// Copyright (c) Microsoft. All rights reserved. // This sample demonstrates a basic AG-UI server hosting a chat agent for the Blazor web client. using Azure.AI.OpenAI; using Azure.Identity; using Microsoft.Agents.AI; using Microsoft.Agents.AI.Hosting.AGUI.AspNetCore; using Microsoft.Extensions.AI; using OpenAI.Chat; WebApplicationBuilder builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args); builder.Services.AddHttpClient().AddLogging(); builder.Services.AddAGUI(); WebApplication app = builder.Build(); string endpoint = builder.Configuration["AZURE_OPENAI_ENDPOINT"] ?? throw new InvalidOperationException("AZURE_OPENAI_ENDPOINT is not set."); string deploymentName = builder.Configuration["AZURE_OPENAI_DEPLOYMENT_NAME"] ?? throw new InvalidOperationException("AZURE_OPENAI_DEPLOYMENT_NAME is not set."); // Create the AI agent // WARNING: DefaultAzureCredential is convenient for development but requires careful consideration in production. // In production, consider using a specific credential (e.g., ManagedIdentityCredential) to avoid // latency issues, unintended credential probing, and potential security risks from fallback mechanisms. AzureOpenAIClient azureOpenAIClient = new( new Uri(endpoint), new DefaultAzureCredential()); ChatClient chatClient = azureOpenAIClient.GetChatClient(deploymentName); ChatClientAgent agent = chatClient.AsIChatClient().AsAIAgent( name: "ChatAssistant", instructions: "You are a helpful assistant."); // Map the AG-UI agent endpoint app.MapAGUI("/ag-ui", agent); await app.RunAsync();