Alexa Skills are the “apps” that you can build to run on Amazon devices like the Echo, Echo Dot, etc. In this blog post, you’ll learn how to build an Alexa skill using serverless Azure Functions and a Couchbase backend running on Azure. This post builds on a lot of blog posts I’ve written about Azure Functions, Serverless, and Couchbase on Azure in the past:

What kind of Alexa skills am I building?

I work as a Developer Advocate, which means I often spend time at sponsor booths at developer events. I love doing this: I get to tell people how great Couchbase is, and I often get feedback from developers about what problems they’re trying to solve with Couchbase.

If there’s one thing I don’t like about working a booth, though, it’s repetition. I often get asked the same set of questions hundreds of times per events:

  • What is Couchbase? (distributed NoSQL document database with a memory first architecture)

  • How is Couchbase different than MongoDB? (they are both document databases, but Couchbase has major feature and architectural differences)

  • Is Couchbase the same thing as CouchDB? (No.)

I’m not complaining, mind you. It’s just that it’s hard to be enthusiastic when answering the question for the 100th time as the conference is about to close down.

But you know who is always enthusiastic? Alexa! So, if I bring my Echo Dot to the next event, maybe she can help me:

  • What is Couchbase? – Alexa will say a random interesting fact about Couchbase

  • How is Couchbase different than MongoDB? Alexa will say a random architectural or feature difference.

  • Is Couchbase the same thing as CouchDB? Alexa will say “no”.

If these Alexa skills turn out to be helpful, I can expand the skills later to answer more complex questions.

If you want to follow along with this post and create your own Alexa skills, the full source code is available on Github.

Design

Alexa skills are registered with Amazon. For the most part, they make simple HTTP requests to the endpoint that you designate and expect a certain JSON response. Azure Functions can process HTTP requests. The Azure Functions can make queries out to a database full of responses, and can also keep track of how many times each response has been given.

Below is a high-level architectural diagram of my minimum viable Alexa skills project:

Architecture diagram from you

Data storage and design

The skill is going to ultimately query some data from Couchbase Server. I’ll start with 2 different kinds of documents. (If these Alexa skills turn out to be useful, I’ll add more complex stuff later).

Document design

Each document represents a possible response. Each will have 3 fields:

  • type – This will be either “mongodbcomparison” or “whatiscouchbase”.

  • number – The number of times this response has been used (starting at 0).

  • text – The text that I want the Alexa skills to say.

The document key design of these documents is not important (at least not yet), since I’ll be using only N1QL (SQL for JSON) queries to retrieve them. However, I’ve decided to create keys like “mongo::2” and “couchbase::5”.

To start, I will store this data in a single Couchbase node on a low cost Azure VM. A single node with a small amount of data should be able to handle even heavy booth traffic no problem. But if, for instance, I were to install these as kiosks in airports around the world I will definitely need to scale up my Couchbase cluster. Couchbase and Azure makes this easy.

Query design

To get a random document, I need to run a N1QL query:

UUID is functioning as a random number generator. That’s not really what it’s for, but it’s “good enough”. If I really needed true randomness, I could make a curl request in N1QL to random.org’s API.

To run that query, I need to create an index for the ‘type’ field:

Azure Functions

To create an Azure Function, I used an existing .NET library called AlexaSkills.NET, which makes it very easy to write the code you need to create Alexa skills.

After creating my Azure Functions solution, I added it with NuGet.

Using AlexaSkills.NET

Next, I created a “speechlet” class. I chose to make my speechlet asynchronous, but a synchronous option exists as well. There are four methods that need to be created. I only really need two of them for the skill at this point.

The OnLaunchAsync is the first thing that an Echo user will reach. The user will say something like “Alexa, open Matt’s booth helper”, and this code will respond with some basic instructions.

The OnIntentAsync is where most of the Alexa skills request will be processed. I’m using a factory/strategy code pattern here to instantiate a different object depending on which intent is being invoked (more on “intents” later).

Connecting to Couchbase

CouchbaseBucket.GetBucket() is using Lazy behind the scenes as outlined in my earlier blog post on Azure Functions.

So, whenever a ‘What is Couchbase’ intent comes in, a WhatIsCouchbaseIntentProcessor is instantiated and executed.

Note the use of the N1QL query that was mentioned earlier (slightly tweaked so that facts with lower numbers will be given priority). This code is also using the Couchbase subdocument API to increment the “number” field by 1.

You can view the full code of the other intent processors on Github, but they are very similar (just with slightly different N1QL).

Connecting to Azure Functions

Finally, once my speechlet is ready, it’s easy to wire up to an Azure Function.

You can now test this locally with Postman, or with the Alexa interface once you deploy to azure.

Creating the Alexa skills

I won’t go through the whole process, since there’s plenty of documentation on how to setup Alexa skills. I think I have more work to do before my skill is officially certified, but it’s good enough for beta testing.

Once you have the Azure Functions URL, you’ll use that with Alexa. Alexa requires skills to use HTTPS, but fortunately Azure Functions come with HTTPS on a azurewebsites.net subdomain. Here’s a screenshot:

Alexa skills HTTPS configuration with Azure Functions

I mentioned “intents” earlier. These are various types of actions that Alexa skills can process, along with their inputs. Think of these like function signatures. Currently, I have designed 3 intents, and I have no parameters on these (yet). So my intent schema is a very simple piece of JSON:

Alexa skills intent schema

For each intent, you can create “utterances” that map to the intents. These are the phrases that an Echo user will speak, and which intent they correspond to.

Alexa skills sample utterances

I’ve tried to think of all the different variations. But if I really wanted this to work more generally, I would setup parameters so that a user could ask the question “What is the difference between Couchbase and {x}”.

Echo Dot in action

I did not publish this on the Alexa store. I did deploy it as a “beta test”, so if you want to try it out, I’d be happy to send you an invitation to get it.

Here’s a video of my trying it out on my Echo Dot (which was a speaker gift last year from the fine people at DevNexus):

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RaYV6jDO8Q8&w=560&h=315]

Will this actually work at a noisy booth? Well, let’s just say I’m not ready to bring an easy chair and pillow to the booth just yet. But it’s a fun way to demonstrate the power of Couchbase as an engagement database.

Summary

Alexa skills are a great place to use serverless architecture like Azure Functions. The skills will be used intermittently, and Azure Functions will only bill you for the time they are executed.

Couchbase Server again makes a great database for such an app. It can start out small to handle a single booth, but it can scale easily to accommodate larger demand.

Have a question about Couchbase? Visit the Couchbase forums.

Have a question for me? Find me on Twitter @mgroves.

Be sure to check out all the great documentation from Microsoft on Azure Functions, and the documentation on the Alexa Skills .NET library.

Author

Posted by Matthew Groves

Matthew D. Groves is a guy who loves to code. It doesn't matter if it's C#, jQuery, or PHP: he'll submit pull requests for anything. He has been coding professionally ever since he wrote a QuickBASIC point-of-sale app for his parent's pizza shop back in the 90s. He currently works as a Senior Product Marketing Manager for Couchbase. His free time is spent with his family, watching the Reds, and getting involved in the developer community. He is the author of AOP in .NET, Pro Microservices in .NET, a Pluralsight author, and a Microsoft MVP.

3 Comments

  1. That’s an awesome blog post – thanks, Matt! I need to get me some Alexa hardware to play with.

    1. Thanks for reading. I’d love to see what else can be done with Couchbase in an Alexa skill.

  2. […] Alexa Skills with Azure Functions and Couchbase […]

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