Microsoft
Teams is a chat-based tool that
provides a common platform for remote teams to share information and work together. Microsoft
Teams integrates with Microsoft 365. IBM® App Connect Enterprise provides Microsoft Teams Input and Microsoft Teams Request nodes, which you can use to
interact with Microsoft
Teams.
About this task
IBM App Connect Enterprise communicates synchronously with Microsoft
Teams through the Microsoft Teams Input and Microsoft Teams Request nodes, which are available on Windows, AIX, and Linux®
systems.
Use the Microsoft Teams Input node in a message flow to
accept input from Microsoft
Teams. You can use the node
to monitor Microsoft
Teams for new or updated objects
such as channels, chats, groups, members, messages, owners, teams, and users. For more information
about configuring the Microsoft Teams Input node, see Microsoft Teams Input node.
You can use the
Microsoft Teams Request node to connect to
Microsoft
Teams and perform actions on objects, including
the following:
- Channels
- Create, retrieve, update, or delete channels
- Chat messages
- Send or retrieve chat messages
- Chats
- Retrieve chats
- Groups
- Create, retrieve, update, or delete groups
- Members
- Retrieve, add, or delete members
- Message replies
- Create a reply to a message or retrieve message replies
- Messages
- Send a message to a channel or retrieve messages
- Owners
- Retrieve, set, or delete owners
- Teams
- Create, retrieve, or update teams
- Users
- Retrieve users
For more information about configuring the Microsoft Teams Request node, see Microsoft Teams Request node.
Procedure
The following steps show you how to connect to a Microsoft
Teams account and configure a Microsoft Teams Request node by using connector discovery. You can
follow a similar procedure to configure a Microsoft Teams Input
node to monitor Microsoft
Teams for new or updated
objects, by creating a flow containing a Microsoft Teams Input
node and configuring it through connector discovery.
- In the IBM App Connect
Enterprise Toolkit, create a flow containing a Microsoft Teams Request node.
- Select the Microsoft Teams Request node in the flow
to show the node properties in the editor.
- On the Basic tab, click Launch Connector
Discovery.
A panel is displayed in which you specify the name of the
policy project and vault details to be used during connector discovery.
- Specify the details of the policy project and vault to be
used during connector discovery:
- In the Policy Project field, specify the policy project that is
used to store the policies that are created during connector discovery.
Alternatively,
you can create a new policy project by clicking New and then specifying the
name of the new policy project. Then click Finish.
- Specify the vault to be used during connector discovery. By default, credentials that
are used during connector discovery are stored in an external directory vault, which is
an App Connect Enterprise vault that can be used by any integration server.
Alternatively, you can store the credentials in an integration server vault, which is created in the
integration server's work directory and can be used only by that specific integration server.
To specify the vault to be used for storing the credentials, complete the steps in the
Using
the Connector Discovery wizard section of one of the following topics:
- In the Vault key field, enter the vault key that is used to
access the credentials stored in the vault. The vault key must be at least 8 characters in
length.
- Optional: By default, the specified vault location and vault key are saved
as preferences in the Toolkit so that the values are preset when you launch Connector Discovery. If
you do not want the preferences to be saved, deselect Save in vault
preferences.
- Click Launch Discovery to start the Connector Discovery wizard for
the Microsoft
Teams connector.
The
Connector Discovery window is displayed. If existing Microsoft
Teams connections (accounts) are available, a list
of those connections is displayed. If there are no existing connections, the status of the Microsoft
Teams connector is shown as Not
connected
.
- Set the required connector properties in the wizard.
You can add conditions for the retrieval of the data, by clicking Add
condition and then selecting the property that you want to filter. For example, if you
selected Channels and then Retrieve channels, you can
select Display name and then specify the display name in the
equals field. You can also set properties that specify the maximum number of
records to retrieve and the action to be taken if that limit is exceeded.
- When you have finished specifying the properties in the Connector Discovery wizard, click
Save.
