* Python: bump package versions for 1.2.2 release PATCH bump (1.2.1 -> 1.2.2) for the released cohort. Five PRs land in this window: - agent-framework-openai: fix file_search citations breaking the assistant- message history roundtrip (#5557) โ drives the released-tier PATCH - agent-framework-orchestrations: [BREAKING] standardize orchestration terminal outputs as AgentResponse (#5301) - agent-framework-core, agent-framework-declarative: preserve Workflow.run() shared state across calls, accept list[Message] in declarative start executor, and coerce Enum values when serializing PowerFx symbols (#5531) - agent-framework-foundry-hosting: add hosted Durable Workflow support (#5531) - agent-framework-azure-contentunderstanding: new alpha package โ Azure AI Content Understanding context provider (#4829) - dependencies: workspace package dependency refresh (#5555) Per lockstep convention, all 21 beta packages stamp 1.0.0b260429 and all 4 alpha packages (now including the new contentunderstanding) stamp 1.0.0a260429. Date stamp reflects 2026-04-29 Pacific. Every non-core package floor on agent-framework-core is raised to >=1.2.2; the new contentunderstanding package's stale >=1.0.0 floor is brought into line. Two follow-on fixes bundled to keep validate-dependency-bounds-test green at lowest-direct resolution: - Bump agent-framework-azure-contentunderstanding's azure-ai-content understanding lower bound from >=1.0.0 to >=1.0.1 (1.0.0 ships without proper typing โ pyright reports 65 unknown-type errors) - Add pyright ignore comments to core/foundry/__init__.pyi for the new alpha package's type-stub imports, since alpha packages are not in core's [all] extra and therefore aren't installed at lowest-direct * Python: add #5552 to 1.2.2 CHANGELOG Add the streaming-span observability fix to the Fixed section. PR is on upstream/main but not yet pulled into origin/main; the code itself will land via the PR merge. * Python: address PR #5561 review feedback on dependency bounds Two packaging fixes flagged in review: 1. agent-framework-azure-contentunderstanding: add agent-framework-foundry as a runtime dependency. The package's README directs users to `pip install agent-framework-azure-contentunderstanding --pre` and the basic example imports `FoundryChatClient` from `agent_framework.foundry`, so the documented install path was failing with ImportError. Pulling agent-framework-foundry into deps makes the advertised entry path self-contained. 2. agent-framework-foundry: bump agent-framework-openai lower bound from >=1.1.0 to >=1.2.2,<2. Foundry imports private modules from agent_framework_openai (`_chat_client.py:22`, `_agent.py:34`), so resolvers were free to pair foundry==1.2.2 with older OpenAI versions that lack this release's coordinated Responses/history fix. Lockstep the floor with the released cohort to prevent mismatched installs. Both changes pass `validate-dependency-bounds-test` lower + upper at their respective packages.
Agent Framework and ChatKit Integration
This package provides an integration layer between Microsoft Agent Framework and OpenAI ChatKit (Python). Specifically, it mirrors the Agent SDK integration, and provides the following helpers:
stream_agent_response: A helper to convert a streamedAgentResponseUpdatefrom a Microsoft Agent Framework agent that implementsSupportsAgentRunto ChatKit events.ThreadItemConverter: A extendable helper class to convert ChatKit thread items toMessageobjects that can be consumed by an Agent Framework agent.simple_to_agent_input: A helper function that uses the default implementation ofThreadItemConverterto convert a ChatKit thread to a list ofMessage, useful for getting started quickly.
Installation
pip install agent-framework-chatkit --pre
This will install agent-framework-core and openai-chatkit as dependencies.
Requirements and Limitations
Frontend Requirements
The ChatKit integration requires the OpenAI ChatKit frontend library, which has the following requirements:
-
Internet Connectivity Required: The ChatKit UI is loaded from OpenAI's CDN (
cdn.platform.openai.com). This library cannot be self-hosted or bundled locally. -
External Network Requests: The ChatKit frontend makes requests to:
cdn.platform.openai.com- UI library (required)chatgpt.com/ces/v1/projects/oai/settings- Configurationapi-js.mixpanel.com- Telemetry (metadata only, not user messages)
-
Domain Registration for Production: Production deployments require registering your domain at platform.openai.com and configuring a domain key.
Air-Gapped / Regulated Environments
The ChatKit frontend is not suitable for air-gapped or highly-regulated environments where outbound connections to OpenAI domains are restricted.
What IS self-hostable:
- The backend components (
chatkit-python,agent-framework-chatkit) are fully open source and have no external dependencies
What is NOT self-hostable:
- The frontend UI (
chatkit.js) requires connectivity to OpenAI's CDN
For environments with network restrictions, consider building a custom frontend that consumes the ChatKit server protocol, or using alternative UI libraries like ai-sdk.
See openai/chatkit-js#57 for tracking self-hosting feature requests.
Example Usage
Here's a minimal example showing how to integrate Agent Framework with ChatKit:
from collections.abc import AsyncIterator
from typing import Any
from azure.identity import AzureCliCredential
from fastapi import FastAPI, Request
from fastapi.responses import Response, StreamingResponse
from agent_framework import Agent
from agent_framework.openai import OpenAIChatCompletionClient
from agent_framework.chatkit import simple_to_agent_input, stream_agent_response
from chatkit.server import ChatKitServer
from chatkit.types import ThreadMetadata, UserMessageItem, ThreadStreamEvent
# You'll need to implement a Store - see the sample for a SQLiteStore implementation
from your_store import YourStore # type: ignore[import-not-found] # Replace with your Store implementation
# Define your agent with tools
agent = Agent(
client=OpenAIChatCompletionClient(credential=AzureCliCredential()),
instructions="You are a helpful assistant.",
tools=[], # Add your tools here
)
# Create a ChatKit server that uses your agent
class MyChatKitServer(ChatKitServer[dict[str, Any]]):
async def respond(
self,
thread: ThreadMetadata,
input_user_message: UserMessageItem | None,
context: dict[str, Any],
) -> AsyncIterator[ThreadStreamEvent]:
if input_user_message is None:
return
# Load full thread history to maintain conversation context
thread_items_page = await self.store.load_thread_items(
thread_id=thread.id,
after=None,
limit=1000,
order="asc",
context=context,
)
# Convert all ChatKit messages to Agent Framework format
agent_messages = await simple_to_agent_input(thread_items_page.data)
# Run the agent and stream responses
response_stream = agent.run(agent_messages, stream=True)
# Convert agent responses back to ChatKit events
async for event in stream_agent_response(response_stream, thread.id):
yield event
# Set up FastAPI endpoint
app = FastAPI()
chatkit_server = MyChatKitServer(YourStore()) # type: ignore[misc]
@app.post("/chatkit")
async def chatkit_endpoint(request: Request):
result = await chatkit_server.process(await request.body(), {"request": request})
if hasattr(result, '__aiter__'): # Streaming
return StreamingResponse(result, media_type="text/event-stream") # type: ignore[arg-type]
else: # Non-streaming
return Response(content=result.json, media_type="application/json") # type: ignore[union-attr]
For a complete end-to-end example with a full frontend, see the weather agent sample.