cloud.ibm.com.
- Click the Create service button.
- Under Watson, select which service you would like to create an instance of and click that service.
- Give the service and credential a name. Select a plan and click the Create button on the bottom.
- Click Service Credentials.
- Click View credentials to access your credentials.
- Your service credentials can be used to instantiate Watson Services within your application. Most services also support tokens which you can instantiate the service with as well.
The credentials for each service contain either a username
, password
and endpoint url
or an apikey
and endpoint url
.
WARNING: You are responsible for securing your own credentials. Any user with your service credentials can access your service instances!
To get started with a Watson Service in Unity, follow the link to see the code.
- Assistant V1
- Assistant V2
- Compare Comply V1
- Conversation (deprecated - Use Assistant V1 or Assistant V2)
- Discovery
- Language Translator V3
- Natural Language Classifier
- Natural Language Understanding
- Personality Insights
- Speech to Text
- Text to Speech
- Tone Analyzer
- Visual Recognition
Watson services are migrating to token-based Identity and Access Management (IAM) authentication.
- With some service instances, you authenticate to the API by using IAM.
- In other instances, you authenticate by providing the username and password for the service instance.
To find out which authentication to use, view the service credentials. You find the service credentials for authentication the same way for all Watson services:
- Go to the IBM Cloud Dashboard page.
- Either click an existing Watson service instance or click Create.
- Click Show to view your service credentials.
- Copy the
url
and eitherapikey
orusername
andpassword
.
In your code, you can use these values in the service constructor or with a method call after instantiating your service.
Some services use token-based Identity and Access Management (IAM) authentication. IAM authentication uses a service API key to get an access token that is passed with the call. Access tokens are valid for approximately one hour and must be regenerated.
You supply either an IAM service API key or an access token:
- Use the API key to have the SDK manage the lifecycle of the access token. The SDK requests an access token, ensures that the access token is valid, and refreshes it if necessary.
- Use the access token if you want to manage the lifecycle yourself. For details, see Authenticating with IAM tokens. If you want to switch to API key, in a coroutine, override your stored IAM credentials with an IAM API key and yield until the credentials object
HasIamTokenData()
returnstrue
.
Authenticator authenticator;
AssistantService assistant;
string versionDate = "<service-version-date>";
IEnumerator TokenExample()
{
// Create authenticator using the IAM token options
authenticator = new IamAuthenticator(apikey: "<iam-api-key>");
while (!authenticator.CanAuthenticate())
yield return null;
assistant = new AssistantService(versionDate, authenticator);
assistant.SetServiceUrl("<service-url>");
assistant.ListWorkspaces(callback: OnListWorkspaces);
}
private void OnListWorkspaces(DetailedResponse<WorkspaceCollection> response, IBMError error)
{
Log.Debug("OnListWorkspaces()", "Response: {0}", response.Response);
}
Authenticator authenticator;
AssistantService assistant;
string versionDate = "<service-version-date>";
void TokenExample()
{
// Create authenticator using the Bearer Token
authenticator = new BearerTokenAuthenticator("<bearer-token>");
assistant = new AssistantService(versionDate, authenticator);
assistant.SetServiceUrl("<service-url>");
assistant.ListWorkspaces(callback: OnListWorkspaces);
}
private void OnListWorkspaces(DetailedResponse<WorkspaceCollection> response, IBMError error)
{
Log.Debug("OnListWorkspaces()", "Response: {0}", response.Response);
}
Authenticator authenticator;
AssistantService assistant;
string versionDate = "<service-version-date>";
void UsernamePasswordExample()
{
Authenticator authenticator = new BasicAuthenticator("<username>", "<password>", "<url>");
assistant = new AssistantService(versionDate, authenticator);
assistant.SetServiceUrl("<service-url>");
}
There are two ways to supply the authenticator you found above to the SDK for authentication.
With a credential file, you just need to put the file in the right place and the SDK will do the work of parsing it and authenticating. You can get this file by clicking the Download button for the credentials in the Manage tab of your service instance.
The file downloaded will be called ibm-credentials.env
. This is the name the SDK will search for and must be preserved unless you want to configure the file path (more on that later). The SDK will look for your ibm-credentials.env
file in the following places (in order):
- Your system's home directory
- The top-level directory of the project you're using the SDK in
As long as you set that up correctly, you don't have to worry about setting any authentication options in your code. So, for example, if you created and downloaded the credential file for your Discovery instance, you just need to do the following:
public IEnumerator ExampleAutoService()
{
Assistant assistantService = new Assistant("2019-04-03");
// Wait for authorization token
while (!assistantService.Authenticator.CanAuthenticate())
yield return null;
var listWorkspacesResult = assistantService.ListWorkspaces();
}
And that's it!