The credential that is used for connecting to Microsoft
Teams is stored in the vault, and the other
connection details are saved in the Microsoft
Teams
policy. The values of the properties that you set in the wizard are returned to the Microsoft Teams Request node in the IBM App Connect
Enterprise Toolkit.
- When you have finished discovery and saved the property values, exit the Connector
Discovery wizard by clicking the X in the upper-right corner of the window or by pressing
Alt+F4.
- Return to editing the Microsoft Teams Request node
in the IBM App Connect
Enterprise Toolkit.
The connector properties that were set
in the Connector Discovery wizard (in step
6) are now
visible on the
Microsoft Teams Request node in the property
editor. The
Basic tab shows the values of the
Action
and
Object properties that you set in the wizard. For example, if you
selected in the wizard, the following properties will be visible on the
Basic tab of the node:
- Action -
RETRIEVEALL
- Object -
Channel
The values of the Action and Object properties
are displayed in read-only format. If you want to change these values, you can do so by clicking
Launch Connector Discovery again and setting new values in the Connector
Discovery wizard.
The Schema base name property specifies the base name
of the schema files that describe the format of the request and response messages that are sent and
received from the Microsoft
Teams connector. The schema
base name is set automatically the first time that you run discovery for the node, and it is based
on the current flow name and node name. If you set this property manually before running discovery
for the first time, the value that you set will be used. If you rename the schemas after discovery,
you must edit this property so that it matches the schema base name that is used by the renamed
schemas in the project. If you change this property after discovery, you must either rename the
schema names to match or run discovery again.
Depending on the action that was selected
during discovery, the Connector Discovery wizard generates either a request schema and a response
schema, or a response schema only. A request schema is generated only if the selected action and
object require a request message. The generated request schema is used for validation of the request
message. If the action was RETRIEVE
or DELETE
, only the response
schema is returned by the connector.
The generated schema files are added to the project and
can be used by a Mapping node for transforming input or
output data. The full filename of the schema is derived from the schema base name (such as
gen/MyMessageFlow.Microsoft_Teams_Request
), suffixed with either
response.schema.json or request.schema.json. You can open
the schema by clicking Open request schema or Open response
schema.
- Check that the property settings on the Microsoft Teams Request node are correct and then save the message
flow.
- On the Connection tab of the Microsoft Teams Request node, the Policy
property shows the name of the policy that contains the details of the security identity to be used
for the connection. The policy has a type of
Microsoft Teams
. For more information,
see Microsoft Teams policy.
- Optional: Set the Timeout property
on the Connection tab to specify the time (in seconds) that the node waits
for Microsoft
Teams to process the
operation.
- The Filter tab of the Microsoft Teams Request node contains properties that control the
way in which the message flow selects data. The initial values of these properties are taken from
the property values that were set for the Microsoft
Teams
connector in the Connector Discovery wizard, including the filter options properties and any
conditions that were specified (as described in step 6). If you
subsequently return to the Connector Discovery wizard and change the values of any properties (by
adding new conditions, for example) those updates are reflected in the properties set on the node.
The Filter Options properties control which objects are to be operated
upon when the Microsoft Teams Request node executes. The
Filter Limit properties control the maximum number of items to be retrieved
and the action to be taken if the limit is exceeded.
You can modify the values by clicking Edit next to the value that you want
to modify in the Filter Options section, and by changing the property values
that have been set in the Filter Limit section.
The property values can be either text values or ESQL or XPATH expressions that are resolved from
the contents of the message that is passed to the Microsoft Teams Request node as it executes.
- On the Request tab, set the Data
location property to specify the location in the incoming message tree that contains the
object data to be created in Microsoft
Teams. This data
forms the request that is sent from the Microsoft Teams Request
node to the Microsoft
Teams system.
- On the Result tab, set the Output
data location property to specify the location in the output message tree that will contain
the data of the record that is created in Microsoft
Teams.
- By default, request messages are validated against the request schema that was generated
during connector discovery. You can turn off request validation or change the validation settings by
using the Validation properties of the Microsoft Teams Request node.
- Save the message flow.