* Python: .NET Samples - Restructure and Improve Samples (Feature Branch) (#4091) * Moved by agent (#4094) * Fix readme links * .NET Samples - Create `04-hosting` learning path step (#4098) * Agent move * Agent reorderd * Remove A2A section from README Removed A2A section from the Getting Started README. * Agent fixed links * Fix broken sample links in durable-agents README (#4101) * Initial plan * Fix broken internal links in documentation Co-authored-by: crickman <66376200+crickman@users.noreply.github.com> * Revert template link changes; keep only durable-agents README fix Co-authored-by: crickman <66376200+crickman@users.noreply.github.com> --------- Co-authored-by: copilot-swe-agent[bot] <198982749+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: crickman <66376200+crickman@users.noreply.github.com> * .NET Samples - Create `03-workflows` learning path step (#4102) * Fix solution project path * Python: Fix broken markdown links to repo resources (outside /docs) (#4105) * Initial plan * Fix broken markdown links to repo resources Co-authored-by: crickman <66376200+crickman@users.noreply.github.com> * Update README to rename .NET Workflows Samples section --------- Co-authored-by: copilot-swe-agent[bot] <198982749+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: crickman <66376200+crickman@users.noreply.github.com> * .NET Samples - Create `02-agents` learning path step (#4107) * .NET: Fix broken relative link in GroupChatToolApproval README (#4108) * Initial plan * Fix broken link in GroupChatToolApproval README Co-authored-by: crickman <66376200+crickman@users.noreply.github.com> --------- Co-authored-by: copilot-swe-agent[bot] <198982749+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: crickman <66376200+crickman@users.noreply.github.com> * Update labeler configuration for workflow samples * .NET - Reorder Agents samples to start from Step01 instead of Step04 (#4110) * Fix solution * Resolve new sample paths * Move new AgentSkills and AgentWithMemory_Step04 samples * Fix link * Fix readme path * fix: update stale dotnet/samples/Durable path reference in AGENTS.md Co-authored-by: crickman <66376200+crickman@users.noreply.github.com> * Moved new sample * Update solution * Resolve merge (new sample) * Sync to new sample - FoundryAgents_Step21_BingCustomSearch * Updated README * .NET Samples - Configuration Naming Update (#4149) * .NET: Restore AzureFunctions index parity with ConsoleApps under DurableAgents samples (#4221) * Clean-up `05_host_your_agent` * Config setting consistency * Refine samples * AGENTS.md * Move new samples * Re-order samples * Move new project and fixup solution * Fixup model config * Fix up new UT project --------- Co-authored-by: Copilot <198982749+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>
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Getting started with agents
The getting started with agents samples demonstrate the fundamental concepts and functionalities of single agents and can be used with any agent type.
While the functionality can be used with any agent type, these samples use Azure OpenAI as the AI provider and use ChatCompletion as the type of service.
For other samples that demonstrate how to create and configure each type of agent that come with the agent framework, see the How to create an agent for each provider samples.
Getting started with agents prerequisites
Before you begin, ensure you have the following prerequisites:
- .NET 10 SDK or later
- Azure OpenAI service endpoint and deployment configured
- Azure CLI installed and authenticated (for Azure credential authentication)
- User has the
Cognitive Services OpenAI Contributorrole for the Azure OpenAI resource.
Note: These samples use Azure OpenAI models. For more information, see how to deploy Azure OpenAI models with Azure AI Foundry.
Note: These samples use Azure CLI credentials for authentication. Make sure you're logged in with az login and have access to the Azure OpenAI resource and have the Cognitive Services OpenAI Contributor role. For more information, see the Azure CLI documentation.
Samples
| Sample | Description |
|---|---|
| Using OpenAPI function tools with a simple agent | This sample demonstrates how to create function tools from an OpenAPI spec and use them with a simple agent (note that this sample is in the Semantic Kernel repository) |
| Using function tools with approvals | This sample demonstrates how to use function tools where approvals require human in the loop approvals before execution |
| Structured output with a simple agent | This sample demonstrates how to use structured output with a simple agent |
| Persisted conversations with a simple agent | This sample demonstrates how to persist conversations and reload them later. This is useful for cases where an agent is hosted in a stateless service |
| 3rd party chat history storage with a simple agent | This sample demonstrates how to store chat history in a 3rd party storage solution |
| Observability with a simple agent | This sample demonstrates how to add telemetry to a simple agent |
| Dependency injection with a simple agent | This sample demonstrates how to add and resolve an agent with a dependency injection container |
| Exposing a simple agent as MCP tool | This sample demonstrates how to expose an agent as an MCP tool |
| Using images with a simple agent | This sample demonstrates how to use image multi-modality with an AI agent |
| Exposing a simple agent as a function tool | This sample demonstrates how to expose an agent as a function tool |
| Background responses with tools and persistence | This sample demonstrates advanced background response scenarios including function calling during background operations and state persistence |
| Using middleware with an agent | This sample demonstrates how to use middleware with an agent |
| Using plugins with an agent | This sample demonstrates how to use plugins with an agent |
| Reducing chat history size | This sample demonstrates how to reduce the chat history to constrain its size, where chat history is maintained locally |
| Background responses | This sample demonstrates how to use background responses for long-running operations with polling and resumption support |
| Deep research with an agent | This sample demonstrates how to use the Deep Research Tool to perform comprehensive research on complex topics |
| Declarative agent | This sample demonstrates how to declaratively define an agent. |
| Providing additional AI Context to an agent using multiple AIContextProviders | This sample demonstrates how to inject additional AI context into a ChatClientAgent using multiple custom AIContextProvider components that are attached to the agent. |
Running the samples from the console
To run the samples, navigate to the desired sample directory, e.g.
cd Agent_Step01_UsingFunctionToolsWithApprovals
Set the following environment variables:
$env:AZURE_OPENAI_ENDPOINT="https://your-resource.openai.azure.com/" # Replace with your Azure OpenAI resource endpoint
$env:AZURE_OPENAI_DEPLOYMENT_NAME="gpt-4o-mini" # Optional, defaults to gpt-4o-mini
If the variables are not set, you will be prompted for the values when running the samples.
Execute the following command to build the sample:
dotnet build
Execute the following command to run the sample:
dotnet run --no-build
Or just build and run in one step:
dotnet run
Running the samples from Visual Studio
Open the solution in Visual Studio and set the desired sample project as the startup project. Then, run the project using the built-in debugger or by pressing F5.
You will be prompted for any required environment variables if they are not already set.