6.4 KiB
summary, read_when
| summary | read_when | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Runbook: connect/pair the iOS node to a Clawdis Gateway and drive its Canvas |
|
iOS Node Connection Runbook
This is the practical “how do I connect the iOS node” guide:
iOS app ⇄ (Bonjour + TCP bridge) ⇄ Gateway bridge ⇄ (loopback WS) ⇄ Gateway
The Gateway WebSocket stays loopback-only (ws://127.0.0.1:18789). The iOS node talks to the LAN-facing bridge (default tcp://0.0.0.0:18790) and uses Gateway-owned pairing.
Prerequisites
- You can run the Gateway on the “master” machine.
- iOS node app can reach the gateway bridge:
- Same LAN with Bonjour/mDNS, or
- Same Tailscale tailnet using Wide-Area Bonjour / unicast DNS-SD (see below), or
- Manual bridge host/port (fallback)
- You can run the CLI (
clawdis) on the gateway machine (or via SSH).
1) Start the Gateway (with bridge enabled)
Bridge is enabled by default (disable via CLAWDIS_BRIDGE_ENABLED=0).
pnpm clawdis gateway --port 18789 --verbose
Confirm in logs you see something like:
bridge listening on tcp://0.0.0.0:18790 (node)
For tailnet-only setups (recommended for Vienna ⇄ London), bind the bridge to the gateway machine’s Tailscale IP instead:
- Set
bridge.bind: "tailnet"in~/.clawdis/clawdis.jsonon the gateway host. - Restart the Gateway / macOS menubar app.
2) Verify Bonjour discovery (optional but recommended)
From the gateway machine:
dns-sd -B _clawdis-bridge._tcp local.
You should see your gateway advertising _clawdis-bridge._tcp.
If browse works, but the iOS node can’t connect, try resolving one instance:
dns-sd -L "<instance name>" _clawdis-bridge._tcp local.
More debugging notes: docs/bonjour.md.
Tailnet (Vienna ⇄ London) discovery via unicast DNS-SD
If the iOS node and the gateway are on different networks but connected via Tailscale, multicast mDNS won’t cross the boundary. Use Wide-Area Bonjour / unicast DNS-SD instead:
- Set up a DNS-SD zone (example
clawdis.internal.) on the gateway host and publish_clawdis-bridge._tcprecords. - Configure Tailscale split DNS for
clawdis.internalpointing at that DNS server.
Details and example CoreDNS config: docs/bonjour.md.
3) Connect from the iOS node app
In the iOS node app:
- Pick the discovered bridge (or hit refresh).
- If not paired yet, it will initiate pairing automatically.
- After the first successful pairing, it will auto-reconnect strictly to the last discovered gateway on launch (including after reinstall), as long as the iOS Keychain entry is still present.
Connection indicator (always visible)
The Settings tab icon shows a small status dot:
- Green: connected to the bridge
- Yellow: connecting (subtle pulse)
- Red: not connected / error
4) Approve pairing (CLI)
On the gateway machine:
clawdis nodes pending
Approve the request:
clawdis nodes approve <requestId>
After approval, the iOS node receives/stores the token and reconnects authenticated.
Pairing details: docs/gateway/pairing.md.
5) Verify the node is connected
- In the macOS app: Instances tab should show something like
iOS Node (...). - Via nodes status (paired + connected):
clawdis nodes status - Via Gateway (paired + connected):
clawdis gateway call node.list --params "{}" - Via Gateway presence (legacy-ish, still useful):
Look for the node
clawdis gateway call system-presence --params "{}"instanceId(often a UUID).
6) Drive the iOS Canvas (draw / snapshot)
The iOS node runs a WKWebView “Canvas” scaffold which exposes:
window.__clawdis.canvaswindow.__clawdis.ctx(2D context)window.__clawdis.setStatus(title, subtitle)
Gateway Canvas Host (recommended for web content)
If you want the node to show real HTML/CSS/JS that the agent can edit on disk, point it at the Gateway canvas host.
-
Create
~/clawd/canvas/index.htmlon the gateway host. -
Navigate the node to it (LAN):
clawdis nodes invoke --node "iOS Node" --command canvas.navigate --params '{"url":"http://<gateway-hostname>.local:18793/"}'
Notes:
- The server injects a live-reload client into HTML and reloads on file changes.
- Tailnet (optional): if both devices are on Tailscale, use a MagicDNS name or tailnet IP instead of
.local, e.g.http://<gateway-magicdns>:18793/. - iOS may require App Transport Security allowances to load plain
http://URLs; if it fails to load, prefer HTTPS or adjust the iOS app’s ATS config.
Draw with canvas.eval
clawdis nodes invoke --node "iOS Node" --command canvas.eval --params "$(cat <<'JSON'
{"javaScript":"(() => { const {ctx,setStatus} = window.__clawdis; setStatus('Drawing','…'); ctx.clearRect(0,0,innerWidth,innerHeight); ctx.lineWidth=6; ctx.strokeStyle='#ff2d55'; ctx.beginPath(); ctx.moveTo(40,40); ctx.lineTo(innerWidth-40, innerHeight-40); ctx.stroke(); setStatus(null,null); return 'ok'; })()"}
JSON
)"
Snapshot with canvas.snapshot
clawdis nodes invoke --node 192.168.0.88 --command canvas.snapshot --params '{"maxWidth":900}'
The response includes base64 PNG data (for debugging/verification).
Common gotchas
- iOS in background: all
canvas.*commands fail fast withNODE_BACKGROUND_UNAVAILABLE(bring the iOS node app to foreground). - Return to default scaffold:
canvas.navigatewith{"url":""}or{"url":"/"}returns to the built-in canvas/A2UI scaffold. - mDNS blocked: some networks block multicast; use a different LAN or plan a tailnet-capable bridge (see
docs/discovery.md). - Wrong node selector:
--nodecan be the node id (UUID), display name (e.g.iOS Node), IP, or an unambiguous prefix. If it’s ambiguous, the CLI will tell you. - Stale pairing / Keychain cleared: if the pairing token is missing (or iOS Keychain was wiped), the node must pair again; approve a new pending request.
- App reinstall but no reconnect: the node restores
instanceId+ last bridge preference from Keychain; if it still comes up “unpaired”, verify Keychain persistence on your device/simulator and re-pair once.
Related docs
docs/ios/spec.md(design + architecture)docs/gateway.md(gateway runbook)docs/gateway/pairing.md(approval + storage)docs/bonjour.md(discovery debugging)docs/discovery.md(LAN vs tailnet vs SSH)