Roger Barreto fb97e93a01 .NET: Add dedicated Foundry.Hosting UnitTest project (#5592)
* Foundry.Hosting.UnitTests: extract project from Foundry.UnitTests

Move all Hosting/* tests, three toolbox TestData JSONs, and the FakeAuthenticationTokenProvider/HttpHandlerAssert/TestDataUtil helpers (trimmed to toolbox getters) into a new Microsoft.Agents.AI.Foundry.Hosting.UnitTests project. Add it to the slnx and grant the new assembly InternalsVisibleTo from Microsoft.Agents.AI.Foundry and Microsoft.Agents.AI.Foundry.Hosting.

* Foundry.Hosting.UnitTests: align namespaces to assembly name

Rename namespaces from Microsoft.Agents.AI.Foundry.UnitTests(.Hosting) to Microsoft.Agents.AI.Foundry.Hosting.UnitTests across all moved tests, the duplicated helpers, and the trimmed TestDataUtil. Also fixes the prior namespace inconsistency in FoundryToolboxTests.

* Foundry.Hosting.UnitTests: split WorkflowIntegrationTests by SUT

Replace the WorkflowIntegrationTests file (an IT-named file inside a UT project) with two SUT-focused files plus a shared test-doubles file:

- AgentFrameworkResponseHandlerWorkflowTests.cs - the 5 handler-driven tests that exercise AgentFrameworkResponseHandler with a real workflow agent.
- OutputConverterWorkflowTests.cs - the 5 OutputConverter tests driven by hand-crafted update sequences mirroring real workflow patterns.
- WorkflowTestAgents.cs - StreamingTextAgent and ThrowingStreamingAgent extracted as internal types used by both files.

* Foundry.UnitTests: trim Hosting-related conditionals and dead testdata

Now that Hosting tests live in their own project:
- drop the Compile Remove guard for the Hosting subfolder,
- drop the .NETCoreApp-only PackageReferences (Azure.AI.AgentServer.Responses, Microsoft.AspNetCore.TestHost, OpenTelemetry, OpenTelemetry.Exporter.InMemory),
- drop the conditional ProjectReference to Microsoft.Agents.AI.Foundry.Hosting,
- delete the three Toolbox JSON files and the matching Toolbox getters in TestDataUtil.

* Foundry.Hosting.UnitTests: drop redundant 'using Microsoft.Agents.AI.Foundry.Hosting'

The new project namespace is Microsoft.Agents.AI.Foundry.Hosting.UnitTests, which already brings the parent Microsoft.Agents.AI.Foundry.Hosting namespace into scope. The explicit using statement is therefore redundant (IDE0005). Caught by 'dotnet format --verify-no-changes' running on Linux against the .NET 10 SDK.

* Foundry.Hosting: drop InternalsVisibleTo to Foundry.UnitTests

The non-hosting Foundry.UnitTests project no longer holds any Hosting tests after the split, so it doesn't need access to internal types in Microsoft.Agents.AI.Foundry.Hosting. Only Microsoft.Agents.AI.Foundry.Hosting.UnitTests needs it.

* Foundry.Hosting: rename DelegatingResponsesClient to UserAgentResponsesClient

Address westey-m's review feedback on PR #5453: `Delegating*` is conventionally reserved for inheritable base classes (mirroring `DelegatingHandler`) where consumers override one or two members. This polyfill is sealed and only injects the User-Agent supplement, so the new name reflects its actual purpose.

Renamed via `git mv` to preserve history:
* `src/Microsoft.Agents.AI.Foundry.Hosting/DelegatingResponsesClient.cs` to `UserAgentResponsesClient.cs`
* `tests/Microsoft.Agents.AI.Foundry.Hosting.UnitTests/DelegatingResponsesClientTests.cs` to `UserAgentResponsesClientTests.cs`

Class, constructor, and all references updated across:
* `src/.../UserAgentResponsesClient.cs` (class + constructor + internal log message)
* `src/.../ServiceCollectionExtensions.cs` (cref + type check + instantiation)
* `src/.../HostedAgentUserAgentPolicy.cs` (cref)
* `tests/Foundry.UnitTests/RequestOptionsExtensionsTests.cs` (comment)
* `tests/Foundry.Hosting.UnitTests/UserAgentResponsesClientTests.cs` (class + cref + instantiations)
fb97e93a01 · 2026-04-30 21:09:25 +00:00
1,987 Commits
2025-10-30 20:29:01 +00:00
2025-04-28 12:54:43 -07:00
2025-04-28 12:54:42 -07:00

Microsoft Agent Framework

Welcome to Microsoft Agent Framework!

Microsoft Foundry Discord MS Learn Documentation PyPI NuGet

Welcome to Microsoft's comprehensive multi-language framework for building, orchestrating, and deploying AI agents with support for both .NET and Python implementations. This framework provides everything from simple chat agents to complex multi-agent workflows with graph-based orchestration.

Watch the full Agent Framework introduction (30 min)

Watch the full Agent Framework introduction (30 min)

📋 Getting Started

📦 Installation

Python

pip install agent-framework
# This will install all sub-packages, see `python/packages` for individual packages.
# It may take a minute on first install on Windows.

.NET

dotnet add package Microsoft.Agents.AI

📚 Documentation

Still have questions? Join our weekly office hours or ask questions in our Discord channel to get help from the team and other users.

