Twilio provides a HTTP-based API for sending and receiving phone calls and text messages. Learn more on twilio.com.
More documentation for this library can be found here.
twilio-csharp
uses a modified version of Semantic Versioning for all changes. See this document for details.
See the migration guide here. Also, if you were using the Twilio.Mvc
package, that has been replaced by the Twilio.AspNet.Mvc package which is compatible with this version of the library.
New accounts and subaccounts are now required to use TLS 1.2 when accessing the REST API. "Upgrade Required" errors indicate that TLS 1.0/1.1 is being used. With .NET, you can enable TLS 1.2 using this setting:
System.Net.ServicePointManager.SecurityProtocol = SecurityProtocolType.Tls12;
This library supports .NET applications that utilize .NET Framework 3.5+ or .NET Core 1.0+ (.NET Standard 1.4).
The best and easiest way to add the Twilio libraries to your .NET project is to use the NuGet package manager.
From within Visual Studio, you can use the NuGet GUI to search for and install the Twilio NuGet package. Or, as a shortcut, simply type the following command into the Package Manager Console:
Install-Package Twilio
If you are building with the .NET Core command line tools, then you can run the following command from within your project directory:
dotnet add package Twilio
The examples below show how to have your application initiate and outbound phone call and send an SMS message using the Twilio .NET helper library:
TwilioClient.Init("ACCOUNT_SID", "AUTH_TOKEN");
var call = CallResource.Create(
new PhoneNumber("+11234567890"),
from: new PhoneNumber("+10987654321"),
url: new Uri("https://my.twiml.here")
);
Console.WriteLine(call.Sid);
var message = MessageResource.Create(
new PhoneNumber("+11234567890"),
from: new PhoneNumber("+10987654321"),
body: "Hello World!"
);
Console.WriteLine(message.Sid);
To take advantage of Twilio's Global Infrastructure, specify the target Region and/or Edge for the client:
TwilioClient.SetRegion("au1");
TwilioClient.SetEdge("sydney");
This will result in the hostname
transforming from api.twilio.com
to api.sydney.au1.twilio.com
.
There are two ways to enable debug logging in the default HTTP client. You can create an environment variable called TWILIO_LOG_LEVEL
and set it to debug
or you can set the LogLevel variable on the client as debug:
TwilioClient.SetLogLevel("debug");
For an example on how to handle exceptions in this helper library, please see the Twilio documentation.
To control phone calls, your application needs to output TwiML.
// TwiML classes can be created as standalone elements
var gather = new Gather(numDigits: 1, action: new Uri("hello-monkey-handle-key.cshtml"), method: HttpMethod.Post)
.Say("To speak to a real monkey, press 1. Press 2 to record your own monkey howl. Press any other key to start over.");
// Attributes can be set directly on the object
gather.Timeout = 100;
gather.MaxSpeechTime = 200
// Arbitrary attributes can be set by calling set/getOption
var dial = new Dial().SetOption("myAttribute", 200)
.SetOption("newAttribute", false);
// Or can be created and attached to a response directly using helper methods
var response = new VoiceResponse()
.Say("Hello Monkey")
.Play(new Uri("http://demo.twilio.com/hellomonkey/monkey.mp3"))
.Append(gather)
.Append(dial);
// Serialize the TwiML objects to XML string
Console.WriteLine(response);
/*
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<Response>
<Say>Hello Monkey</Say>
<Play>http://demo.twilio.com/hellomonkey/monkey.mp3</Play>
<Gather numDigits="1" action="hello-monkey-handle-key.cshtml" method="POST" timeout="100" maxSpeechTime="200">
<Say>To speak to a real monkey, press 1. Press 2 to record your own monkey howl. Press any other key to start over.</Say>
</Gather>
<Dial myAttribute="200" newAttribute="false"></Dial>
</Response>
*/
To use a custom HTTP client with this helper library, please see the Twilio documentation.
The Dockerfile
present in this repository and its respective twilio/twilio-csharp
Docker image are used by Twilio for testing purposes.
You could use the docker image for building and running tests:
docker build -t twiliobuild .
Bash:
docker run -it --rm -v $(pwd):/twilio twiliobuild
make test
Powershell:
docker run -it --rm -v ${PWD}:/twilio twiliobuild
make test
If you need help installing or using the library, please check the Twilio Support Help Center first, and file a support ticket if you don't find an answer to your question.
If you've instead found a bug in the library or would like new features added, go ahead and open issues or pull requests against this repo!