If you're using more than one service at a time in your code and get two different ibm-credentials.env
files, just put the contents together in one ibm-credentials.env
file and the SDK will handle assigning authenticator to their appropriate services.
If you would like to configure the location/name of your credential file, you can set an environment variable called IBM_CREDENTIALS_FILE
. This will take precedence over the locations specified above. Here's how you can do that:
export IBM_CREDENTIALS_FILE="<path>"
where <path>
is something like /home/user/Downloads/<file_name>.env
.
If you'd prefer to set authentication values manually in your code, the SDK supports that as well. The way you'll do this depends on what type of authenticator your service instance gives you.
A success callback is required. You can specify the return type in the callback.
AssistantService assistant;
string assistantVersionDate = "<assistant-version-date>";
Authenticator assistantAuthenticator;
string workspaceId = "<workspaceId>";
DiscoveryService discovery;
string discoveryVersionDate = "<discovery-version-date>";
Authenticator discoveryAuthenticator;
private void Example()
{
assistant = new AssistantService(assistantVersionDate, assistantAuthenticator);
assistant.SetServiceUrl("<service-url>");
discovery = new DiscoveryService(discoveryVersionDate, discoveryAuthenticator);
discovery.SetServiceUrl("<service-url>");
// Call with sepcific callbacks
assistant.Message(
callback: OnMessage,
workspaceId: workspaceId
);
discovery.ListEnvironments(
callback: OnGetEnvironments
);
}
private void OnMessage(DetailedResponse<MessageResponse> response, IBMError error)
{
Log.Debug("ExampleCallback.OnMessage()", "Response received: {0}", response.Response);
}
private void OnGetEnvironments(DetailedResponse<ListEnvironmentsResponse> response, IBMError error)
{
Log.Debug("ExampleCallback.OnGetEnvironments()", "Response received: {0}", response.Response);
}
Since the success callback signature is generic and the failure callback always has the same signature, you can use a single set of callbacks to handle multiple calls.
AssistantService assistant;
string assistantVersionDate = "<assistant-version-date>";
Authenticator assistantAuthenticator;
string workspaceId = "<workspaceId>";
DiscoveryService discovery;
string discoveryVersionDate = "<discovery-version-date>";
Authenticator discoveryAuthenticator;
private void Example()
{
assistant = new AssistantService(assistantVersionDate, assistantAuthenticator);
assistant.SetServiceUrl("<service-url>");
// Call with generic callbacks
JObject input = new JObject();
input.Add("text", "");
assistant.Message(
callback: OnSuccess,
workspaceId: workspaceId,
input: input
);
discovery = new DiscoveryService(discoveryVersionDate, discoveryAuthenticator);
discovery.SetServiceUrl("<service-url>");
discovery.ListEnvironments(
callback: OnSuccess
);
}
// Generic success callback
private void OnSuccess<T>(DetailedResponse<T> resp, IBMError error)
{
Log.Debug("ExampleCallback.OnSuccess()", "Response received: {0}", resp.Response);
}
You can also use an anonymous callback
AssistantService assistant;
string assistantVersionDate = "<assistant-version-date>";
Authenticator assistantAuthenticator;
string workspaceId = "<workspaceId>";
private void Example()
{
assistant = new AssistantService(assistantVersionDate, assistantAuthenticator);
assistant.ListWorkspaces(
callback: (DetailedResponse<WorkspaceCollection> response, IBMError error) =>
{
Log.Debug("ExampleCallback.OnSuccess()", "ListWorkspaces result: {0}", response.Response);
},
pageLimit: 1,
includeCount: true,
sort: "-name",
includeAudit: true
);
assistant.SetServiceUrl("<service-url>");
}
You can check the error
response to see if there was an error in the call.
AssistantService assistant;
string assistantVersionDate = "<assistant-version-date>";
Authenticator assistantAuthenticator;
string workspaceId = "<workspaceId>";
private void Example()
{
assistant = new AssistantService(versionDate, authenticator);
assistant.Message(OnMessage, workspaceId);
}
private void OnMessage(DetailedResponse<MessageResponse> response, IBMError error)
{
if (error == null)
{
Log.Debug("ExampleCallback.OnMessage()", "Response received: {0}", response.Response);
}
else
{
Log.Debug("ExampleCallback.OnMessage()", "Error received: {0}, {1}, {3}", error.StatusCode, error.ErrorMessage, error.Response);
}
}
You can send custom request headers by adding them to the service.
