Chat concepts

Azure Communication Services Chat can help you add real-time text communication to your cross-platform applications. This page summarizes key Chat concepts and capabilities. See the Communication Services Chat Software Development Kit (SDK) Overview for lists of SDKs, languages, platforms, and detailed feature support.

The Chat APIs provide an auto-scaling service for persistently stored text and data communication. Other key features include:

  • Custom Identity and Addressing - Azure Communication Services provides generic identities to address communication endpoints. Clients use these identities to authenticate to the Azure service and communicate with each other in chat threads you control.
  • Encryption - Chat SDKs encrypt traffic and prevents tampering on the wire.
  • Microsoft Teams Meetings - Chat SDKs can join Teams meetings and communicate with Teams chat messages.
  • Real-time Notifications - Chat SDKs use efficient persistent connectivity (WebSockets) to receive real-time notifications such as when a remote user is typing. When apps are running in the background, built-in functionality is available to fire pop-up notifications ("toasts") to inform end users of new threads and messages.
  • Bot Extensibility - It's easy to add Azure bots to the Chat service with Azure Bot integration.

Chat overview

Chat conversations happen within chat threads. Chat threads have the following properties:

  • A chat thread identity is its ChatThreadId.
  • Chat threads have between zero to 250 users as participants who can send messages to it.
  • A user can be a part an unlimited number of chat threads.
  • Only thread participants can send or receive messages, add participants, or remove participants.
  • Users are added as a participant to any chat threads that they create.

User access

Azure Communication Services supports three levels of user access control, using the chat tokens. See Identity and Tokens for details. Participants don't have write-access to messages sent by other participants, which means only the message sender can update or delete their sent messages. If another participant tries to do that, they get an error.

Chat Data

Azure Communication Services stores chat messages indefinitely until they are deleted by the customer. Chat thread participants can use ListMessages to view message history for a particular thread. Users that are removed from a chat thread are able to view previous message history but can't send or receive new messages. Accidentally deleted messages aren't recoverable by the system. To learn more about data being stored in Azure Communication Services chat service, refer to the data residency and privacy page.

In 2024, new functionality will be introduced where customers must choose between indefinite message retention or automatic deletion after 90 days. Existing messages remain unaffected.

For customers that use Virtual appointments, refer to our Teams Interoperability user privacy for storage of chat messages in Teams meetings.

Service limits

  • The maximum number of participants allowed in a chat thread is 250.
  • The maximum message size allowed is approximately 28 KB.
  • For chat threads with more than 20 participants, read receipts and typing indicator features are not supported.
  • For Teams Interop scenarios, it is the number of Azure Communication Services users, not Teams users, that must be below 20 for the typing indicator feature to be supported.
  • For Teams Interop scenarios, the typing indicator event might contain a blank display name when sent from Teams user.
  • For Teams Interop scenarios, read receipts aren't supported for Teams users.

Chat architecture

There are two core parts to chat architecture: 1) Trusted Service and 2) Client Application.

Diagram showing Communication Services' chat architecture.

  • Trusted service: To properly manage a chat session, you need a service that helps you connect to Communication Services by using your resource connection string. This service is responsible for creating chat threads, adding and removing participants, and issuing access tokens to users. More information about access tokens can be found in our access tokens quickstart.
  • Client app: The client application connects to your trusted service and receives the access tokens that are used by users to connect directly to Communication Services. After creating the chat thread and adding users as participants, they can use the client application to connect to the chat thread and send messages. Real-time notifications in your client application can be used to subscribe to message & thread updates from other participants.

Build intelligent, AI-powered chat experiences

You can use Azure AI services with the Chat service to build use cases like:

  • Help a support agent prioritize tickets by detecting a negative sentiment of an incoming message from a customer.
  • Generate a summary at the end of the conversation to send to customer via email with next steps or follow up at a later date.
  • Add a Power Virtual Agent (PVA) in an Azure Communication Services Chat channel with an Azure Bot and a relay bot.
  • Configure a bot to run on one or more social channels alongside the Chat channel.

Diagram showing Azure Communication Services can be paired with Azure AI services.

Message types

As part of message history, Chat shares user-generated messages and system-generated messages.

System messages are generated when

  • a chat thread is updated
  • a participant was added or removed
  • the chat thread topic was updated.

When you call List Messages or Get Messages on a chat thread, the result contains both kind of messages in chronological order. For user-generated messages, the message type can be set in SendMessageOptions when sending a message to chat thread. If no value is provided, Communication Services defaults to text type. Setting this value is important when sending HTML. When html is specified, Communication Services sanitizes the content to ensure that it's rendered safely on client devices.

  • text: A plain text message composed and sent by a user as part of a chat thread.
  • html: A formatted message using html, composed and sent by a user as part of chat thread.

Types of system messages:

  • participantAdded: System message that indicates one or more participants have been added to the chat thread.
  • participantRemoved: System message that indicates a participant has been removed from the chat thread.
  • topicUpdated: System message that indicates the thread topic has been updated.

Real-time notifications

JavaScript Chat SDK supports real-time notifications. This feature lets clients listen to Communication Services for real-time updates and incoming messages to a chat thread without having to poll the APIs.

The client app can subscribe to following events:

  • chatMessageReceived - when a new message is sent to a chat thread by a participant.
  • chatMessageEdited - when a message is edited in a chat thread.
  • chatMessageDeleted - when a message is deleted in a chat thread.
  • typingIndicatorReceived - when another participant sends a typing indicator to the chat thread.
  • readReceiptReceived - when another participant sends a read receipt for a message they have read.
  • chatThreadCreated - when a Communication Services user creates a chat thread.
  • chatThreadDeleted - when a Communication Services user deletes a chat thread.
  • chatThreadPropertiesUpdated - when chat thread properties are updated; currently, only updating the topic for the thread is supported.
  • participantsAdded - when a user is added as a chat thread participant.
  • participantsRemoved - when an existing participant is removed from the chat thread.
  • realTimeNotificationConnected - when real time notification is connected.
  • realTimeNotificationDisconnected -when real time notification is disconnected.

Note

Real time notifications are not to be used with server applications.

Server events

This feature lets server applications listen to events such as when a message is sent and when a participant is joining or leaving the chat. Server applications can react to these events, adding/removing participants to the chat, archiving chats, performing analysis, and many other scenarios for orchestration. To see what kinds of chat events can be used by developers, see Server Events.

Push notifications

Android and iOS Chat SDKs support push notifications. To send push notifications for messages missed by your users while they were away, connect a Notification Hub resource with Communication Services resource to send push notifications. Doing so will notify your application users about incoming chats and messages when the mobile app is not running in the foreground.

IOS and Android SDK support the below event:

  • chatMessageReceived - when a new message is sent to a chat thread by a participant.

Android SDK supports extra events:

  • chatMessageEdited - when a message is edited in a chat thread.
  • chatMessageDeleted - when a message is deleted in a chat thread.
  • chatThreadCreated - when a Communication Services user creates a chat thread.
  • chatThreadDeleted - when a Communication Services user deletes a chat thread.
  • chatThreadPropertiesUpdated - when chat thread properties are updated; currently, only updating the topic for the thread is supported.
  • participantsAdded - when a user is added as a chat thread participant.
  • participantsRemoved - when an existing participant is removed from the chat thread.

For more information, see Push Notifications.

Note

Currently sending chat push notifications with Notification Hub is generally available in Android version 1.1.0 and in IOS version 1.3.0.

Next steps

The following documents may be interesting to you:

  • Familiarize yourself with the Chat SDK