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| Frequently asked questions about Clawdbot setup, configuration, and usage |
FAQ
Quick answers plus deeper troubleshooting for real-world setups (local dev, VPS, multi-agent, OAuth/API keys, model failover). For runtime diagnostics, see Troubleshooting. For the full config reference, see Configuration.
First 60 seconds if something's broken
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Run the doctor
clawdbot doctorRepairs/migrates config/state + runs health checks. See Doctor.
-
Daemon + port state
clawdbot daemon statusShows supervisor runtime vs RPC reachability, the probe target URL, and which config the daemon likely used.
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Local probes
clawdbot status --deepChecks provider connectivity and local health. See Health.
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Gateway snapshot
clawdbot health --json clawdbot health --verbose # shows the target URL + config path on errorsAsks the running gateway for a full snapshot (WS-only). See Health.
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Tail the latest log
tail -f "$(ls -t /tmp/clawdbot/clawdbot-*.log | head -1)"File logs are separate from service logs; see Logging and Troubleshooting.
What is Clawdbot?
What is Clawdbot, in one paragraph?
Clawdbot is a personal AI assistant you run on your own devices. It replies on the messaging surfaces you already use (WhatsApp, Telegram, Slack, Discord, Signal, iMessage, WebChat) and can also do voice + a live Canvas on supported platforms. The Gateway is the always‑on control plane; the assistant is the product.
Quick start and first‑run setup
What’s the recommended way to install and set up Clawdbot?
The repo recommends running from source and using the onboarding wizard:
git clone https://github.com/clawdbot/clawdbot.git
cd clawdbot
pnpm install
# Optional if you want built output / global linking:
pnpm build
# If the Control UI assets are missing or you want the dashboard:
pnpm ui:install
pnpm ui:build
pnpm clawdbot onboard
The wizard can also build UI assets automatically. After onboarding, you typically run the Gateway on port 18789.
What runtime do I need?
Node >= 22 is required. pnpm is recommended; bun is optional.
What does the onboarding wizard actually do?
clawdbot onboard is the recommended setup path. In local mode it walks you through:
- Model/auth setup (Anthropic OAuth recommended, OpenAI Codex OAuth supported, API keys optional, LM Studio local models supported)
- Workspace location + bootstrap files
- Gateway settings (bind/port/auth/tailscale)
- Providers (WhatsApp, Telegram, Discord, Signal, iMessage)
- Daemon install (LaunchAgent on macOS; systemd user unit on Linux/WSL2)
- Health checks and skills selection
It also warns if your configured model is unknown or missing auth.
Can I use Bun?
Bun is supported for faster TypeScript execution, but WhatsApp requires Node in this ecosystem. The wizard lets you pick the runtime; choose Node if you use WhatsApp.
Where things live on disk
Where does Clawdbot store its data?
Everything lives under $CLAWDBOT_STATE_DIR (default: ~/.clawdbot):
| Path | Purpose |
|---|---|
$CLAWDBOT_STATE_DIR/clawdbot.json |
Main config (JSON5) |
$CLAWDBOT_STATE_DIR/credentials/oauth.json |
Legacy OAuth import (copied into auth profiles on first use) |
$CLAWDBOT_STATE_DIR/agents/<agentId>/agent/auth-profiles.json |
Auth profiles (OAuth + API keys) |
$CLAWDBOT_STATE_DIR/agents/<agentId>/agent/auth.json |
Runtime auth cache (managed automatically) |
$CLAWDBOT_STATE_DIR/credentials/ |
Provider state (e.g. whatsapp/<accountId>/creds.json) |
$CLAWDBOT_STATE_DIR/agents/ |
Per‑agent state (agentDir + sessions) |
$CLAWDBOT_STATE_DIR/agents/<agentId>/sessions/ |
Conversation history & state (per agent) |
$CLAWDBOT_STATE_DIR/agents/<agentId>/sessions/sessions.json |
Session metadata (per agent) |
Legacy single‑agent path: ~/.clawdbot/agent/* (migrated by clawdbot doctor).
Your workspace (AGENTS.md, memory files, skills, etc.) is separate and configured via agent.workspace (default: ~/clawd).
I’m in remote mode — where is the session store?
Session state is owned by the gateway host. If you’re in remote mode, the session store you care about is on the remote machine, not your local laptop. See Session management.
Config basics
What format is the config? Where is it?
Clawdbot reads an optional JSON5 config from $CLAWDBOT_CONFIG_PATH (default: ~/.clawdbot/clawdbot.json):
$CLAWDBOT_CONFIG_PATH
If the file is missing, it uses safe‑ish defaults (including a default workspace of ~/clawd).
I set gateway.bind: "lan" (or "tailnet") and now nothing listens / the UI says unauthorized
Non-loopback binds require auth. Configure gateway.auth.mode + gateway.auth.token (or use CLAWDBOT_GATEWAY_TOKEN).