AssistantService assistant;
string assistantVersionDate = "<assistant-version-date>";
Authenticator assistantAuthenticator;
string workspaceId = "<workspaceId>";
void Example()
{
assistant = new AssistantService(assistantVersionDate, assistantAuthenticator);
// Add custom header to the REST call
assistant.WithHeader("X-Watson-Metadata", "customer_id=some-assistant-customer-id");
assistant.Message(OnSuccess, "<workspace-id>");
}
private void OnSuccess(DetailedResponse<MessageResponse> response, IBMError error)
{
Log.Debug("ExampleCallback.OnMessage()", "Response received: {0}", response.Response);
}
You can get response headers in the headers
object in the DetailedResponse.
AssistantService assistant;
string assistantVersionDate = "<assistant-version-date>";
Authenticator assistantAuthenticator;
string workspaceId = "<workspaceId>";
void Example()
{
assistant = new AssistantService(assistantVersionDate, assistantAuthenticator);
assistant.Message(OnMessage, "<workspace-id>");
}
private void OnMessage(DetailedResponse<MessageResponse> response, IBMError error)
{
// List all headers in the response headers object
foreach (KeyValuePair<string, object> kvp in response.Headers)
{
Log.Debug("ExampleCustomHeader.OnMessage()", "{0}: {1}", kvp.Key, kvp.Value);
}
}
Every SDK call returns a response with a transaction ID in the X-Global-Transaction-Id
header. Together the service instance region, this ID helps support teams troubleshoot issues from relevant logs.
public void ExampleGetTransactionId()
{
AssistantService service = new AssistantService("{version-date}");
service.ListWorkspaces(
callback: (DetailedResponse<Workspace> response, IBMError error) =>
{
if(error != null)
{
Log.Debug("AssistantServiceV1", "Transaction Id: {0}", error.ResponseHeaders["X-Global-Transaction-Id"]);
}
else
{
Log.Debug("AssistantServiceV1", "Transaction Id: {0}", response.Headers["X-Global-Transaction-Id"]);
}
}
);
}
However, the transaction ID isn't available when the API doesn't return a response for some reason. In that case, you can set your own transaction ID in the request. For example, replace <my-unique-transaction-id>
in the following example with a unique transaction ID.
public void ExampleSetTransactionId()
{
AssistantService service = new AssistantService("{version-date}");
service.WithHeader("X-Global-Transaction-Id", "<my-unique-transaction-id>");
service.ListWorkspaces(
callback: (DetailedResponse<Workspace> response, IBMError error) =>
{
if(error != null)
{
Log.Debug("AssistantServiceV1", "Transaction Id: {0}", error.ResponseHeaders["X-Global-Transaction-Id"]);
}
else
{
Log.Debug("AssistantServiceV1", "Transaction Id: {0}", response.Headers["X-Global-Transaction-Id"]);
}
}
);
}
Watson services have upgraded their hosts to TLS 1.2. The Dallas location has a TLS 1.0 endpoint that works for streaming. To stream in other regions, use Unity 2018.2 and set Scripting Runtime Version in Build Settings to .NET 4.x equivalent
. To support Speech to Text in earlier versions of Unity, create the instance in the Dallas location.
You can disable SSL verifciation when making a service call.
AssistantService assistant;
string assistantVersionDate = "<assistant-version-date>";
Authenticator assistantAuthenticator;
string workspaceId = "<workspaceId>";
void Example()
{
authenticator.DisableSslVerification = true;
assistant = new AssistantService(assistantVersionDate, assistantAuthenticator);
// disable ssl verification
assistant.DisableSslVerification = true;
}
If your service instance is of ICP4D, below are two ways of initializing the assistant service.
The SDK will manage the token for the user
CloudPakForDataAuthenticator authenticator = new CloudPakForDataAuthenticator("<url>", "<username>", "<password>");
while(!authenticator.CanAuthenticate())
{
yield return null;
}
service = new AssistantService(versionDate, authenticator);
BearerTokenAuthenticator = new BearerTokenAuthenticator("<accessToken>");
while(!authenticator.CanAuthenticate())
{
yield return null;
}
service = new AssistantService(versionDate, authenticator);
The Watson Unity SDK does not support IBM Cloud Private because connection via proxy is not supported in UnityWebRequest.
Documentation can be found here. You can also access the documentation by selecting API Reference the Watson menu (Watson -> API Reference).
You can view Getting Started videos for the IBM Watson SDK for Unity on YouTube.
If you have issues with the APIs or have a question about the Watson services, see Stack Overflow.
Find more open source projects on the IBM Github Page.
This library is licensed under Apache 2.0. Full license text is available in LICENSE.
See CONTRIBUTING.md.
We'd love to highlight cool open-source projects that use this SDK! If you'd like to get your project added to the list, feel free to make an issue linking us to it.