Highlights

  • Graph-based Workflows: Connect agents and deterministic functions using data flows with streaming, checkpointing, human-in-the-loop, and time-travel capabilities
  • AF Labs: Experimental packages for cutting-edge features including benchmarking, reinforcement learning, and research initiatives
  • DevUI: Interactive developer UI for agent development, testing, and debugging workflows

See the DevUI in action

See the DevUI in action (1 min)

💬 We want your feedback!

Quickstart

Basic Agent - Python

Create a simple Azure Responses Agent that writes a haiku about the Microsoft Agent Framework

# pip install agent-framework
# Use `az login` to authenticate with Azure CLI
import os
import asyncio
from agent_framework import Agent
from agent_framework.foundry import FoundryChatClient
from azure.identity import AzureCliCredential


async def main():
    # Initialize a chat agent with Microsoft Foundry
    # the endpoint, deployment name, and api version can be set via environment variables
    # or they can be passed in directly to the FoundryChatClient constructor
    agent = Agent(
      client=FoundryChatClient(
          credential=AzureCliCredential(),
          # project_endpoint=os.environ["FOUNDRY_PROJECT_ENDPOINT"],
          # model=os.environ["FOUNDRY_MODEL_DEPLOYMENT_NAME"],
      ),
      name="HaikuBot",
      instructions="You are an upbeat assistant that writes beautifully.",
    )

    print(await agent.run("Write a haiku about Microsoft Agent Framework."))

if __name__ == "__main__":
    asyncio.run(main())

Basic Agent - .NET

Create a simple Agent, using Microsoft Foundry with token-based auth, that writes a haiku about the Microsoft Agent Framework

// dotnet add package Microsoft.Agents.AI.Foundry
// Use `az login` to authenticate with Azure CLI
using Azure.AI.Projects;
using Azure.Identity;
using System;
using Azure.AI.Projects;
using Azure.Identity;

var endpoint = Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("AZURE_AI_PROJECT_ENDPOINT") ?? throw new InvalidOperationException("AZURE_AI_PROJECT_ENDPOINT is not set.");
var deploymentName = Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable("AZURE_AI_MODEL_DEPLOYMENT_NAME") ?? "gpt-5.4-mini";

var agent = new AIProjectClient(new Uri(endpoint), new DefaultAzureCredential())
    .AsAIAgent(model: deploymentName, name: "HaikuBot", instructions: "You are an upbeat assistant that writes beautifully.");

Console.WriteLine(await agent.RunAsync("Write a haiku about Microsoft Agent Framework."));

Create a simple Agent, using OpenAI Responses, that writes a haiku about the Microsoft Agent Framework

// dotnet add package Microsoft.Agents.AI.OpenAI
using System;
using OpenAI;
using OpenAI.Responses;

// Replace the <apikey> with your OpenAI API key.
var agent = new OpenAIClient("<apikey>")
    .GetResponsesClient()
    .AsAIAgent(model: "gpt-5.4-mini", name: "HaikuBot", instructions: "You are an upbeat assistant that writes beautifully.");

Console.WriteLine(await agent.RunAsync("Write a haiku about Microsoft Agent Framework."));

More Examples & Samples

Python

  • Getting Started: progressive tutorial from hello-world to hosting
  • Agent Concepts: deep-dive samples by topic (tools, middleware, providers, etc.)
  • Workflows: workflow creation and integration with agents
  • Hosting: A2A, Azure Functions, Durable Task hosting
  • End-to-End: full applications, evaluation, and demos

.NET

Troubleshooting

Authentication

Problem Cause Fix
Authentication errors when using Azure credentials Not signed in to Azure CLI Run az login before starting your app
API key errors Wrong or missing API key Verify the key and ensure it's for the correct resource/provider

Tip: DefaultAzureCredential is convenient for development but in production, consider using a specific credential (e.g., ManagedIdentityCredential) to avoid latency issues, unintended credential probing, and potential security risks from fallback mechanisms.

Environment Variables

The samples typically read configuration from environment variables. Common required variables:

Variable Used by Purpose
AZURE_OPENAI_ENDPOINT Azure OpenAI samples Your Azure OpenAI resource URL
AZURE_OPENAI_DEPLOYMENT_NAME Azure OpenAI samples Model deployment name (e.g. gpt-4o-mini)
AZURE_AI_PROJECT_ENDPOINT Microsoft Foundry samples Your Microsoft Foundry project endpoint
AZURE_AI_MODEL_DEPLOYMENT_NAME Microsoft Foundry samples Model deployment name
OPENAI_API_KEY OpenAI (non-Azure) samples Your OpenAI platform API key

Contributor Resources

Important Notes

Important

If you use Microsoft Agent Framework to build applications that operate with any third-party servers, agents, code, or non-Azure Direct models (“Third-Party Systems”), you do so at your own risk. Third-Party Systems are Non-Microsoft Products under the Microsoft Product Terms and are governed by their own third-party license terms. You are responsible for any usage and associated costs.

We recommend reviewing all data being shared with and received from Third-Party Systems and being cognizant of third-party practices for handling, sharing, retention and location of data. It is your responsibility to manage whether your data will flow outside of your organizations Azure compliance and geographic boundaries and any related implications, and that appropriate permissions, boundaries and approvals are provisioned.

You are responsible for carefully reviewing and testing applications you build using Microsoft Agent Framework in the context of your specific use cases, and making all appropriate decisions and customizations. This includes implementing your own responsible AI mitigations such as metaprompt, content filters, or other safety systems, and ensuring your applications meet appropriate quality, reliability, security, and trustworthiness standards. See also: Transparency FAQ

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