{
gateway: {
bind: "lan",
auth: {
mode: "token",
token: "replace-me"
}
}
}
Notes:
gateway.remote.tokenis for remote CLI calls only; it does not enable local gateway auth.- The Control UI authenticates via
connect.params.auth.token(stored in app/UI settings). Avoid putting tokens in URLs.
Do I have to restart after changing config?
The Gateway watches the config and supports hot‑reload:
gateway.reload.mode: "hybrid"(default): hot‑apply safe changes, restart for critical oneshot,restart,offare also supported
A full restart is required for gateway, bridge, discovery, and canvasHost changes.
Is there an API / RPC way to apply config?
Yes. config.apply validates + writes the full config and restarts the Gateway as part of the operation.
What’s a minimal “sane” config for a first install?
{
agent: { workspace: "~/clawd" },
whatsapp: { allowFrom: ["+15555550123"] }
}
This sets your workspace and restricts who can trigger the bot.
Env vars and .env loading
How does Clawdbot load environment variables?
Clawdbot reads env vars from the parent process (shell, launchd/systemd, CI, etc.) and additionally loads:
.envfrom the current working directory- a global fallback
.envfrom~/.clawdbot/.env(aka$CLAWDBOT_STATE_DIR/.env)
Neither .env file overrides existing env vars.
“I started the Gateway via a daemon and my env vars disappeared.” What now?
Two common fixes:
- Put the missing keys in
~/.clawdbot/.envso they’re picked up even when the daemon doesn’t inherit your shell env. - Enable shell import (opt‑in convenience):
{
env: {
shellEnv: {
enabled: true,
timeoutMs: 15000
}
}
}
This runs your login shell and imports only missing expected keys (never overrides). Env var equivalents:
CLAWDBOT_LOAD_SHELL_ENV=1, CLAWDBOT_SHELL_ENV_TIMEOUT_MS=15000.
Sessions & multiple chats
How do I start a fresh conversation?
Send /new or /reset as a standalone message. See Session management.
Do groups/threads share context with DMs?
Direct chats collapse to the main session by default. Groups/channels have their own session keys, and Telegram topics / Discord threads are separate sessions. See Groups and Group messages.
Models: defaults, selection, aliases, switching
What is the “default model”?
Clawdbot’s default model is whatever you set as:
agent.model.primary
Models are referenced as provider/model (example: anthropic/claude-opus-4-5). If you omit the provider, Clawdbot currently assumes anthropic as a temporary deprecation fallback — but you should still explicitly set provider/model.
How do I switch models on the fly (without restarting)?
Use the /model command as a standalone message:
/model sonnet
/model haiku
/model opus
/model gpt
/model gpt-mini
/model gemini
/model gemini-flash
You can list available models with /model, /model list, or /model status.
Are opus / sonnet / gpt built‑in shortcuts?
Yes. Clawdbot ships a few default shorthands (only applied when the model exists in agent.models):
opus→anthropic/claude-opus-4-5sonnet→anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5gpt→openai/gpt-5.2gpt-mini→openai/gpt-5-minigemini→google/gemini-3-pro-previewgemini-flash→google/gemini-3-flash-preview
If you set your own alias with the same name, your value wins.
How do I define/override model shortcuts (aliases)?
Aliases come from agent.models.<modelId>.alias. Example:
{
agent: {
model: { primary: "anthropic/claude-opus-4-5" },
models: {
"anthropic/claude-opus-4-5": { alias: "opus" },
"anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5": { alias: "sonnet" },
"anthropic/claude-haiku-4-5": { alias: "haiku" }
}
}
}
Then /model sonnet (or /<alias> when supported) resolves to that model ID.
How do I add models from other providers like OpenRouter or Z.AI?
OpenRouter (pay‑per‑token; many models):
{
agent: {
model: { primary: "openrouter/anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5" },
models: { "openrouter/anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5": {} }
},
env: { OPENROUTER_API_KEY: "sk-or-..." }
}
Z.AI (GLM models):
{
agent: {
model: { primary: "zai/glm-4.7" },
models: { "zai/glm-4.7": {} }
},
env: { ZAI_API_KEY: "..." }
}
If you reference a provider/model but the required provider key is missing, you’ll get a runtime auth error (e.g. No API key found for provider "zai").
Model failover and “All models failed”
How does failover work?
Failover happens in two stages:
- Auth profile rotation within the same provider.
- Model fallback to the next model in
agent.model.fallbacks.
Cooldowns apply to failing profiles (exponential backoff), so Clawdbot can keep responding even when a provider is rate‑limited or temporarily failing.
What does this error mean?
No credentials found for profile "anthropic:default"
It means the system attempted to use the auth profile ID anthropic:default, but could not find credentials for it in the expected auth store.
