Custom Actions¶
Note
This tutorial will show you the pieces required to deploy an action server to Rasa Platform.
Goal¶
We will deploy an example action server to your running instance of the Platform. The recommended way of doing this is using Docker, but it’s not required. The only requirement is that your action server provides a webhook for executing actions, and supplying that url to Rasa Core. For the rest of this tutorial we will assume you are using Docker.
The easiest way to follow along is if you carry out
these steps while in an ssh
session on the server where you deployed the
Platform. In the final section we discuss how to build and deploy to a remote
server.
Clone and the Rasa platform-demo repository by running
git clone https://github.com/RasaHQ/platform-demo.git
Creating an action server and a Docker container¶
For custom actions written in python, creating a server is as simple as passing an actions.py
file to the Rasa Core SDK:
python -m rasa_core_sdk.endpoint --actions actions -p 5001
This script runs a server that handles custom actions your bot should take. To run this as a docker container, you will need to build an image.
Building Your Docker Image¶
The platform-demo directory contains a Dockerfile
that can be used to
build an executable server. To build a docker image from your
demo app, go to the root directory of the platform-demo repo and run:
docker build --build-arg CORE_SDK_VERSION=0.11.2 -t $IMAGE_TAG .
Note
You will need to supply a --build-arg
specifying the version
of Rasa Core SDK that should be used. We recommend you use version
0.11.5 of Rasa Core SDK with this version of Rasa Platform.
This will use the Dockerfile in your current directory.
For now, you can use something like IMAGE_TAG=demobot:v1
.
If you are deploying to a remote server, you will want to push the image to a
registry first. An image tag like IMAGE_TAG=username/demobot:v1
will allow
you to push this tag to a docker registry like GCR or docker Hub. You can read
more about docker tags here.
Start the action server¶
Once your docker image is built, you can start the container using the command below.
sudo docker pull $IMAGE_TAG
sudo docker stop app 2> /dev/null
sudo docker rm app 2> /dev/null
sudo docker run -d -p 5001:5001 --name app $IMAGE_TAG
Deploying that container as part of the Platform¶
To start your container as part of the Platform, you need to add it to the
docker-compose
specification. This will tell the docker runner to
start your container as part of the Platform.
Instead of changing /etc/rasaplatform/docker-compose.yml
we strongly
recommend to create a file /etc/rasaplatform/docker-compose.override.yml
with your changes. Any changes made to /etc/rasaplatform/docker-compose.yml
might be overwritten by an update.
Here is an example docker-compose.override.yml
that includes the
changes necessary to start the above docker:
version: '3.4'
services:
app:
build:
context: app
dockerfile: Dockerfile
container_name: "app"
environment:
# any env vars you need go here
expose:
- "5001"
depends_on:
- core
This assumes that your custom action server code is stored on the machine
in /etc/rasaplatform/app
and your docker file is located there as well
/etc/rasaplatform/app/Dockerfile
.
After creating this docker-compose.override.yml
, you can use
the following commands to restart the Platform with your action server:
cd /etc/rasaplatform
sudo docker-compose up --build -d
This setup will build the docker container directly on the server.
Alternatively, you can also build the docker container externally (e.g. on a continuous integration server like travis) and use that image in the docker compose:
version: '3'
services:
app:
image: my-private-docker-registry.com/platform-app:latest
container_name: "app"
environment:
RASA_API_ENDPOINT_URL: "http://api:5002"
expose:
- "5001"
depends_on:
- core
In this case, you need to make sure to pull the image before starting up the server:
cd /etc/rasaplatform
sudo docker login -u USER -p PASSWORD https://my-private-docker-registry.com
sudo docker pull my-private-docker-registry.com/platform-app:latest
After the image is successfully pulled, make sure to login with the Rasa Platform credentials again and restart the Platform:
sudo docker login -u _json_key -p "$(cat /etc/rasaplatform/gcr-auth.json)" https://gcr.io
sudo docker-compose pull
sudo docker-compose up -d
Note
sudo docker-compose pull
will also attempt to pull the latest image of
your action server. This will fail because you’re logged in with the Rasa
credentials, rather than your own. To update the Platform successfully,
run sudo docker-compose pull --ignore-pull-failures
You can use the Dockerfile from the Platform demo as a basis for the custom action server of your own bot.
The important part is that the Dockerfile starts the action server, and the easiest way to do this is with
the following command (assuming your actions are in the actions.py
file):
python -m rasa_core_sdk.endpoint --actions actions -p 5001