Python Wrapper Library to send requests to Microsoft Teams Webhooks. Microsoft refers to these messages as Connector Cards. A message can be sent with only the main Connector Card, or additional sections can be included into the message.
This library uses Webhook Connectors for Microsoft Teams. Please visit the following Microsoft Documentation link for instructions on how to obtain the correct url for your Channel: https://dev.outlook.com/Connectors/GetStarted#creating-messages-through-office-365-connectors-in-microsoft-teams
Please refer to the Microsoft Documentation for the most up to date screenshots. https://dev.outlook.com/connectors/reference
Install with pip:
pip install pymsteams
Install with async capabilities (python 3.6+):
pip install pymsteams[async]
At time of writing, the latest release supported by Python 2 is Version 0.1.16
This is the simplest implementation of pymsteams. It will send a message to the teams webhook url with plain text in the message.
import pymsteams
# You must create the connectorcard object with the Microsoft Webhook URL
myTeamsMessage = pymsteams.connectorcard("<Microsoft Webhook URL>")
# Add text to the message.
myTeamsMessage.text("this is my text")
# send the message.
myTeamsMessage.send()
import asyncio
import pymsteams
loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
# the async_connectorcard object is used instead of the normal one.
myTeamsMessage = pymsteams.async_connectorcard("<Microsoft Webhook URL>")
# all formatting for the message should be the same
myTeamsMessage.text("This is my message")
# to send the message, pass to the event loop
loop.run_until_complete(myTeamsMessage.send())
Please visit the python asyncio documentation for more info on using asyncio and the event loop: https://docs.python.org/3/library/asyncio-eventloop.html
myTeamsMessage.title("This is my message title")
myTeamsMessage.addLinkButton("This is the button Text", "https://github.com/rveachkc/pymsteams/")
This is useful in the event you need to post the same message to multiple rooms.
myTeamsMessage.newhookurl("<My New URL>")
This sets the theme color of the card. The parameter is expected to be a hex color code without the hash or the string red.
myTeamsMessage.color("<Hex Color Code>")
This is a simple print command to view your connector card message object before sending.
myTeamsMessage.printme()
To create a section and add various formatting elements
# create the section
myMessageSection = pymsteams.cardsection()
# Section Title
myMessageSection.title("Section title")
# Activity Elements
myMessageSection.activityTitle("my activity title")
myMessageSection.activitySubtitle("my activity subtitle")
myMessageSection.activityImage("http://i.imgur.com/c4jt321l.png")
myMessageSection.activityText("This is my activity Text")
# Facts are key value pairs displayed in a list.
myMessageSection.addFact("this", "is fine")
myMessageSection.addFact("this is", "also fine")
# Section Text
myMessageSection.text("This is my section text")
# Section Images
myMessageSection.addImage("http://i.imgur.com/c4jt321l.png", ititle="This Is Fine")
# Add your section to the connector card object before sending
myTeamsMessage.addSection(myMessageSection)
You may also add multiple sections to a connector card message as well.
# Create Section 1
Section1 = pymsteams.cardsection()
Section1.text("My First Section")
# Create Section 2
Section2 = pymsteams.cardsection()
Section2.text("My Second Section")
# Add both Sections to the main card object
myTeamsMessage.addSection(Section1)
myTeamsMessage.addSection(Section2)
# Then send the card
myTeamsMessage.send()
To create a actions on which the user can interect with in MS Teams To find out more information on what actions can be used, please visit https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoftteams/platform/concepts/connectors/connectors-using#setting-up-a-custom-incoming-webhook
myTeamsMessage = pymsteams.connectorcard("<Microsoft Webhook URL>")
myTeamsPotentialAction1 = pymsteams.potentialaction(_name = "Add a comment")
myTeamsPotentialAction1.addInput("TextInput","comment","Add a comment here",False)
myTeamsPotentialAction1.addAction("HttpPost","Add Comment","https://..."")
myTeamsPotentialAction2 = pymsteams.potentialaction(_name = "Set due date")
myTeamsPotentialAction2.addInput("DateInput","dueDate","Enter due date")
myTeamsPotentialAction2.addAction("HttpPost","save","https://...")
myTeamsPotentialAction3 = pymsteams.potentialaction(_name = "Change Status")
myTeamsPotentialAction3.choices.addChoices("In progress","0")
myTeamsPotentialAction3.choices.addChoices("Active","1")
myTeamsPotentialAction3.addInput("MultichoiceInput","list","Select a status",False)
myTeamsPotentialAction3.addAction("HttpPost","Save","https://...")
myTeamsMessage.addPotentialAction(myTeamsPotentialAction1)
myTeamsMessage.addPotentialAction(myTeamsPotentialAction2)
myTeamsMessage.addPotentialAction(myTeamsPotentialAction3)
myTeamsMessage.summary("Test Message")
myTeamsMessage.send()
myTeamsMessage = pymsteams.connectorcard("<Microsoft Webhook URL>")
myTeamsPotentialAction1 = pymsteams.potentialaction(_name = "Add a comment")
# You can add a TextInput to your potential action like below - Please note the 2nd argment below as the id name
myTeamsPotentialAction1.addInput("TextInput","comment","Add a comment here",False)
# we use the 2nd argument above as the id name to parse the values into the body post like below.
myTeamsPotentialAction1.addAction("HttpPost","Add Comment","https://...", "{{comment.value}}")
myTeamsMessage.addPotentialAction(myTeamsPotentialAction1)
myTeamsMessage.summary("Test Message")
myTeamsMessage.send()
# Notes:
# If you post anything via teams, you will get some Javascript encoding happening via the post - For example:
# Posting this: {"name":"john", "comment" : "nice"}
# Output will be: b'{\\u0022name\\u0022:\\u0022john\\u0022, \\u0022comment\\u0022 : \\u0022nice\\u0022}'
# i solved this issue by decoding unicode escape for a custom rest backend.
Please use Github issues to report any bugs or request enhancements.
This module is really just a nice wrapper pointed at the Microsoft API. To help troubleshoot missing messages, the requests response content is saved to the connectorcard class attribute last_http_response
.
To get the last http status code:
import pymsteams
myTeamsMessage = pymsteams.connectorcard("<Microsoft Webhook URL>")
myTeamsMessage.text("this is my text")
myTeamsMessage.send()
last_status_code = myTeamsMessage.last_http_response.status_code
More info on the Response Content is available in the requests documentation, link.
If the call to the Microsoft Teams webhook service fails, a TeamsWebhookException
will be thrown.
In order to test in your environment with pytest, set the environment variable MS_TEAMS_WEBHOOK
to the Microsoft Teams Webhook url you would like to use.
Then, from the root of the repo, install the requirements and run pytest.
pip install -r dev-requirements.txt
MS_TEAMS_WEBHOOK=MicrosoftWebhookURL
export MS_TEAMS_WEBHOOK
pytest --cov=./pymsteams --cov-report=term-missing --cov-branch
This will send two MS Teams messages describing how they are formatted. Manually validate that the message comes through as expected.
In some situations, a custom CA bundle must be used. This can be set on class initialization, by setting the verify parameter.
import pymsteams
# set custom ca bundle
msg = pymsteams.connectorcard("<Microsoft Webhook URL>", verify="/path/to/file")
# disable CA validation
msg = pymsteams.connectorcard("<Microsoft Webhook URL>", verify=False)
Set to either the path of a custom CA bundle or False to disable.
The requests documentation can be referenced for full details: https://2.python-requests.org/en/master/user/advanced/#ssl-cert-verification