Fix checklist for No credentials found for profile "anthropic:default"
- Confirm where auth profiles live (new vs legacy paths)
- Current:
~/.clawdbot/agents/<agentId>/agent/auth-profiles.json - Legacy:
~/.clawdbot/agent/*(migrated byclawdbot doctor)
- Current:
- Confirm your env var is loaded by the Gateway
- If you set
ANTHROPIC_API_KEYin your shell but run the Gateway via systemd/launchd, it may not inherit it. Put it in~/.clawdbot/.envor enableenv.shellEnv.
- If you set
- Make sure you’re editing the correct agent
- Multi‑agent setups mean there can be multiple
auth-profiles.jsonfiles.
- Multi‑agent setups mean there can be multiple
- Sanity‑check model/auth status
- Use
/model statusto see configured models and whether providers are authenticated.
- Use
Why did it also try Google Gemini and fail?
If your model config includes Google Gemini as a fallback (or you switched to a Gemini shorthand), Clawdbot will try it during model fallback. If you haven’t configured Google credentials, you’ll see No API key found for provider "google".
Fix: either provide Google auth, or remove/avoid Google models in agent.model.fallbacks / aliases so fallback doesn’t route there.
Auth profiles: what they are and how to manage them
Related: /concepts/oauth (OAuth flows, token storage, multi-account patterns, CLI sync)
What is an auth profile?
An auth profile is a named credential record (OAuth or API key) tied to a provider. Profiles live in:
~/.clawdbot/agents/<agentId>/agent/auth-profiles.json
What are typical profile IDs?
Clawdbot uses provider‑prefixed IDs like:
anthropic:default(common when no email identity exists)anthropic:<email>for OAuth identities- custom IDs you choose (e.g.
anthropic:work)
Can I control which auth profile is tried first?
Yes. Config supports optional metadata for profiles and an ordering per provider (auth.order.<provider>). This does not store secrets; it maps IDs to provider/mode and sets rotation order.
OAuth vs API key: what’s the difference?
Clawdbot supports both:
- OAuth often leverages subscription access (where applicable).
- API keys use pay‑per‑token billing.
The wizard explicitly supports Anthropic OAuth and OpenAI Codex OAuth and can store API keys for you.
Gateway: ports, “already running”, and remote mode
What port does the Gateway use?
gateway.port controls the single multiplexed port for WebSocket + HTTP (Control UI, hooks, etc.).
Precedence:
--port > CLAWDBOT_GATEWAY_PORT > gateway.port > default 18789
Why does clawdbot daemon status say Runtime: running but RPC probe: failed?
Because “running” is the supervisor’s view (launchd/systemd/schtasks). The RPC probe is the CLI actually connecting to the gateway WebSocket and calling status.
Use clawdbot daemon status and trust these lines:
Probe target:(the URL the probe actually used)Listening:(what’s actually bound on the port)Last gateway error:(common root cause when the process is alive but the port isn’t listening)
Why does clawdbot daemon status show Config (cli) and Config (daemon) different?
You’re editing one config file while the daemon is running another (often a --profile / CLAWDBOT_STATE_DIR mismatch).
Fix:
clawdbot daemon install --force
Run that from the same --profile / environment you want the daemon to use.
What does “another gateway instance is already listening” mean?
Clawdbot enforces a runtime lock by binding the WebSocket listener immediately on startup (default ws://127.0.0.1:18789). If the bind fails with EADDRINUSE, it throws GatewayLockError indicating another instance is already listening.
Fix: stop the other instance, free the port, or run with clawdbot gateway --port <port>.
How do I run Clawdbot in remote mode (client connects to a Gateway elsewhere)?
Set gateway.mode: "remote" and point to a remote WebSocket URL, optionally with a token/password:
{
gateway: {
mode: "remote",
remote: {
url: "ws://gateway.tailnet:18789",
token: "your-token",
password: "your-password"
}
}
}
Notes:
clawdbot gatewayonly starts whengateway.modeislocal(or you pass the override flag).- The macOS app watches the config file and switches modes live when these values change.
The Control UI says “unauthorized” (or keeps reconnecting). What now?
Your gateway is running with auth enabled (gateway.auth.*), but the UI is not sending the matching token/password.
Facts (from code):
- The Control UI stores the token in browser localStorage key
clawdbot.control.settings.v1. - The UI can import
?token=...(and/or?password=...) once, then strips it from the URL.
Fix:
- Set
gateway.auth.token(orCLAWDBOT_GATEWAY_TOKEN) on the gateway host. - In the Control UI settings, paste the same token (or refresh with a one-time
?token=...link).
I set gateway.bind: "tailnet" but it can’t bind / nothing listens
tailnet bind picks a Tailscale IP from your network interfaces (100.64.0.0/10). If the machine isn’t on Tailscale (or the interface is down), there’s nothing to bind to.
