This application demonstrates how the Conversation service uses intent capabilities in an animated car dashboard UI.
For more information about Conversation, see the detailed documentation.
The app interface is designed and trained for chatting with a cognitive car. The interface allows the user to enter input either using text, in the edit field at the bottom of the UI or via speech via by pressing the mic button. Your questions and commands are run against a small set of sample data trained with intents like these:
turn_on
weather
capabilities
These intents help the system to understand variations of questions and commands that you might submit. For example, if you say "Wipers on" or "I want to turn on the windshield wipers", the system understands that in both cases your intent is the same and responds accordingly.
# Getting Started using Bluemix1 Ensure that you have a Bluemix account.
2 Ensure that you have the necessary space available in your Bluemix account. This action deploys 1 application and 3 services.
- You can view this on your Bluemix Dashboard. Tiles will show what space you have available.
- For example, for Services & APIS
![](readme_images/services.PNG)
1 Click this button to Deploy to Bluemix.
2 Log in with an existing Bluemix account or sign up.
3 Name your app and select your REGION, ORGANIZATION, and SPACE. Then select DEPLOY
-
This performs multiple actions:
- Creates the app
- Creates a Conversation service instance that the user needs for workspace creation
- Creates instances for a Speech To Text service and Text To Speech service
-
The status of the deployment is shown. This can take some time.
5 Once your app has deployed, select VIEW YOUR APP. If you are using speech to text, change the protocol to https. Otherwise, your browser might confuse the microphone with an attack.
6 Navigate to your Bluemix Dashboard and import a workspace.
## Using Cloudfoundry CLI tool to deploy your applicationTo build the application:
1 Download and install the Cloudfoundry CLI tool.
2 Git clone the project https://github.com/watson-developer-cloud/car-dashboard
3 Navigate to the car-dashboard
folder
4 Connect to Bluemix in the command-line tool:
For US Region
$ cf api https://api.ng.bluemix.net
$ cf login -u <your user ID>
5 Create the Conversation service in Bluemix:
$ cf create-service conversation free conversation-service
6 Push it live:
$ cf push <application-name>
The name you use determinates your application URL initially, such as <application-name>.mybluemix.net
.
1 Ensure that you have a Bluemix account. While you can do part of this deployment locally, you must still use Bluemix.
2 In Bluemix, create a Conversation Service.
- Copy the Service Credentials for later use.
- Import a workspace
3 OPTIONAL: If you want to use Text To Speech and/or Speech To Text in your locally runnning app, create a text-to-speech
service and/or a speech-to-text
service like you did in step 2.
- Copy the Service Credentials for later use.
The application uses Node.js and npm.
1 Copy the credentials from your conversation-service
service in Bluemix to a .env
file in the root.
- Look at
.env.example
as an example to create your.env
file.
2 OPTIONAL: If you want to use Text To Speech and/or Speech To Text in your locally runnning app, copy the credentials from your text-to-speech
service and/or speech-to-text
service in Bluemix to a .env
file in the root.
- Look at
.env.example
as an example to add to your.env
file.
3 Use the Conversation tooling app to create a workspace, as described above, and add the workspace ID environment variable to the .env
file. For details about obtaining the workspace ID, see Step 6 - 7 in the previous section.
4 Install Node.js.
5 Open the terminal, go to the project folder, and run this command:
npm install
6 Build the UI by running this command:
npm run build
7 Start the application by running this command:
npm start
8 Open http://localhost:3000
in a browser.
Note: If you are interested in deploying you local application or the changes you have made locally to Bluemix, go to this section
# Import a workspace 1 You need to import the app's workspace. To do that, go to the Bluemix Dashboard and select the Conversation service instance. Once there, select the **Service Credentials** menu item.2 Select ADD CREDENTIALS. Name your credentials then select ADD.
3 Return to the Manage menu item and select Launch Tooling. This opens a new tab in your browser, where you are prompted to login if you have not done so before. Use your Bluemix credentials.
4 Download the exported JSON file that contains the Workspace contents.
5 Select Import. Browse to (or drag and drop) the JSON file that you downloaded in Step 4. Choose to import Everything(Intents, Entities, and Dialog). Then select Import to finish importing the workspace.
6 Refresh your browser. A new workspace tile is created within the tooling. Select the menu button within the workspace tile, then select View details:
In the Details UI, copy the 36 character UNID **ID** field. This is the **Workspace ID**.7 Return to your application, either in your local dev environment, or in Bluemix. If running on Bluemix, you need to add environment variables.
For more information on workspaces, see the full Conversation service documentation.
# Adding environment variables in Bluemix1 In Bluemix, open the application from the Dashboard. Select Environment Variables.
2 Select USER-DEFINED.
3 Select ADD.
4 Add a variable with the name WORKSPACE_ID. For the value, paste in the Workspace ID you copied earlier. Select SAVE.
5 Restart your application.
- Log in to Bluemix, you'll be taken to the dashboard.
- Navigate to the the application you previously created.
- Select Logs.
- If you want, filter the LOG TYPE by "APP".
- Log in to Bluemix, you'll be taken to the dashboard.
- Select Compute
- Select the application you previously created.
- Select Logs.
- If you want, filter the Log Type by selecting the drop-down and selecting Application(APP).
$ cf logs < application-name > --recent
This sample code is licensed under Apache 2.0. Full license text is available in LICENSE.
See CONTRIBUTING.
Find more open source projects on the IBM Github Page.