Fix:
- Start Tailscale on that host (so it has a 100.x address), or
- Switch to
gateway.bind: "loopback"/"lan".
Can I run multiple Gateways on the same host?
Yes, but you must isolate:
CLAWDBOT_CONFIG_PATH(per‑instance config)CLAWDBOT_STATE_DIR(per‑instance state)agent.workspace(workspace isolation)gateway.port(unique ports)
There are convenience CLI flags like --dev and --profile <name> that shift state dirs and ports.
Logging and debugging
Where are logs?
File logs (structured):
/tmp/clawdbot/clawdbot-YYYY-MM-DD.log
You can set a stable path via logging.file. File log level is controlled by logging.level. Console verbosity is controlled by --verbose and logging.consoleLevel.
Fastest log tail:
clawdbot logs --follow
Service/supervisor logs (when the gateway runs via launchd/systemd):
- macOS:
$CLAWDBOT_STATE_DIR/logs/gateway.logandgateway.err.log(default:~/.clawdbot/logs/...; profiles use~/.clawdbot-<profile>/logs/...) - Linux:
journalctl --user -u clawdbot-gateway.service -n 200 --no-pager - Windows:
schtasks /Query /TN "Clawdbot Gateway" /V /FO LIST
See Troubleshooting for more.
How do I start/stop/restart the Gateway daemon?
Use the daemon helpers:
clawdbot daemon status
clawdbot daemon restart
If you run the gateway manually, clawdbot gateway --force can reclaim the port. See Gateway.
What’s the fastest way to get more details when something fails?
Start the Gateway with --verbose to get more console detail. Then inspect the log file for provider auth, model routing, and RPC errors.
Media & attachments
My skill generated an image/PDF, but nothing was sent
Outbound attachments from the agent must include a MEDIA:<path-or-url> line (on its own line). See Clawd setup and Agent send.
CLI sending:
clawdbot send --to +15555550123 --message "Here you go" --media /path/to/file.png
Note: images are resized/recompressed (max side 2048px) to hit size limits. See Images.
Security and access control
Is it safe to expose Clawdbot to inbound DMs?
Treat inbound DMs as untrusted input. Defaults are designed to reduce risk:
- Default behavior on DM‑capable providers is pairing:
- Unknown senders receive a pairing code; the bot does not process their message.
- Approve with:
clawdbot pairing approve --provider <provider> <code>
- Opening DMs publicly requires explicit opt‑in (
dmPolicy: "open"and allowlist"*").
Run clawdbot doctor to surface risky DM policies.
Chat commands, aborting tasks, and “it won’t stop”
How do I stop/cancel a running task?
Send any of these as a standalone message (no slash):
stop
abort
esc
wait
exit
These are abort triggers (not slash commands).
For background processes (from the bash tool), you can ask the agent to run:
process action:kill sessionId:XXX
Slash commands only run when the entire message is the command (must start with /). Inline text like hello /status is ignored.
Why does it feel like the bot “ignores” rapid‑fire messages?
Queue mode controls how new messages interact with an in‑flight run. Use /queue to change modes:
steer— new messages redirect the current taskfollowup— run messages one at a timecollect— batch messages and reply once (default)steer-backlog— steer now, then process backloginterrupt— abort current run and start fresh
You can add options like debounce:2s cap:25 drop:summarize for followup modes.
Common troubleshooting
“All models failed” — what should I check first?
- Credentials present for the provider(s) being tried (auth profiles + env vars).
- Model routing: confirm
agent.model.primaryand fallbacks are models you can access. - Gateway logs in
/tmp/clawdbot/…for the exact provider error. /model statusto see current configured models + shorthands.
I’m running on my personal WhatsApp number — why is self-chat weird?
Enable self-chat mode and allowlist your own number:
{
whatsapp: {
selfChatMode: true,
dmPolicy: "allowlist",
allowFrom: ["+15555550123"]
}
}
See WhatsApp setup.
WhatsApp logged me out. How do I re‑auth?
Run the login command again and scan the QR code:
clawdbot providers login
Build errors on main — what’s the standard fix path?
git pull origin main && pnpm installpnpm clawdbot doctor- Check GitHub issues or Discord
- Temporary workaround: check out an older commit
Answer the exact question from the screenshot/chat log
Q: “What’s the default model for Anthropic with an API key?”
A: In Clawdbot, credentials and model selection are separate. Setting ANTHROPIC_API_KEY (or storing an Anthropic API key in auth profiles) enables authentication, but the actual default model is whatever you configure in agent.model.primary (for example, anthropic/claude-sonnet-4-5 or anthropic/claude-opus-4-5). If you see No credentials found for profile "anthropic:default", it means the Gateway couldn’t find Anthropic credentials in the expected auth-profiles.json for the agent that’s running.
Still stuck? Ask in Discord or open a GitHub discussion.